Knocking Where a Door Once Stood interrogates the processes by which boundaries are constituted and dismantled through the operations of memory, employing diverse media and sculptural approaches to critically engage with these dynamics.
Jo Baer (*1929, Seattle, US) was a transformative figure in the art world, reshaping Minimalism and becoming a key player in the avant-garde movement of 1960s New York City.
Widely recognized as one of the most important and influential artists of the past century, French-American artist Louise Bourgeois’s work expresses a variety of emotions through a visual vocabulary of formal.
McNay Art Museum presents “Designing Shakespeare through the Ages,” on view March 27-July 6. The exhibition examines the changing conversations surrounding William Shakespeare’s plays.
This spring, the Leopold Museum is dedicating a large-scale monographic exhibition to the central artist of the Leopold Collection, Egon Schiele (1890-1918). Changing Times.
By Friday, as art professionals started picking up flights out of Hong Kong, the narrative for this year’s edition of Art Basel Hong Kong, and the surrounding art week, was pretty much set.
Jean-Michel Basquiat's Sábado por la Noche (Saturday Night), a piece that symbolizes a pivotal moment in the career of the New York born and raised artist, was sold at a Christie's auction in Hong Kong.
Born in Brisbane in 1991, Sancintya Mohini Simpson is an artist and researcher whose work recontextualizes the colonial history of Indian indentured labor in the South African province of Natal—now KwaZulu-Natal—from 1860 to 1911.
Paula Modersohn-Becker: I am Me was the first American retrospective of the artist and as such, marked Modersohn-Becker’s ascending renown on this side of the Atlantic.
Eva Smith is a mixed-media artist, Naturalist, and lichen enthusiast. She paints and photographs surreal landscapes influenced by her work as an arborist and a steward of Chicagoland forest preserves.
Although Caspar David Friedrich is today thought of as a painter of oil on canvas, he returned continually throughout his life to paper and ink, making sepia-toned works of precise penwork that treat delicately his great subject, the natural landscape of his native Germany.