“DEVIATIONS” is a group show of 12 artists, most of whom I know more or less intimately, and most of whom are trans or gay and/or hang out “downtown” (a word which here alludes to but does not in fact denote geography).
The Sultanate of Oman marks its debut at the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia with Traces, curated by Omani architect Majeda Alhinai.
In ètô y’a Nda-bot: Intimate Interiors Salomon Moneyang offers a luminous and layered exploration of home, not as fixed geography, but as a shifting interior terrain shaped by memory, inheritance, and return.
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH) is presenting the exhibition “Picturing Nature: The Stuart Collection of 18th- and 19th-Century British Landscapes and Beyond.”
A retrospective at the Brooklyn Museum introduces the photographer to a new generation—and reestablishes her place in the canon of modern American art.
In Bangladesh, Sarker Protick combines the impulses of a photojournalist with the intuition of a musician, unpacking questions about photography’s relationship to time and memory.
Birmingham Museums Trust launches ‘The Elephant in the Room’ gallery examining how global artefacts entered city collections and addressing complex colonial histories.
A decade ago, Fisher created the Big Fruit mural visible from the Howard Street station, and a new mural — a facade on a facade — can be seen on the Blue Line.
For the exhibition resonance of absence, basis e. v. is presenting the vibrant, engaging and personal works of the sudanese artist Amna Elhassan in a wide-ranging institutional solo exhibition concentrating on the years 2021–2025.