5 to See: This Weekend
Seminal portraits, stylised images and thought-provoking documentary photography. Top exhibitions navigate memory, history and identity.
Seminal portraits, stylised images and thought-provoking documentary photography. Top exhibitions navigate memory, history and identity.
Photographs by Markéta Luskačová, taken on the North East coast of England in the late 1970s, will go on display at the Martin Parr Foundation.
‘Women Photographing the Landscape’ at Flowers Gallery, London, explores tensions between genre and gender through the lens.
From intelligent housing developments to Texan retreats, here are five structures that have changed the landscape in their part of the world.
Half a century has passed since man first set foot on the moon. Museum of Fine Arts Houston celebrates with an exhibition of 40 photographs.
Must-see exhibitions for the start of August look back to reflect upon the present. Portraiture and intriguing cityscapes document a world in flux.
Top titles for August 2019 span eco-conscious design, light installation and street photography – interpreting the modern world through creativity.
Issue 90, entitled ‘Living for Today’, is a response to our times, covering innovative upcycled plastic whilst questioning alternative truths in the media.
Through three rooms of video installation, John Akomfrah’s new show at BALTIC is complex and ambitious, examining the borders of film.
Photographed across four years, ‘The Canary & The Hammer’ by Lisa Barnard, shows how our dependence on gold was born.
“History is the art of highlighting whatever is hiding in plain sight.” Hito Steyerl’s installations reveal and question hidden power structures.
RIBA furthers its conversation on how architecture can influence arts, music, film and theatre with ‘The Architects Underground’.
Next Generation is an annual collaboration with London College of Communication, featuring seven new talents entering the photographic sphere.
The renowned Dutch fair returns, providing a space for photographers that are testing uneven ground through bold, abstracted compositions.
Examining the use of photography to question the nature of accepted truths and subjective realities, the images sit between fact and fiction.
Picking up on small strips of colour within manufactured locations, Kyle Jeffers builds up textures through costume, props and layouts.
Studio Brasch works across fine art and conceptual projects, as well as brand campaigns, visual communication and direction.
Sculpture’s new talents consider the boundaries of the medium and its environmental impact, working with data and electricity, metal and sound.
Kyle Thompson produces photographs that depict feelings of solitude and loneliness in today’s hyper-digitised climate.