Illusory Voyages
Constituting an imaginative reinterpretation of historical eras and literary masterpieces, Tagliavini explores idiosyncratic themes and characters.
Constituting an imaginative reinterpretation of historical eras and literary masterpieces, Tagliavini explores idiosyncratic themes and characters.
For Alicia Savage, self-portraiture is a means to explore her past and present, including the literal and metaphorical journeys that she takes.
The spirit of pilgrimage is evoked in a striking new performance, Songs of the Wanderers, which looks at tradition through contemporary eyes.
A major exhibition opens at Tate Modern, creating a conversation between the dangers of domesticity and the depths of identity today.
Pervading Joshua Jordan’s charismatic works are figures who observe and undermine the borders in which they exist.
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, explores ideas of community as an intrinsic part of the aesthetics of contemporary Japanese architects.
Photo London spans decades, genres and use of both analogue and digital methods, showcasing an evolution of the artistic practice of photography.
Heroes is a photographic project that started in Italy in 2013. It is about craft shops and artisans that are disappearing.
Photographer Christopher Payne originally trained as an architect and has dedicated himself to the exploration of America’s industrial heritage.
Journalist Ellen Köhrer and expert Magdalena Schaffrin produce the first fashion publication that illustrates how green has become the new black.
Californian Amy Harrity’s subjects are rendered universal by their relative anonymity, frozen in the most human of moments and postures.
Suzanne Moxhay’s work developed out of an interest in the constructed domain of film, where the natural and the artificial merge to immerse the viewer.
An exhibition of women photographers from Iran and the Arab world offers insight into the complex identities of a region that is often misunderstood.
Can fashion create a better future? A new show surveys the inspiring possibilities that emerge when creativity and technology join forces.
Lighting transforms the spaces we inhabit, and as technology makes our homes ever more responsive, a new book takes stock of the possibilities.
Pioneer of street photography Saul Leiter captured city life in mid-20th century New York City with an inimitable sense of composition, humour and grace.
Michigan-born Eric Ogden draws inspiration from the landscape and inhabitants of his native Midwest, looking for unexpected angles on the familiar.
Roger Frei operates at the confluence of the public and private realm, capturing the functionalism of vivid, mass-manufactured structures.
Themes of freedom proliferate in Olivia Malone’s projects exploring the transition from the awkwardness of youth to self-assured adulthood.