In the 1920s, influential German artist László Moholy-Nagy coined the term “New Vision.” It was a label for a global photographic shift – a response to the mechanised conflict of WWI and a reclamation of artistic image-making.
One of the luckiest house museums in America is Lyndhurst, a creamy marble pile perched atop a Hudson River bank, just north of New York City in Tarrytown.
In ‘Cutting Through the Past’, a retrospective of Rebecca Horn (1944–2024) at Castello di Rivoli, near Turin, things are constantly being spiked and sliced and snipped and ripped open.
Earlier this spring, artist Julia Isídrez led an informal guided tour at the São Paulo gallery Gomide & Co. The occasion was a joint exhibition featuring her work alongside that of Maria Lira.
The two-year-old gallery Tureen is tucked into a Jefferson Boulevard storefront in Dallas’ Oak Cliff neighborhood that retains traces of its architectural past even as it envisions fresher perspectives.
From Joel Meyerowitz’s 1960s travels through Europe to Felipe Romero Beltrán’s award-winning series Bravo, here are a trio of highlights from Spain’s largest and liveliest photo festival.