Aesthetica Archives: Jimmy Marble
Jimmy Marble’s first camera was an iPhone 3 – it “helped me to get over my fears about photography.” Aesthetica surveys five years’ work.
Jimmy Marble’s first camera was an iPhone 3 – it “helped me to get over my fears about photography.” Aesthetica surveys five years’ work.
Federica Beretta, Director at Opera Gallery London, discusses managing the gallery in a time of mass-closures and isolation.
Olafur Eliasson experiments with installation, public projects, photography and film to explore perception and our relationship with the world.
Aesthetica selects five new books across photography, architecture and sculpture. Stay home and read about seminal names in visual art.
At a time when museums and galleries are closed, we must find new ways of connecting to the arts. One such example is Dior Talks – a new podcast.
Aesthetica explores 10 art movements to know, looking at key artists across a range of genres – including installation, minimalism and video.
Inspired by a new podcast, Aesthetica highlights five pioneering women sculptors who have redefined the medium through materials.
Santiago Perez explores the concept of relationships and the romantic gaze. False eyelashes point upwards from a dewy plane of skin.
As Tate’s galleries are currently shut, Aesthetica highlights five online collections to enjoy and explore from your home.
Johannesburg-based photographer, Aart Verrips, has captured the attention of the South African fashion scene through a distinctive style.
Photography has never been so present in our lives. The Aesthetica Art Prize celebrates image-makers who are exploring today’s complex world.
The April / May edition is titled ‘Resilience.’ This issue is about ideas and innovation, standing together through cultural collaboration.
Whilst the show at Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg is closed, Aesthetica speaks to Barbara Kasten about materiality, abstraction and creative perseverance.
“The photography I most respect pulls something out of the ether of nothingness.” Paul Graham’s everyday snapshots connect us to the past.
Ismail Zaidy’s images explore distance between family members – the emotional estrangement and tensions that can cloud our experiences.
A monumental show spans the last century of design, examining changing interiors and what they indicate about how society lives, works and consumes.
New European photographers are part of a vital reconstruction of visual narratives, exploring themes of overconsumption, surveillance and liberation.
What does it mean to be an activist? How can we use social media? In the age of Instagram, Houston Center for Photography considers visual identities.
Design is systematic and methodical; it is creative and collaborative. Studio Gang considers the kinds of buildings we need for the near-future.