In Akụ-luo-ụnọ, Nduka Ikechukwu reflects on the Igbo philosophies of reciprocity, mentorship, and collective progress as pathways to societal regeneration.
Fitzrovia’s Alice Amati offers an inventive and progressive programme entirely unlike any of the ‘new generation’ of central London galleries which have opened in the last half decade.
Opening at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on April 27, 2025, Sargent and Paris will explore the early career of John Singer Sargent (born 1856, Florence; died 1925, London), from his arrival in Paris in 1874 as a talented 18-year-old art student through the mid-1880s.
Edi Hila | Thea Djordjadze is a trans-generational exhibition of two major artists from Albania and Georgia, both countries with a communist past linked to Soviet Union, and to Eastern Europe and Western Asia history.
From April 25 to September 28, 2025, the Altinate | San Gaetano Cultural Center in Padua will host the most comprehensive exhibition ever dedicated to one of photography’s most intriguing figures: Vivian Maier.
The National Museum of Norway, Oslo, presents the first retrospective dedicated to A K Dolven (b. 1953, Oslo), one of the most internationally acclaimed Norwegian artists working today.
For more than a decade, multidisciplinary artist Kandis Williams (US, b. 1985) has engaged with the politics of representation, labor, and the body through an impressive array of media, from collage and sculpture to film and performance, and to writing and publishing.
Dulwich Picture Gallery has announced a celebratory weekend of events taking place 6-7 September 2025 to mark the completion of major development projects that will transform the public offering of the first purpose-built public art gallery.
Swann Galleries spring sale of Fine Photographs is rich in masters of the medium, working in all formats, including nineteenth-century panoramas, photo books, portfolios, and fine art prints.