Cultural Reflections
Sooni Taraporevala’s close relationship with her home-city, Mumbai, is depicted in the 30 images selected for Home in the City at the Whitworth.
Sooni Taraporevala’s close relationship with her home-city, Mumbai, is depicted in the 30 images selected for Home in the City at the Whitworth.
Adam Pendleton’s shot him in the face is a new collection currently on display at BALTIC, Gateshead, the largest exhibition of the American artist to date.
Michael Hoppen Gallery examines Harry Gruyaert’s innovative use of colour photography to create chromatic parallels across disparate locations.
Paul Kasmin Gallery’s Farewell Transmission is a two-venue showcase of sculptures by Roxy Paine, spanning the spaces at 293 and 297 Tenth Avenue.
Hauser & Wirth pays homage to photographer August Sander’s oeuvre through a display of 40 rare large-scale portraits made between 1910 and 1931.
NMWA, Washington DC, considers the concepts of spectacle and transcendence; Revival looks at how female artists achieve emotional connections,
Extraordinary showcases the innovative work of graduands from Leeds College of Art. The college’s buildings become large-scale exhibition spaces this June.
Our 5 To See for 2-4 June brings us into the summer season: The Whitworth challenges borders and Sprüth Magers rejoices in a dynamic flurry of light.
Artist Victoria Lucas draws inspiration from JG Ballard’s Concrete Island in a show that interrogates the constructs of culture and gender representation.
Our June / July issue considers the current state of flux; in this age of digital alienation, it’s important to make time for reflection.
Mónica de Miranda is drawn back to Angola’s modernist architecture to consider the multiple geographies and histories of the city of Luanda.
Filled with abandoned roads, scattered flowers and brilliant skylines – Western Cape and WHiT NY are amongst the latest colourful series by Jimmy Marble.
Romain Thiery offers a visual sense of renewal to universal structures through an attention to texture, light and the notion of absence.
Serbian artist Nikola Olic reimagines environments as disorientating and dimensionless, inviting viewers to examine urban and decontextualised structures.
Reflecting the notion of discovery, Jungle provides a bright, digitalised arena for uncanny figures, each an active participant in a number of settings.
German photographer Andreas Gefeller questions perception and truth, exploiting the possibilities of photography to highlight that which is overlooked.
Mudun مدن Urban Cultures in Transit explores four MENA cities from a micro-perspective, highlighting the relationship of inhabitants to their surroundings.
Ritratti di living provides an emotional backdrop for the lifestyles advertised, combining minimalist design with voyeuristic angles.
photo basel is an opportunity for visitors to the city to explore the dynamic scenes that are being captured by an array of leading photographers.