Evoking Paintings
Cristina Spagnolo showcases crisp photographic portraits and nature images inspired by the light, detail and form of art from the 1500s and 1600s.
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Cristina Spagnolo showcases crisp photographic portraits and nature images inspired by the light, detail and form of art from the 1500s and 1600s.
Tommy Goguely’s glitch-like abstractions emerge via a process of damaging camera sensors, where colours smear, crack and split across every page.
Architecture is Satijn Panyigay’s subject of choice, creating brooding depictions of empty buildings and cinematically-lit homes under construction.
This issue addresses our tense current moment, featuring artists who respond to today’s division and turbulence, calling for action and connection.
In Vienna, a major Brigitte Kowanz retrospective reflects on society’s rapid virtualisation, as well as the transformative impact of the information age.
This September, the museum celebrates 50 years. It marks the anniversary with a major reopening: Station Hall, a gallery dedicated to railway life.
Our top shows for October spotlights artists and creatives who examine identity, heritage and community in a world that is in constant flux.
Photographer Daniel Mirer disrupts the myth of the American West, bringing conversations about climate change and colonialism into the picture.
Saatchi Yates presents the iconic work of Marina Abramović, an artist who has changed the landscape of contemporary art over the past five decades.
New Photography marks its 40th year with a bold vision that unites 13 artists from Johannesburg, Kathmandu, New Orleans and Mexico City.
Yuki Kihara’s renowned series Paradise Camp is now on display at The Whitworth, Manchester, presenting a vital recentring of queer, Indigenous voices.
Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme’s new installation unfolds as songs, poems and the daily resistance of prisoners in the occupied West Bank.
British Art Fair returns this November with an ambitious programme that reconsiders the historic canon and spotlights bold and innovative new artists.
Focal Point Gallery brings together performance, photography, sculpture, sound and moving-image intertwine to create immersive environments.
Victoria Miro presents two key works from artist Stan Douglas, which ask audiences to consider the intersections of race, class and colonial history.
A new exhibition at Castlefield Gallery brings together artists who explore what it means to get lost and what we can discover when we lose our way.
Val Lee’s poignant moving-image practice reflects on how both personal and collective memory are shaped by contemporary political and social systems.
Two new shows at Art Museum at the University of Toronto presents a dialogue between land, memory and the precarious futures of our environment.
We announce the 2025 Aesthetica Art Prize winners: Tobi Onabolu and Sam Metz, who were announced at the opening of this year’s show at York Art Gallery.