Aesthetica Future Now Symposium
Future Now provides an imaginative platform for attendees to consider the arts ecosystem within a broader social, political and professional context.
Future Now provides an imaginative platform for attendees to consider the arts ecosystem within a broader social, political and professional context.
The top picks for 24-25 March engage with art history, reinventing traditional approaches through photography and installation.
Work by James Casebere features as part of an exhibition exploring the relationship between photography and architecture.
Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris, revisits Ettore Spalletti’s monochromatic, minimalist panels with What is the most profound in a man, is the skin.
Practitioners featured at The Other Art Fair explore and subvert the everyday through new and surprising methods.
By 2050, 70% of the world’s population will live in urbanised surroundings. Current exhibitions embrace, escape and offer solutions to this issue.
A new exhibition celebrates the British seaside experience through the lenses of Tony Ray-Jones, David Hurn and Simon Roberts and Martin Parr.
Czech practitioner Jaromír Funke pushed the limits of photography through an experimental use of light and shadow.
A strong sense of narrative permeates Robert Frank’s oeuvre. An exhibition explores work created in Paris, England, Wales and the US
Only 30% of artists represented by commercial galleries are women. Exhibitors at Photo London foreground a strong female presence.
Monty Kaplan fluctuates between modes of working. Colour is rendered as an emotive backdrop, carrying a sense of joy and woeful nostalgia.
An exhibition at Museum Franz Gertsch, Burgdorf, tracks the intercontinental journeys of German photographer Axel Hütte.
The average American spends 7% of their life outdoors. YSP tracks a the work of a charity offering dialogues between societies and nature.
Stéphanie Roland reates evocative compositions which are often influenced by science and technology.
Positioning the work of leading 20th and 21st century practitioners alongside emerging artists, a show celebrates photography’s legacy.
Photographer Andrew Moore’s oeuvre comprises evocative images of architectural landscapes in Cuba, Russia and Detroit.
Anne Collier interrogates popular culture in order to investigate gender stereotypes, challenging outdated notions of female identity.
The selection for 17-18 March celebrates the past, present and future of creative practice through performance, installation and images.
The Historic Dockyard Chatham hosts Powerful Tides: 400 years of Chatham and the Sea, an exhibition that showcases works inspired by water.