Mohammed Sami, an Iraqi painter who once created murals of Saddam Hussein, and Zadie Xa, a Canadian artist of Korean heritage, are among the nominees for 2025’s Turner Prize, the organisers of that prestigious British art award announced on April 23.
“Gardening gives one back a sense of proportion about everything—except itself,” author May Sarton (1912-1995) wrote in her book Plant Dreaming Deep (1968), a journal about discovering a love of tending to the land.
Spanning nearly the entire floor of the main space of Mercer Art Gallery in Harrogate, Liz West’s expansive new installation invites viewers to revel in color and brightness.
Art Green, an original member of a rabblerousing group of artists known as the Hairy Who and a key figure in the Chicago Imagist movement, died on April 14. He was eighty-three.
Los Angeles–based performance artist Ei Arakawa-Nash will represent Japan at the 2026 Venice Biennale, the Japan Foundation announced Thursday. A curator has not been announced yet.
Hashimoto Contemporary is pleased to present amuse-bouche, a group exhibition focused on the small scale. Featuring over 80 works from 28 artists, the exhibition pays homage to the unpretentious simplicity of scale, with all of the artworks measuring under 12 inches.
Glasgow’s Tramway will be the first venue in the UK to present a new piece of work by Brazilian artist Solange Pessoa (b.1961 Ferros Belo Horizonte, Brazil).
In Tulip Hysteria, his first solo exhibition at TROTOAR, Bojan Šumonja presents what can be described as a visual phantasmagoria—a theatre of the absurd nestled within the familiar wilderness of Istria.