Manufactured Sensations
Mária Švarbová’s Swimming Pool fills places of recreation with a sense of emptiness and static stillness.
Mária Švarbová’s Swimming Pool fills places of recreation with a sense of emptiness and static stillness.
Holden Luntz Gallery explores a wealth of dynamic fashion imagery, expanding the boundaries of the medium.
IWM North reflects upon the proceedings in the Syria. The four-part programme invites visitors to consider their association to the country.
Capturing locations including Hong Hong, Paris, Tokyo and Chicago, Michael Wolf documents every day life in mega-cities.
György Gáti’s abstracted images of architectural forms offer fresh dialogues about the urban landscape.
Simon Roberts’ images explore the shared idiosyncrasies of a nation by documenting the events that define the British social landscape.
International Center of Photography presents The Day the Music Died, British photographer Edmund Clark’s first solo museum exhibition in the US.
Lisson Gallery and The Vinyl Factory collaborate to present Everything At Once, a group exhibition condensing 50 years of artistic practice into one space.
Fotomuseum’s latest exhibition, Unwired, by Jacqueline Hassink, extends an interest in networks of global socioeconomic power in digital media.
London-based architecture studio Tonkin Liu creates symbiotic structures that connect art, building and nature.
Marguerite Humeau’s Echoes transfigure Tate Britain’s gallery space into a mesmerising yellow environment. that combines sound and sculpture.
Irene Scheinmann is an artist that ventures into digital worlds, combining bold, geometric forms with the open possibilities of technology.
Alex Da Corte’s BAD LAND transforms the architectural space of Josh Lilley Gallery, London, into a colourful three-dimensional film set.
The selection for 25-26 November investigates self-definition, uncovering what it means to be formed by experience, locale and popular culture.
The practice of influential photographic duo Bernd and Hilla Becher is characterised by an objective uniformity,
Concertina is a collection of structures by Richard Wentworth and Apparata that explore the social potential of art spaces and transform the gallery.
André Cepeda’s work examines urban architectural forms using light and geometry in surprising, spatially resonant ways.
Unsettling and revealing, Sasha Rudensky’s images traverse the contemporary landscape, exploring the aftermath of the Cold War.
Taking the city as a subject, Wayne Sorce’s images document the urban landscapes of Chicago and New York in the 1970s and 1980s.