Henri Cartier-Bresson, Decisive Moments, The Fine Art Society
The Fine Art Society presents 50 masterpieces by Henri Cartier-Bresson, in an exhibition staged in collaboration with Peter Fetterman Gallery.
The Fine Art Society presents 50 masterpieces by Henri Cartier-Bresson, in an exhibition staged in collaboration with Peter Fetterman Gallery.
Pearl Lam Galleries brings a solo exhibition of works by Pino Pinelli to its Soho space in Hong Kong; the first show by the artist to appear in Asia.
Hauser & Wirth hosts its first exhibition devoted to the work of Mike Kelley. This show is the first in New York to focus on Kelley’s later series, Kandors.
Fields of Abstraction is a group exhibition at Galerie du Monde. Curated by Justin Charles Hoover, the show unites the work of four American artists.
Commissioned especially for Bristol, Do Ho Suh’s New York City Apartment/Corridor/Bristol is an immersive installation. Until 27 September.
We interview London-based artist Idris Khan about his new series of work, Overture, exhibiting at Sean Kelly, New York. Khan explores philosophical ideas surrounding displacement and conflict.
Josh Kline highlights the erosion of privacy and civil rights in the 21st century in Freedom, a darkly compelling new exhibition at Modern Art Oxford, and the first in a cycle of projects by Kline.
The National Museum of Art in Osaka hosts a large-scale solo exhibition by the German-born artist and photographer Wolfgang Tillmans.
Artist Bernadetta Tajs, who completed her arts education in Krakow, Poland, explores the light hearted side of life, using her own imagination as a starting point for her painting and sculptures.
Tyburn Gallery, London, opens with its inaugural exhibition Broken English on 18 September.
The Live Art Development Agency (LADA) is an influential and key player in the realm of performance art in the UK and internationally. LADA supports artists through a portfolio of resources, opportunities and publishing activities.
The Imago Mundi project inaugurated by the Luciano Benetton Foundation in 2013 continues its democratic mission to create a body of international art that shows the fullness of human experience.
FACT’s upcoming exhibition sees Danish artist Shona Illingworth question how our memories influence our understanding of society.
Dan Flavin has worked with fluorescents since 1963 to develop his own form of minimalism, creating what he termed ‘situations’ composed entirely of light and colour, which interact with architecture and the viewer’s perception of space.
We review Castlefield Gallery, Manchester’s Launch Pad: It Was a Dark and Stormy Night, a group project initiated by six artists based around the UK, France and the Netherlands.
This is Idris Khan’s inaugural exhibition with the gallery and his first solo presentation in New York since 2010.
The turbulent 1950s in Cuba began with the military coup led by Fulgencio Batista and were marked by growing conflict between the US-backed Batista dictatorship and the revolutionary movement of Fidel and Raoul Castro, which would eventually topple Batista and transform the Cuban society.
Jeff Brouws’ peripatetic road journeys through the US form a crucial role in his “mapping” of a changing American landscape. His work features in Diffusion International Festival of Photography.
Yorkshire Sculpture Park, West Bretton, hosts a new exhibition by artist, agitator and former parliamentary candidate, Bob and Roberta Smith.