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York Minster and Aesthetica have teamed up to launch two £10,000 commissions, recognising bold new voices in sound and contemporary art.
York Minster and Aesthetica have teamed up to launch two £10,000 commissions, recognising bold new voices in sound and contemporary art.
Fondazione Brescia Musei shows Joel Meyerowitz’s pioneering street photography, highlighting his innovative use of colour and rich urban portraits.
The Box Plymouth’s retrospective of Jyll Bradley highlights a varied and distinguished career that considers identity, light, nature and queerness.
For Bradford 2025 UK City of Culture, experiential collective Marshmallow Laser Feast turns its visionary lens towards our place in the universe.
Submit to one of the UK’s most prestigious awards for creative talent, celebrating boundary-pushing work across a range of media. Win £10,000 & more.
Rob Blanken’s abstract photography uncovers the hidden world of crystals, offering an insight into how the patterns are mirrored in the human body.
The top exhibitions to see this May bring emerging artists to the fore, spotlight overlooked creatives and offer new perspectives on well established names.
Lawrence Lek’s immersive installation presents a vision of the future where the boundaries between humans, machines and AI have been blurred.
Zed Nelson’s book, ‘The Anthropocene Illusion’, shines a light on the ways that humanity tries to recreate nature despite environmental destruction.
NSU Art Museum presents a collection of iconic duo Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s work, highlighting their creative process and large-scale installations.
‘Beach of Dreams’ brings eight new commissions to coastal locations around the UK, working with communities to create art that celebrates the sea.
In a time of accelerating climate anxiety and ecological crisis, Kew Gardens invites us to pause, look closely and reconnect with the natural world.
Photographer Nadia Attura transforms typical desert landscapes into surreal, dreamlike locations, inviting audiences to step into a technicolour paradise.
Tate Modern’s new exhibition of Korean artist Do Ho Suh’s large-scale, fabric installations considers the question: is home is a place, an idea or a feeling?
These five new books, released this spring, reveal the history and people behind some of the world’s most iconic and ambitious architecture projects.
Hundreds of designers and changemakers come together from around the world to share ideas, confront challenges and inspire audiences via design.
Art Fund announce the shortlist for Museum of the Year 2025: Beamish Museum, Compton Verney, Chapters, Golden Thread Gallery and Perth Museum.
In a digital world that’s saturated by an endless flow of imagery, Fondazione Prada looks back and surveys typological photography in 20th-century Germany.
Fotomuseum Den Haag’s latest display spotlights 26 pioneering Japanese women photographers, offering fresh perspectives on society and culture.
Larry Achiampong’s new book, ‘If It Don’t Exist, Build It’, reflects on a remarkable 20 years of artistic practice that examines class, gender and identity.
Comprising more than 50 photographs and spanning two decades of practice, this body of work traces a visual constellation of life, decay, memory and desire.
Liz West’s captivating exhibition turns Mercer Art Gallery into a playful, luminous realm of constantly shifting light, reflections and saturated colour.
Horst Kistner’s meticulously staged photography transports viewers to a surreal world, where typical travel images are transformed into something new.
Today, the four artists who have been shortlisted for the Turner Prize 2025 have been announced: Nnena Kalu, Rene Matić, Mohammed Sami and Zadie Xa.
Photo London returns for the tenth year, showcasing the scope of today’s talent and inviting visitors to consider the future possibilities of lens-based art.
The exhibition of exhibitions is now on view at Berlin’s Gropius Bau, journeying through more than 200 artworks and six decades of experimentation.
This World Earth Day, Aesthetica brings together ten works of art that are driving important conversations around environmental issues and climate crisis.
Mackenzie Calle’s photographic series reimagines NASA’s history, challenging queer exclusion and envisioning a future for LGBTQIA+ astronauts.
A new book from Thames and Hudson shines a light on the ways that colonialism and racial injustice are inextricably tied up with ongoing the climate crisis.
In a show spanning from 1969 to the present day, Serpentine Galleries in London brings together Penone’s sculptures, installations and outdoor work.
Photographer Frank Zhang’s portraits challenge traditional definitions of ‘high fashion’ and celebrate the varied worldwide influences on the industry.
Mandy Barker’s cyanotypes are created from waste fabrics collected along the British coastline, revealing the horrifying extent of environmental damage.
Diary of Flowers explores how artists work together to build worlds, collaborating with communities and fellow creatives to imagine new ways of being.
The Sony World Photography Awards showcases a selection of works from finalists, highlighting diverse achievements in contemporary lens-based art.
The American modernist artist and advocate, best-known for her signature hanging looped-wire sculptures, is celebrated in a major SFMOMA show.
Indonesian photographer Hardi Budi brings a surreal, playful perspective to the everyday, showing what is possible when the imagination is allowed to run free.
The Photography Show returns this April, placing emerging artists and innovative new galleries in dialogue with renowned names and institutions.
Technology is advancing at breakneck speed. Mori Art Museum offers a compelling glimpse into a near future where digital and physical realities blur.
Whitechapel Gallery presents the pioneering career of artist Donald Rodney, who created works that interrogated race, illness and Black experience.
Lachlan Turczan’s latest work explores light, water, and sound, creating immersive environments that challenge and transform human perception.
Photographer Steve Madden’s abstract images capture commuters on London’s iconic red buses, behind the steamed up windows on rainy days.
Ellen Kooi celebrates the beauty of the Dutch landscape, whilst showing the consequences of humankind’s current treatment of the planet.
Robert Nzaou’s photography showcase Congolese traditions and history, such as food and fashion, reframing them in colourful and playful portraits.
Ed Atkins is known for his computer-generated videos, which draw attention to the disconnect between the digital world and human connection.
Sarah Meyohas is widely known for works that make invisible systems visible. Now, the artist presents an exciting new piece of installation art at Desert X.
Claudio Dell’Osa presents cross-section views of Mediterranean fruits and vegetables: asparagus, chicory, fennel, parsley, peppers and strawberry.
Images by Bevil Templeton-Smith make use of the microscope to document sweeping abstract shapes and colours found in everyday household objects.
Thirza Schaap’s sculptures are constructed with plastic collected on beaches, raising awareness of the urgent pollution crisis through visual juxtapositions.
Carter Baran captures surreal, hazy images that are lit by an eerie glow, making audiences pause and wonder: what’s going to happen next in the story?
This issue celebrates photographers challenging boundaries, transforming the impossible into visual reality through innovation, emotion and perception.