In new works at Petzel, the 94-year-old artist renders floral compositions and lush landscapes of germinating natural life through minimal gestures that celebrate the earth’s beauty.
Connie Wilson’s new sculptural works, presented at Liste Art Fair 2025 in Basel, explore the interplay between interior and exterior spaces, connecting global consumption and trade systems.
Edward Burtynsky’s photographs once offered a prescient vision of large-scale anthropogenic changes; now, they feel more and more like a pretext for aesthetic dazzle.
Her Nature Studies invoke the promise of something greater, a direct line from the material world to the spiritual experience that art is presumed to offer.
The Griffin Museum announced its two photobook exhibitions, the 15th Annual Photobook Exhibition and the 2025 Handmade Photobook Exhibition, showcasing over 50 photobooks in the Griffin Gallery & Library this summer.
British artist Sahara Longe’s first institutional solo exhibition The Other Side of the Mountain presents a new body of work exploring semi-abstract interior worlds, where her paintings capture fleeting moments and memories alongside the multitude of stories that live within.
Fridman Gallery presents Mad Heart, Be Brave, a group exhibition curated by Sadaf Padder and inspired by Kashmiri poet Agha Shahid Ali (1949–2001), known for his lyrical reflections on longing, memory and emotional terrain.
Sean Kelly is presenting How to Win, a solo exhibition of new work by Sadie Barnette. In this conceptually rigorous presentation, Barnette offers a poetic visual lexicon for navigating contemporary life.
Iconic contemporary artist Takashi Murakami is taking over Cleveland with his ambitious new exhibition, Takashi Murakami: Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow.