5 to See: This Weekend
Exhibitions running 20-21 January offer viewers the opportunity to reflect on the modern world, building platforms for introspection.
Exhibitions running 20-21 January offer viewers the opportunity to reflect on the modern world, building platforms for introspection.
In an age of gratuitous image editing and fake news, it is hard to distinguish artificiality from reality. Alex Prager investigates this confusion.
Structures define the everyday human experience. The selection for 6-7 December examines the varied manifestations of the term.
A recently opened exhibition of Monika Sosnowska at Hauser & Wirth, London, titled Structural Exercises, examines underlying layers of buildings.
Straddling the physical and the digital, modern life is increasingly hard to pin down. Louisiana Museum of Modern Art explores what it means to be alive today.
Marguerite Humeau’s Echoes transfigure Tate Britain’s gallery space into a mesmerising yellow environment. that combines sound and sculpture.
Alex Da Corte’s BAD LAND transforms the architectural space of Josh Lilley Gallery, London, into a colourful three-dimensional film set.
Concertina is a collection of structures by Richard Wentworth and Apparata that explore the social potential of art spaces and transform the gallery.
SCOPE Miami Beach is recognised worldwide for its forward-thinking approach and focus on emerging practitioners and galleries.
At YSP, Wakefield, the Underground Gallery and its external concourse are entirely re-characterised by Alfredo Jaar’s seminal installations.
28-29 October. This week’s selection explores the wider, experiential concept of space through a multitude of different mediums.
Throughout April, experimental practitioners spent two weeks living and practicing in Yorkshire Sculpture Park.
Nathan Coley’s The Same For Everyone is playful yet profound, foregrounding Danish values whilst evoking the beguiling lights of a fairground.
21-22 October. This week’s selections question realities and re-establish norms through photography, installation and new design.
The role of artists in representing contemporary conflict and the global response to 9/11 is examined at Imperial War Museum, London.
After a 20-month, £3.8 million redevelopment, Hatton Gallery, Newcastle, opens Pioneers of Pop, a show focusing on the work of Richard Hamilton.
Nasher Sculpture Center announces Theaster Gates as the recipient of the 2018 Nasher Prize. Gates’ projects cull from the material history of a place.
Building upon an established creative legacy, the year ahead at YSP is set to feature ambitious interventions in the park’s historic landscape.
Tomás Saraceno creates a site-specific sculpture for Baltimore Museum of Art. It comprises clusters of iridescent modules held in place by an intricate web.