Leonor Fini (1907–1996) was a singular figure in 20th-century art, known for her refusal to conform— whether to artistic movements, societal expectations, or gender norms.
Turner creates sculptures and site-responsive installations that explore fundamental dichotomies: life and death, human and non-human, attraction and repulsion.
Istituto Svizzero inaugurates its Milan programme with The House of Dorothy, the first solo exhibition in Italy by artist Vincent Grange (*1997, born in Geneva, lives and works in Geneva).
Alexander Berggruen is presenting Yuri Yuan: Hide and Seek. In Hide and Seek, Yuan celebrates the freedom art provides to obscure and reveal, allowing mystery to build while exposing hidden truths to those who look closely.
Experience a powerful reimagining of The Family Album, exploring the beauty and depth of family connections across time while celebrating the body as a site of history and memory.
Marian Goodman Gallery is presenting in Paris beaucoup, peu, rien, a solo exhibition by Ana Jotta, proposed and organized by Ampersand, with whom the artist has collaborated regularly in recent years.
Rehs Contemporary announces its exhibition, Bloom, a vibrant exploration of flowers in contemporary art. This exhibition brings together a diverse group of artists who use floral themes to explore life, love, and identity.
Inside/Out is part two of a two-part exhibition by Pratt Fine Arts’ MFA program. Inside/Out brings together artists who challenge existing frameworks through acts of abstraction, material intervention, conceptual gestures, and formal subversion.
On May 13, 2025, the Polish Pavilion at 24th International Exhibition of Triennale Milano will transform into a cozy chamber inspired by a tepidarium—an area in ancient Roman baths designed for relaxation and social gatherings.
On the same day, CAA also launched a series of events celebrating its 97th anniversary: Black Myth: Wukong Art Exhibition, “Painting 100” Program, Xiao Feng Art Museum Opening.
In John Paul Kesling’s show, Lean-To, currently on display at Lowe Mill ARTS & Entertainment in Huntsville, the artist creates paintings that are greater than the sum of their parts.
Thirty years ago this week, a young African preacher in Rwanda’s Kibeho refugee camp read aloud from the Bible to reassure his flock in the midst of one of the worst and most brutal massacres of modern times.