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Helen Mirra’s works in sound, fabric, film, photography, text and sculpture are rich with allusions and overlaps across a range of subjects

Phrygian bonnets and dunces’ caps; dice, cards and concrete

Since the early 1980s Jutta Koether has been active as a painter, writer and musician, her work in each discipline exerting its influence over the others

Fog machines, scent dispensers and origami; sci-fi tower blocks and urban detritus

BY Emily Pethick |

Sound, paintings, and process; Alexander Graham Bell, kites and a grandmother’s attic

BY Michael Ned Holte |

Words, cinema, stories; loneliness and heartache

Whether making drawings, paintings or conceptual projects 'boycotting' women and dropping out from the art world, Lee Lozano wanted to 'participate only in a total revolution simultaneously personal and public'

For over a decade Mexican artist Abraham Cruzvillegas has made sculptures from objects as disparate as cake, scythes, boxes, plants and magazines

Hilary Lloyd studies, stages and celebrates movement and gesture in her video and slide installations

Tree planting, photographs, friends, workers, houses and dolls

BY Meeka Walsh |

The decorative and the functional, the hard and the soft

Peru, vernacular Modernism, hippie exoticism and the history of cocaine

Making room for learning and un-learning; jugglers and public space

The individual, the communal; theatricality and authenticity

Three lecturers from art academies in the USA, Germany and the UK reflect upon the strengths and failings of art education today

The communication of knowledge and the parameters of educational systems

BY Craig Martin |

Mass- and miscommunication; interviews and re-enactments

'What writing has most influenced the way you think about art?' Writers, artists and curators reveal the often surprising literary influences – from Theodor W. Adorno to Lester Bangs, Gertrude Stein and P.G. Wodehouse – that have shaped their thinking.

'What writing has most influenced the way you think about art?' Writers, artists and curators reveal the often surprising literary influences – from Theodor W. Adorno to Lester Bangs, Gertrude Stein and P.G. Wodehouse – that have shaped their thinking.

'What writing has most influenced the way you think about art?' Writers, artists and curators reveal the often surprising literary influences – from Theodor W. Adorno to Lester Bangs, Gertrude Stein and P.G. Wodehouse – that have shaped their thinking.