Collectors can jump-start their summertime fun with a dip into Everard’s June 17-18 auction of fine and decorative art from prime Southern estates and private holdings.
Water flows through our lives as sustenance, border, weapon, and witness. Hydrographies brings together artists, activists, and thinkers whose work engages water as a contested terrain, revealing how rivers, oceans.
A Tension Worth Keeping Because the Drift is Always There presents a group of new paintings by Nathaniel Oliver that follows a cast of characters over the course of a day as they navigate a single landscape.
There’s something about a book you find by accident, a book no one else seems to have heard of, a book that thrills and then becomes a part of you, when it’s one you so easily might never have read at all – it seems like it found you.
From his unfinished film about a murdered director to a stunning series of doomy oil paintings, Derek Jarman’s work could be angry, dark and disturbing – not to mention highly relevant in these bleak times.
From the Met’s “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” to Candida Alvarez's "Circle, Point, Hoop" at El Museo del Barrio, there's a lot to see and do on Fifth Avenue between 82nd and 110th.
Now on view at Regen Projects, Kader Attia’s latest solo show explores the politics of repair, the echoes of empire, and the fragility of progress through a decolonial lens.
The Indian sculptor reimagines discarded metal into immersive installations, weaving together memory, material, and movement in his latest solo exhibition.