Multi-faceted Collections
Identities overlap and intersect: no one is defined solely by their race, gender, class or nationality, but rather by a combination of complex factors. This…
Identities overlap and intersect: no one is defined solely by their race, gender, class or nationality, but rather by a combination of complex factors. This…
Photography exhibitions opening at the start of June offer encounters with the natural environment, testing the limits of representation.
Celebrating 100 years since the birth of Irving Penn, an extensive retrospective of the photographer’s portfolio is presented at C/O Berlin.
In a fast-developing visual and digital world, graduates offer unique, forward-thinking perspectives on a globalised landscape.
The first UK solo exhibition of German photographer, Olaf Otto Becker, opens at Huxley-Parlour Gallery, London.
Openstudio Architects’ Swartberg House is the subject of a five-channel video installation at La Biennale di Venezia.
Art Basel’s photography selection includes key voices, raising awareness of ongoing social, political and ecological questions.
Photographer Jean Molitor has been tracking the legacy of Bauhaus since 2009, capturing the movement’s bold aesthetic.
Exploring the timely boundary between truth and fiction, Thomas Wrede’s works offer a surreal reflection on the fidelity of photography.
Sabine Weiss and Fred Herzog articulate the post-war urban landscape through a bold use of contrast, holding up a mirror to society.
Fjordenhus, the first building realised by Olafur Eliasson and his architectural team, builds on a socially and conceptually responsive practice.
Mary Mattingly looks into the wider effects of mining and chemical cultivation, investigating supply chains through a critical approach.
Combining strong geometric patterns, clean lines and bold colours, Leonardo Pucci’s body of work, documents the urban landscape.
During travels throughout Europe, the US, Asia and North Africa, Otto Reitsperger captured the sea illuminated only by moonlight.
Chris Dorley-Brown’s hyperreal works capture the breadth of contemporary experience, documenting street corners in East London.
2018’s first Magnum Square Print Sale explores the theme of Freedom, investigating its definition and legacy through influential photographers.
Museum of London brings together portraiture, documentary, conceptual photography and film to draw a striking portrait of the nocturnal city.
Having worked as a freelance illustrator for years, Recchia now focuses on the banality of everyday life, looking at the forms of the urban environment.
Emily Shur’s Super Extra Natural!, documents the American photographer’s time in Japan, offering personal reflections on a unique landscape.