This exhibition offers an exceptional insight into Austrian architect, artist, designer, theorist and Pritzker Prize winner Hans Hollein’s eminently artistic practice.
8 May 1945 not only marks the end of the Second World War and of the Nazi regime, but also stands for one of the greatest losses in cultural assets in Austrian history, triggered by a devastating fire that ravaged Immendorf Castle in Lower Austria.
Bass is Steve McQueen’s (b. 1969) most abstract work to date. Over the past two decades, the British artist has become synonymous with powerful cinema – think Hunger (2008).
Yang Fudong’s “Sparrow on the Sea” drifts like a fugue. Commissioned for the LED façade of M+ museum in Hong Kong, the silent, black-and-white film now plays in L.A. with full sound, anchored in a dream logic that warps memory and time.
“David Hockney: 25” at the Fondation Louis Vuitton is the largest exhibition ever devoted to the artist, showcasing over 400 works spanning seven decades of his career.
If we were to travel 500 years into the future, what would the monuments decorating public parks and town squares commemorate? Thomas Doyle takes us on an unnerving journey to imagine the culture we might encounter should our endless fascination with technology continue.
The exhibition you are invited – the inaugural exhibition of the Onassis Foundation’s new Onassis Ready space in Athens – marks a significant moment in Juergen Teller’s artistic oeuvre, which has been shaped by landmark events and encounters.