Artist-filmmaker Margaret Salmon compellingly examines the impact of austerity on Glasgow communities through an evolving installation at The Hunterian.
Earlier in June, in response to a complaint from the far-right Rassemblement National, the Paris region withdrew a €50,000 subsidy from Inter-LGBT, the organisation responsible for the capital’s Pride march.
Nike Kama was born on 26 July 1979 in Kazakhstan, on the Mangyshlak peninsula, in the city of Aktau. Since 1999, she has been living in Berlin, Germany.
A fading Banksy mural in Venice has been removed from the side of a palazzo for restoration, according to The Associated Press, two years after officials first sparked debate by introducing the unconventional option.
Painter Amy Sherald has canceled her upcoming solo exhibition, titled “American Sublime,” at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery after the museum considered removing her painting of a Black transgender Statue of Liberty, The New York Times reported today.
Just over a year ago, some 100 high-profile contemporary artists—from Jeff Koons and Paul McCarthy to Julie Mehretu and Camille Henrot to Claire Tabouret and Julien Creuzet—were invited to copy masterpieces from the Louvre’s collection.
Perrotin Los Angeles is pleased to present an exhibition by internationally acclaimed Japanese artist, Aya Takano; the artist’s eleventh solo exhibition with the gallery.
By channeling a language as viscerally human as football, Anadol exposed both the calculated hostility of artificial intelligence and the frigidity of the fine art world.
The fully restored Grand Palais in Paris held its first major event in April of this year. From April 3 to April 6, 2025, it hosted Art Paris 2025, a sprawling spring fair that welcomed 170 galleries from 25 countries.