5 to See: This Weekend
From otherworldly installations and futuristic technologies to suburban landscapes and street photography, Aesthetica selects must-see shows.
From otherworldly installations and futuristic technologies to suburban landscapes and street photography, Aesthetica selects must-see shows.
Noémie Goudal takes viewers on a labyrinthine journey devoid of time and place to question natural surrounding phenomena.
‘Architecture of London’ at Guildhall Art Gallery takes an extensive look at a continually transforming city whilst capturing its buildings.
Final week to submit to the Aesthetica Art Prize, offering a key platform for new and established artists to enter work onto the world stage.
The Richard Learoyd exhibition at Fundación MAPFRE is a timely refuge from the constant flow of digital imagery in the outside world.
It’s commonly believed that we’re living in the Anthropocene. ‘New Nordic Houses’ reflects on our relationship with nature and ways to coexist.
As a set designer, Serene Khan’s focus is on narrative, telling stories through composition and the tangibility of objects.
Fact and fiction. Changing cities. Ecological crisis. This week’s must-see shows offer visions of a world in flux – and of the past, present and future.
How does a place live within us long after we have left and what traces of our passage remain there? Phillips Collection looks at the refugee crisis.
From digital works and video to immersive experiences and large-scale sculptures, these installations have changed the art world.
The annual ING Discerning Eye exhibition returns to Mall Galleries, London, in November, bringing the importance of small artworks into focus.
Chicago Architecture Biennial collaborates with local communities, looking at how the built environment can create an inclusive future.
Luce Lapadula is interested in the mastering of natural light. Through sweeping grey skylines, the models become muses of nature.
Aesthetica selects five green buildings around the world. These structures transform the urban landscape, looking towards sustainable future.
Ricardo Bofill is one of the 20th century’s most unique architects. A new monograph from gestalten compiles some of his greatest works.
Seminal portraits, stylised images and thought-provoking documentary photography. Top exhibitions navigate memory, history and identity.
Photographs by Markéta Luskačová, taken on the North East coast of England in the late 1970s, will go on display at the Martin Parr Foundation.
‘Women Photographing the Landscape’ at Flowers Gallery, London, explores tensions between genre and gender through the lens.
From intelligent housing developments to Texan retreats, here are five structures that have changed the landscape in their part of the world.