What can buildings and their architectures reveal about our basic human need for shelter? What about the buildings that are designed to house artists or artworks? In a world where sanctuaries are disappearing, we search for shelter as a hermit crab looks for a home.
Christie’s will present for the second year in a row: Beyond the Screen, a digital art auction open online for bidding from 29 May to 10 June on christies.com.
The Winnipeg Art Gallery (WAG)-Qaumajuq presents Abraham Anghik Ruben, the first solo show in Qaumajuq’s flagship Qilak gallery, the largest exhibition space dedicated to Inuit art in the world.
The practice of Jae Pil Eun draws on personal and intergenerational memories and experiences, traditional ritual practices that face erasure as a result of colonialism, as well as mythologies and their representations.
With unshakable conviction and unguarded honesty, Alvarez continues to trace a path that merges the personal and the political, the tactile and the spiritual, to craft a visual language uniquely her own.
The show highlights the work of turn-of-the-century artists who, forgoing allegory or sentimentality, captured the stark, unfiltered presence of animals in nature.
Discover the fantastical world of the Mumbai-based Chanakya Atelier and School of Craft—the longtime collaborator Dior responsible for transforming artworks into textiles for fashion show atmospheres and more.
Blending surreal color, storytelling, and social impact, Prince Gyasi reflects on his creative evolution, global collaborations, and vision for empowering the next generation.
The concept of the imaginary museum, formulated by André Malraux in The Imaginary Museum (1947), refers to the set of works that everyone can mentally assemble through reproductions, at the time mainly photographic.
Artist Alex Chinneck has installed a townhouse in London whose façade appears to fold like fabric, transforming the rigid architecture into a shifting illusion.