Tangible Illumination
A new exhibition showcases Anthony McCall’s light installations, creating forms which are at once volumetric and ephemeral.
A new exhibition showcases Anthony McCall’s light installations, creating forms which are at once volumetric and ephemeral.
In 2016, a “World’s Top 100 Artists” list included only 22 women. London Art Fair addresses issues of representation through Dialogues.
Jon Setter’s images feature geometric fragments, eradicating all structural complexities and conveying a simplified, poetic expression of surrounding spaces.
A retrospective tracks the career of Balthasar Burkhard, an artist who transforms two-dimensional images into monumental pieces.
The average American spends 93% of their life indoors. Lucas Foglia investigates the relationship between society and nature.
Liverpool is undergoing a period of urban transformation. Tom Wood commemorates an integral part of the community’s quotidian.
Stephen Shore’s Uncommon Places traverses the American vernacular landscape with an objective eye.
Swiss photographer Willy Spiller’s chronicles of life in L.A and New York foreground the absurdity of the quotidian.
Chou Ching Hui’s unflinching satirical eye is key to the success of a series compositions, providing an alternate view of reality.
In 1951, Elliot Erwitt was drafted into the US Army. Carrying a Leica camera, the practitioner began crafting an enduring legacy.
Structures define the everyday human experience. The selection for 6-7 December examines the varied manifestations of the term.
In Ivan Mikhailov’s city, rockets are reinvented for use in children’s playgrounds. The disused icons are a subject for an exhibition.
Guggenheim’s Art and China after 1989 brings together works which define contemporary Chinese experience in universal terms.
Lori Nix / Kathleen Gerber creates fictional urban landscapes that function as dystopias and alternate histories.
Following a two-year redevelopment project, Kettle’s Yard brings together 38 diverse practitioners for its opening exhibition.
Michael Wagner focuses on the concepts of identity and celebrity, with each piece exploring the allure of the person behind the composition.
Alex Da Corte: Harvest Moon is the first in a series of new window installations at New Museum, New York.
Dino Kuznik’s images offer a psychological plane of reflection and organisation, which rely on simplicity, and at times, humour.
Focusing on hazy, in-between spaces, Andria Darius Pancrazi’s works blend between light and darkness through pastel skylines and clean structures.