10 to See: Summer Shows
This summer’s must-see solo exhibitions, group shows and biennales demonstrate the UK’s dynamic artistic landscape.
This summer’s must-see solo exhibitions, group shows and biennales demonstrate the UK’s dynamic artistic landscape.
The first UK retrospective of work by American photographer Dorothea Lange opens at Barbican Centre, London, this summer.
Jacques Henri Lartigue: Life in Color offers personal insight into the photographer’s wider oeuvre and the vividness of the world.
An interest in colour, shape and light defines Franco Fontana’s practice, investigating the possibilities of photography.
Constructing a series of neon utopias, Reine Paradis’ surreal images celebrate the perplexities of the contemporary Los Angeles landscape.
Mark Wallinger’s recently opened public artwork reflects upon notions of justice and democracy, offering an immersive experience.
Bringing together London’s leading galleries, Mayfair Art Weekend celebrates the diversity of London’s artistic landscape.
As part of arts festival Rockaway!, Museum of Modern Art presents Yayoi Kusama’s site-specific installation of Narcissus Garden.
Delving into the formal structure of the built environment, Michael Wolf’s practice uncovers the complexities of life in the metropolis.
Taken between 1974-1976, Langdon Clay’s atmospheric images of cars in New York City capture the aesthetic of an era.
Aesthetica Art Prize alumnus Sara Morawetz’s latest project, étalon, is a study of both the length and the lengths taken by science.
The first American survey of work by John Akomfrah investigates the legacy of colonialism, climate change and the experiences of migrants.
Katrina Palmer’s new piece, opening at Yorkshire Sculpture Park, acknowledges a group of pioneering women during WWI.
Using infrared techniques, artist and photographer Sanne De Wilde captures Pingelap and Pohnpei, islands in Micronesia.
Candida Höfer: Portraits of Spaces depicts empty public places, presenting cultural institutions as devoid of human presence.
Exploring the interactions between individuals and the 21st century landscape, must-see exhibitions unearth the uncanny in the everyday.
Reshaping our understanding of industrial landscapes, David Maisel’s Atlas demonstrates the physical impact of human activities.
Inspired by the studio spaces of Luis Barragan, and Ricardo Bofill’s La Muralla Roja, Massimo Colonna’s images provide an arena for uncanny movement.
Marco Miehling, winner of the 2017 Artists’ Collecting Society Studio Award, creates site specific, spatially & historically responsive works.