Far from the silvery-blue bright light of midday, nearer the twilighted edge of burgeoning darkness, you will find familiar forms assume sinister shape.
Nature and artifice have always been founding categories for any aesthetic artistic discussion, but what is their role in the contemporary context? The exhibition Flowers.
The cerebrally dense works at the latest Asian Art Biennial take breathing as a starting point to explore collective ways of living, dreaming and resisting.
In 1492, the Spanish scholar Antonio de Nebrija published one of the first books dedicated to a vernacular European language, Gramática de la lengua Castellana (Grammar of the Castilian Language).
Diego Rivera lived in Paris for nearly 10 years and loved it. Frida Kahlo spent two months there and hated it. A pair of exhibitions examine their respective experiences in the City of Light.
“I never want to look ordinary,” Leigh Bowery told i-D magazine in 1985. Tate Modern’s new exhibition on his life and work proves that he succeeded—and then some.
Chen Peng and I met in graduate school as students in the painting program at Boston University. Peng grew up in Taiwan, and studied philosophy at National Taiwan University, before moving to the United States to study painting at the Cleveland Institute of Art.
The artist Jim Moir, also known for his comedy under the stage name Vic Reeves, will be displaying his paintings of birds at an art gallery on Merseyside.
On the slopes of a hillside covered in wild grasses, separating a perfectly maintained garden from the forest looming above it, you climb the rain-soaked incline, dragging a construction shovel behind you.
Today we celebrate an iconic photographic institution, the Soho Photo Gallery, that for almost six decades has created a space for community, for the celebration of photography, a place to learn and make the photographic journey more expansive.