Much has been said about the cinematic quality of Tomek Kręcicki’s paintings. His previous exhibition at Stereo, Giallo (2022), borrowed its title from Italian B-movies and featured a series of works evocative of film scenes.
When Marina Tabassum’s architects were invited to design the Serpentine Pavilion in Kensington Gardens, its 25th iteration since Zaha Hadid, they drew inspiration from the trees.
In a bold and meticulous act of historical fabulation, Pablo Bronstein has turned his attention to one of the most elusive architectural enigmas in religious history: the Temple of Solomon.
The Royal Academy Summer Exhibition 2025, running from June 17 to August 17, offers a dynamic and inclusive showcase of contemporary art, featuring works from both emerging and established artists across diverse mediums.
Abeautiful series by Nicolas Denolle. Born in France and currently based in San Francisco, California, Denolle studied Graphic Design at ÉCAL (University of Arts & Design) in Switzerland.
The magic of Stout’s artworks does not feel contingent on a viewer’s comprehension — it feels auratic, as if emitting an electrical current of meaning.
When Giorgio Agamben reflects on the condition of the contemporary as the ability to keep one’s gaze fixed on one’s own time in order to perceive not its lights but its darkness.
Over the past 25 years, artist Isaac Julien has developed a singular, choreographic style of moving image exhibition in the form of immersive multichannel film and video installations.
Emily Kam Kngwarray, whose work is the subject of a major retrospective at Tate Modern this month, was an Aboriginal woman from a part of central Australia called Utopia, which is 240km north-east of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory.
Ahead of a major exhibition in 2026, the National Portrait Gallery has today announced the acquisition of 12 new works from the estate of Lucian Freud, one of Britain’s greatest portrait artists.
François Ghebaly is proud to present Homecoming, the newest exhibition by Ithaca-based artist Matt Bollinger and his first time showing at the Downtown Los Angeles gallery.