Curator and Editor Sammi Gale reviews Jim Hodges’ new UK solo show It Only Takes a Minute.
CULTURED mentions Leilah Babirye: We Have a History as one of the top 11 exhibitons to visit in San Francisco.
Yinka Shonibare CBE RA’s first major showcase in Africa, Safiotra [Hybridities/Hybridités, will open at Fondation H on April 11 2025.
Curator Natasha Becker discusses the artist’s expression of queer pride through sculptures made from urban refuse in Leilah Babirye: We Have a History at de Young Museum.
Eddy Frankel selects Jonathan Baldock: 0.1%, opening at Bloomberg SPACE on 30 January, as one of the nine London art exhibitions to visit in January.
Barry Schwabsky discusses the work of Denzil Forrester and his most recent two-part exhibition, Two Islands, One World, presented by Stephen Friedman Gallery and Andrew Kreps Gallery in New York.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ - "'Reverb' isn’t just a sonic phenomenon at Stephen Friedman Gallery, it’s a visual, cultural one too."
Dancing with the Grenada-born artist, Denzil Forrester, after the opening of his New York solo show, Two Islands, One World, proves to be a salve.
Coinciding with the exhibition Energy Fields: Vibrations of the Pacific, Channing Hansen invites Fulcrum Arts' curator Patrick J. Reed to his Los Angeles studio, to discuss his ranging interests and labor-intensive practice.
In Art Basel’s new series, ‘The Road to Art Basel’, Yinka Shonibare CBE RA, Louisa Gagliardi, and Pascale Marthine Tayou share their thoughts on seeing their work at the fair throughout the years.
Artist Denzil Forrester has received a government award for a print depicting celebrations at a reggae festival in Cornwall.
Writer and art historian Ksenia M.Soboleva interviews Leilah Babirye on her solo exhibition, We Have a History, at de Young, San Francisco.
Claudia Barbieri shares her thoughts on Anne Rothenstein’s first solo institutional exhibition held at Charleston.
10 Magazine interviews Jonathan Baldock on the inspiration behind his window exhibit, Take a Peek, at Hermes flagship store on London's New Bond Street.
Artist Claire Barclay joins professor of Medieval Culture and Chair in the History of Art at the University of Bristol Beth Williamson for a conversation about her current exhibiton, RAWLESS, at CAMPLE LINE.
It's been a breakout year for the British artist with a sell-out booth at Frieze in New York, and presentations at the SCAD Museum of Art in Savannah and Hayward Gallery in London.
View Cultured magazine’s must-see shows this summer.
The British-Nigerian artist hopes his work will invite the public to critically reflect on the past and it's legacy.
Meet the artist who has been selected for this year's Korean Artists Today.
This month, Artsy’s Curatorial team features emerging and noteworthy artists who are working in a similar style or spirit as David Hockney, the iconic British artist who is acclaimed for his idyllic paintings.
As 130 galleries take part in this year's fourth edition of the event, Ben Luke and Louisa Buck roundup some of their exhibition highlights, from John Baldessari to Michaël Borremans, Nan Goldin to BLCKGEEZER.
Recipient of the 2024 Lifetime Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Award.
The Guardian's highlights of the Venice Biennale 2024
Jeffrey Gibson mixes Native American motifs with modern materials to investigate issues of identity and history.
As the British-Nigerian artist’s new Serpentine Gallery show opens he talks about the long arm of colonialism, why art needs to engage, and why the Benin Bronzes should be sent home.
Jonathan Baldock mischievously considers history and myths in ‘Touch Wood’ at Yorkshire Sculpture Park.
In a series of newly commissioned works, Baldock immerses us in a mix of ancient and modern forms, inspired by myths and rituals spanning harvest festivals, folk art, medieval cathedral carvings and queer graffiti.
The artist’s works – designed to be a habitable space, as well as a lab, a storage facility and a stage – are forever becoming; a document of an endless and moving thought
Featuring seminal works by Cosey Fanni Tutti, Caroline Coon and Lubaina Himid, ‘Women in Revolt! Art and Activism in the UK 1970–1990’ at Tate Britain celebrates the radical British women artists who rebelled against conformity.
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