Fascinated by Flowers
Our love for flowers has endured for millennia. They have become intertwined with human experience. A new book explores this through photography.
Our love for flowers has endured for millennia. They have become intertwined with human experience. A new book explores this through photography.
New York’s Museum of Modern Art presents two photography exhibitions in tandem, exploring the diverse perspectives of women behind the lens.
Wuthipol Ujathammarat’s vibrant abstract images present the buildings, floodlights, security cameras and fire escapes of Bangkok as never before.
Florian W. Mueller abstracts perceptions of the city, inspired by the intersecting lines and colours used by Expressionist painter Lyonel Feininger.
Andrea Alkalay’s Landscape on Landscape series examines the radical act of observation through the poetic and political potential of photographs.
Anne Mason-Hoerter celebrates the vivid colour and unique details of plant specimens, from valerian roots and blue thistles to wild garlic.
The notion of “seeing oneself” has become integral to Sharon Walters, a London-based artist whose work centres around celebrating Black women.
Driven by research, Jasmina Cibic creates multimedia artworks that probe how nations have wielded “soft power” through cultural diplomacy.
This issue captures the current zeitgeist, and is a reminder of how much the past forms part of the present. Dive into our preview of the new issue.
The expansive new exhibition at National Gallery of Victoria, titled Who Are You, considers “portraiture in Australia across time and media.”
Virtual events have increased in popularity by an estimated 35% since 2020. Given this increased appetite for digital, how can AR transform museums?
Ingrid Pollard unpicks complex notions of British identity whilst examining the relationship between human bodies, geology and deep time.
Artist and activist Poulomi Basu’s current exhibition discusses the need to speak up to create a world where women have true freedom and equal choice.
Cornelia Parker is best known for transforming everyday objects to address issues of violence, human rights and environmental disaster.
Serena Dzenis’s pastel-toned images question the idea of making humans multiplanetary, transforming everyday structures into otherworldly scenes.
Andreas Mühe is one of Germany’s best-known artists, recognised for his explorations of sociological, historical and political themes.
Katie Paterson condenses subjects of vast scope and significance into singular artworks – navigating the the geological history of our planet.
Refik Anadol is a pioneer in the aesthetics of machine intelligence, creating immersive data sculptures and paintings to make invisible information visible.
“I love the way an image can escape its original tether and move through time to become something else.” Roy Mehta’s photographs are on view in London.