Tabish Khan, the @LondonArtCritic, picks his top 5 art exhibitions to see in London this Spring. Check out last week’s top 5 if you’re after more shows to visit.
On Instagram, where most artists list their websites, exhibitions, and accomplishments beneath their handles, Dan Schein keeps it simple: “artist/painter,” followed by “Person Who Stutters.”
Korean painter Pai Un-soung's works are among the 220 artworks and 200 archival finds in the National Gallery Singapore exhibition that trace how Asian artists quietly but decisively shaped the modernist legacy of Paris
Hiroshige was one of Japan’s most popular print artists during the Edo period and this new exhibition shows how his visual language helped shape the arts.
Within the Paris program of Galleria Continua, the solo exhibitions of Zhanna Kadyrova and Osvaldo González – Ukrainian and Cuban artists respectively, born in 1981 and 1982 – share a space and a moment, yet they seem to stem from distant, almost incompatible orbits.
Memory, Spirit, and Resistance to Nature’s Language resonate in Campos-Pons’ inaugural exhibition at the launch of Efie Gallery’s new premises in the vibrant art hub of Alserkal Avenue, Dubai.
Bernard Baltimore learned a valuable lesson at an art program at Chicago High School for Agricultural Sciences in Mount Greenwood: “You can make art out of anything.”
Hoffman is closing her eponymous gallery, but expect the woman who helped launch artists like Cindy Sherman to continue to shape Chicago’s role in the visual art world.
Who hasn’t marveled at a shoe and its miniature architecture? A shoe, like a chair, becomes an extension of the human body, exuding symbolic power, universal appeal, humor and beauty.
Leaving, retelling, and rebuilding worlds, Lubaina Himid’s retrospective explores black histories and futures with archival storytelling in contemporary art