Hauser & Wirth opened the second edition of Invite(s) in Paris, organized with Olivier Renaud-Clément. This new invitation spotlights Carlotta Amanzi in an exhibition produced in collaboration with Lo Brutto Stahl and featuring a text by Paul Olivennes.
Sculptor, photographer, and master of artistic staging, rival to Auguste Rodin and a role model for numerous artists: around 1900, Medardo Rosso (1858 in Turin, Italy 1928 in Milan, Italy) revolutionized sculpture.
Linder Sterling confronts patriarchal ideas of gender and sexuality in her first retrospective in Scotland, while Jeremy Deller invites you to a collaborative punk performance in Dundee.
Spanning works across five decades, RicanVisions: Global Ancestralities and Embodied Futures is a Diasporican (pertaining to the Puerto Rican diaspora) reading of some of society’s most central challenges throughout the turn of the century.
Ömer Uluç’s groundbreaking exhibition at Istanbul Modern unveils a world where art, movement and transformation converge in dynamic, boundary-pushing creations.
In her recent exhibition at Magenta Plains, Ebecho Muslimova stretches the world around her recurring protagonist “Fatebe,” granting her new kinds of architecture and absurdities to explore.
A huge painting by Mark Rothko, thought to be worth tens of millions of dollars, has been removed from display in a Dutch museum after it was damaged by a visiting child.
Following the retrospective dedicated to Hans Josephsohn’s work at the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris last year – the artist’s first retrospective in France – Thaddaeus Ropac Paris Marais presents an exhibition retracing 50 years of the Swiss sculptor’s practice, from 1952 to 2002.