Artworks by Ai Weiwei, Andrew Sabin and Jane and Louise Wilson have been unveiled in the City of London as part of the 14th edition of Sculpture in the City, the annual public art exhibition set in the heart of the Square Mile.
The Serbian performance artist and Scottish painter were among five recipients of the £77,000 award backed by Japan's royal family recognising artists with international impact.
The celebrated artist and designer presents After the Rain, a vibrant exploration of modular art, sculpture and colour that celebrates creativity, resilience, and the endless possibilities of the rainbow.
You’ve heard the story. In the 1940s, Henri Matisse became gravely ill. In the turmoil of World War II, he eventually underwent life-saving surgery that left the artist too weak to hold a paintbrush.
Gold: coveted, contested, and soaked in contradiction. It mesmerized conquistadors and catalyzed the theft of the Black Hills—homeland of the Oglala Lakota—as well as the Sierra Nevada and much of California.
The enduring appeal of trompe l’oeil—a painterly technique designed to “deceive the eye” into perceiving three-dimensional space on a flat surface—has occupied a significant place in Western art history, from antiquity through the Dutch Golden Age.
We’re high above the Salt River Pima and Maricopa Indian Community, a suburb of Scottsdale, Arizona in the USA, 2011, the master Canadian photographer Edward Burtynsky tells us
Derek Eller Gallery is presenting a solo exhibition of mixed-media sculpture and wall-based works by Steve Keister entitled Split Level. Informed by Mesoamerican architecture and sculpture, Keister conjures bespoke deities that pay homage to Pre-Colombian myth.
Spencertown Academy Arts Center, in collaboration with Freedom Quilting Bee Legacy, announces “Gee’s Bend: The Next Generation,” an exhibition of more than 30 quilts, along with talks, workshops.