From the Moroccan coast to the South of France, these settings helped shape art history, transforming the work of Marc Chagall, David Hockney, Yayoi Kusama and countless others.
The show revisits the artists featured in Lubaina Himid’s landmark 1985 exhibition, “The Thin Black Line,” charting the resilience of Britain’s Black women artists over four decades of cultural and political upheaval.
“A Kind of Language: Storyboards and Other Renderings for Cinema” at Osservatorio Fondazione Prada offers a deep dive into the creative visual tools behind filmmaking, featuring over 800 works from the 1920s to today.
There’s a undeniably erotic charge to Millet’s paintings of gloomy hard work – reminding us that, behind the hoes, these are real people with real desires.
Soshiro Matsubara’s exhibition “Sleeves of Desire” explores the nuances between different forms of desire and their relation to the Other as an entity outside the personal realm, separated through time and space.
In SoiL Thornton’s “The Rest” at Simian, the cans are all found flattened in the street; totally transformed by a vehicular smashing that makes them worthless in this petty exchange economy.
In this exhibition, Zesheng Li transforms ‘space’ into a perceptible fold of consciousness through his works, constructing a ‘spiritual geomorphology’ map through photography, allowing us to cross visible boundaries and enter the forgotten yet still resonant zones within the...
Mitochondria Gallery presents Gifts of the Soil, a group exhibition that brings together works Victor Olaoye, Nedia Were, Izere Antoine, Laju Sholola and Nathalie Djakou Kassi, among others.