Fading Dreams
Both a documentary photographer and cultural commentator, Phil Bergerson has spent the past 20 years constructing a visual historical record of the depleting remnants of the American Dream.
Both a documentary photographer and cultural commentator, Phil Bergerson has spent the past 20 years constructing a visual historical record of the depleting remnants of the American Dream.
For Those in Peril follows the aftermath of a fishing accident that claimed five lives in a remote Scottish village.
A haunting record, Abandoned City isn’t just about capturing the vibe of the cities left behind; it’s concerned with working out what loneliness means.
The astonishing re-staging of one of Germany’s most internationally renowned contemporary artists is playful, bewildering, enticing and hypnotic.
Women Photographers is a definitive collection, which details 60 biographies of the most influential female photographers of the 19th century to the present day.
Mixing precise colour palettes with beautiful settings, Kourtney Roy regularly appears as her own subject, taking on different personas in a myriad of contexts.
Opera, and indeed classical music generally, is healthy and thriving. However, there is still a need to attract the attention of the younger generation.
Raw, naked emotion remains through Strangers, a collection of songs about real people and real life situations with each number having a distinct sense of place.
Humorous and bright, this is a joyful exploration of Dalí’s world and gives intriguing and comprehensive insights into his personal development and his art.
Spending two years as curator of the Frieze Foundation, Sarah McCrory is familiar with commissioning public art. She steps into the role of Director for the 6th Glasgow International festival.
Denis’ latest offering is littered with abusers and victims. The cause of their woes appears to be Laporte, a rich businessman, who becomes the focus of a thirst for retribution.
Berlin-based Denitza Todorova’s hip-hop-layered lyrics don’t waste time on metaphors, instead they are clear and concise with lashings of attitude.
Fire in the Blood tells the story of how Western pharmaceutical companies and governments blocked access to low cost anti-retroviral drugs in the global South, causing millions of unnecessary deaths.
Each song on this record is beautifully crafted, resembling a soundscape more than a traditional piece of music.
Vijay Iyer’s Mutations is a montage of piano, electronics and strings. Constructed from fragmented melodies, the instrumental songs are ever-evolving.
Art & Ecology Now is an extensive survey of nature’s impact upon art’s involvement and responsibility in saving the planet.
A celebration of adolescence in all its acne-ridden, rebellious glory, Matt Wolf’s Teenage is a compelling joyride through the evolution of the teenager.
Less a consideration of the inflexibility of faith than a portrait of desperate women, Fill the Void is a brave film.
“To ride in New York”, the introduction informs us, “is to have a level of authority over an otherwise untamed landscape.”