5 to See: This Weekend
Must-see exhibitions running 11-12 August push the boundaries of art by questioning media imagery and using drones to replicate nature.
Must-see exhibitions running 11-12 August push the boundaries of art by questioning media imagery and using drones to replicate nature.
Paul Graham’s The Whiteness of the Whale reveals class divisions in the US through a thoughtful approach to photography.
Daniel Boudinet’s body of work traverses the nocturnal city, revealing a sense of mystery and surrealism in the urban landscape.
Aesthetica’s selection of US exhibitions open this season investigates timely themes of surveillance, unseen sites and voyeuristic city scenes.
We speak with Sydney-based Harriet Moutsopoulos, a collage artist working under the name Lexicon Love; she seeks out the unexpected connections between humour and tragedy.
Helping to shape an understanding of the interwar years in the US, Dorothea Lange’s deeply human images of urban situations are strikingly poignant.
Photographer Francesca Woodman considered Italy her second home. A new exhibition considers the country’s profound influence.
On display at Helmond Museum, a series of 90 large-scale colour photographs by Carl de Keyzer offer rare insights into life in North Korea.
Evoking a sense of silence, the photography of Trine Søndergaard explores both physical and personal interior spaces.
Featuring work by Edmund Clark, In The Still of the Night at Fotohof, Salzburg, examines public and private worlds through photography.
Aesthetica highlights five key art events opening in 2018, offering unique platforms for discovery, conversation and collaboration.
Andrea Clarke is wholly interested in the spaces that surround us, questioning the confines that they offer and the anonymity attached to home.
Tony Vaccaro’s body of work, celebrated in a show at Getty Images Gallery, offers an all-encompassing view of life in the 20th century.
Moving into August, this week’s top exhibitions reflect upon life in cities around the world through bold photography and installation.
Technology is the signifier of our times, with people checking smartphones every 12 minutes. The 2018 Aesthetica Art Prize responds to this.
A photography show at Museum Ludwig, Cologne, questions the boundaries between fine art and documentary genres.
Curated by the Michael Reid Gallery in Berlin, the Australian Embassy in Paris showcases 22 leading figures in contemporary photography.
Unseen Amsterdam highlights the latest developments in fine art photography. Aesthetica collates a list of 2018’s must-see artists.
Influenced by humanity’s fascination with the nature of the everyday, Romain Veillon’s photographs inhabit a world of testimony and nostalgia.