Teo Treloar prefers drawing with graphite as it is elemental and cosmological. Its carbon composition was born in the stars and supernovas, and is an essential element for all life on earth.
A main event within European fairs, this novel iteration celebrates American painter and graphic artist Robert Rauschenberg on what would be his 100th birthday.
From painting surveys that unflinchingly examine the human body to participatory projects by children, the continent is teeming with stimulating exhibitions.
As his new exhibition opens at Tate Britain, Ed Atkins talks to his childhood friend, the actor Rupert Friend, about realism, the soul of an artwork and wraps bought from late-night pharmacies.
As 2024 came to an end, there were four exhibitions in Sydney that offered a more nuanced and thought-provoking consideration of our rapidly changing world, and its many challenges to existing norms and traditions.
From painting surveys that unflinchingly examine the human body to participatory projects by children, the continent is teeming with stimulating exhibitions.
The Lost Family: Summoning the Courage, Making the Cobbler, photographer Stephanie Hanlon’s first solo exhibit, is a paradoxical and intimate glimpse into the lives of more than 20 Atlanta families through long-exposure, black and white photography.
A long-overdue solo exhibition honoring pioneering California Modernist Donna Norine Schuster (1883–1953), co-founder of the Group of Eight and one of the few women to carve a space in early 20th-century art circles boldly.