5 To See: This Weekend
21-22 October. This week’s selections question realities and re-establish norms through photography, installation and new design.
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.
6-8 October. This week’s selection comprises world-renowned galleries, exhibitions and events with the larger goal of connection and collaboration.
Amongst the dizzying diversity of contemporary art on view, the greater themes pulsing through this year’s Frieze London touch upon global politics.
Future Shock examines our decisive moment in history and looks to the challenges and possibilities of the future through the work of 10 artists.
The complex military and political history of the 18th century Blenheim Palace both inspires and complements Jenny Holzer’s new works.
Emmanuelle Moureaux’s I am here has won the 2017 Aesthetica Art Prize People’s Choice Award, an installation crafted from 300 colour cut-outs.
Tate Modern’s signature series of site-specific installations in the vast former industrial space of the Turbine Hall continues with SUPERFLEX.
30 September – 1 October. These unique shows utilise the constraints of two and three-dimensional forms in order to recreate sensory experiences.
Swab Barcelona brings together galleries from around the world to showcase young, emerging talent in contemporary art.
Frieze Masters returns this October for its sixth edition, featuring highlights from the last 6,000 years of art history through more than 130 dealers.
The 15th edition of Frieze London takes place next month, an event with more than 160 galleries that showcases the ambitious visions of contemporaries.
The Bowes Museum have two parallel exhibitions open this summer, both of which attempt to open up perspectives about nature and create an interactive museum…
The first Artists Collecting Society (ACS) Studio prize offers a current student or recent graduate the opportunity to cover the costs of a studio in the UK.
I am you, you are too at the Walker Art Center explores troubling phenomena through a diverse range of works from the institution’s collection.