Brandt and Moore
Henry Moore met photographer Bill Brandt during WWII. A new publication cements the artists’ legacies as British pioneers.
Henry Moore met photographer Bill Brandt during WWII. A new publication cements the artists’ legacies as British pioneers.
Art has a proven positive impact on our mental health. Wysing Arts Centre invites artists to place works in unexpected locations.
We are living at a time of fast-paced technological development. Cao Fei’s digital art treads the boundaries between physical and virtual worlds.
Viviane Sassen’s ‘Venus & Mercury’ is a photography series is inspired by accounts of the French royal court in the 17th and 18th centuries.
Trees play an essential role in our lives. A new exhibition at Hayward Gallery highlights the importance of the world’s forests through art.
Emmanuelle Moureaux’s ‘Slices of Time’ is a rainbow installation that responds to the Greenwich Peninsula – encouraging audiences to reflect on what is happening in the here and now.
Each day, more than three billion images are shared on social networks. Jeu de Paume examines the production of these photographs.
Photographer Lottie Davies recreates the fictional journey of William Henry Quinn – a character deeply affected by the events of WWII.
Jamal Nxedlana’s images are rooted in an Afro-Surrealist style, “creating an alternative image repertoire to tackle biased views of Africa.”
How do designers shape the way we understand the world around us, as we tackle the climate emergency, political tensions and digital ethics?
Expanding the dimensions of traditional photography, Haser uses paper-folding techniques, collage and mixed media to blur distinctions.
Data plays a huge role in our lives today. Emmanuelle Moureaux creates an immersive installation that assesses how numbers are related to memory.
After half of Claudia Andujar’s family were killed in WWII, she dedicated five decades to photographing and raising awareness of the Yanomami people.
Alex Fruehmann’s dark and dramatic expanses immerse the viewer in the hyperreal, inviting them to revel in the negative space.
Diane Arbus revolutionised portraiture, producing distinctive, direct images that celebrated diversity and humanity. A new show opens at AGO.
Mirror images. Checker-board clothing. Identical models. Twins is an immersion into the eccentric and playful world of photographic duo LM Chabot.
Olga Urbanek’s photographs are clever and considered juxtapositions of form, colour and texture, placing individuals in unexpected scenarios.
Cornelia Parker has spent the last 40 years making installations that make sense of the volatile, violent and precarious world in which we live.
Aleksander Małachowski works at the intersection of photography, geometry and symmetry. His minimal images focus on the spaces that we inhabit.