Sanctuary
Artists are more known, recognisable and part of the fabric of daily life than ever before. Art is no longer niche; it’s here, right in front of our faces.
Artists are more known, recognisable and part of the fabric of daily life than ever before. Art is no longer niche; it’s here, right in front of our faces.
A new book surveys the 25 year success and phenomenon that was, and in many ways still is, the Young British Artists.
Helen Carmel Benigson is media-savy that is for sure; her work layers colour, print and sound to create immersive, dreamlike and hyper-sensual installations that explore themes of female empowerment.
There are certain exhibitions whose titles are so ambiguous and nonsensical that even before attending the show you are met with a quiet sense of dread on whether you will get it.
One of the World’s most defining art prizes opened in 2011 at Baltic. We explore the shortlist with Godfrey Worsdale, Director of Baltic.
Birds Eye View’s Rachel Millward talks about how their popular film festival applauds the creativity and brilliance of women in film.
Haroon Mirza challenges the boundaries of sound, noise, music and art in one of his latest offerings which opened in February 2011 at Lisson Gallery.
Review by Bethany Rex Presenting over 100 galleries and featuring some exceptional contemporary work from leading figures and emerging talent, this year’s London Art Fair…
Finding beauty in the ordinary, Jannica Honey exposes images that rest somewhere between art and fashion.
Walls Are Talking at the Whitworth Art Gallery in Manchester saw a major survey into design aesthetics through the unexpected medium of wallpaper.
New forms transcend the boundaries of the organic and the artificial, addressing unique issues of intimacy and interaction in the computer age.
Investigating the role of the “artist” and “art”, Tate Modern surveys the last 30 years of contemporary visual culture.
The London and Berlin based collective Artists Anonymous resist definitions and skilfully create interplay between anonymity and the artist.