Interviews

Showing results 481-500 of 864

Irma Blank – who has been creating her 'writings' for over 50 years – talks about her relationship to word and image

BY Barbara Casavecchia |

The independent curator on 25 years in the arts

BY Houghton Kinsman |

Q: What do you wish you knew? A: All that I don’t, of course!

BY Joseph Kosuth |

On the eve of his first survey exhibition, Yoshua Okón talks to Magalí Arriola about Mexico, CIA covert ops, globalization and a derelict statue of George H. W. Bush

BY Magalí Arriola |

Recently awarded a USA Artist Fellowship, Lynn Hershman Leeson speaks about cultural technologies, personal narratives and alter egos 

BY Evan Moffitt |

Cosey Fanni Tutti talks to Paul Clinton about feminism, freedom and the politics of the personal

BY Paul Clinton |

Writer Hari Kunzru speaks about his new novel, White Tears, a timely reflection on race, class and cultural appropriation in the US

BY Dan Fox |

Q. What is art for? A. To tell us where we are.

BY JW Anderson |

Q: What are you reading? A: About what money can’t buy

BY Edi Rama |

From the banal to the brutal to the beautiful, the work of the Dutch artist is a reminder to never stop being disobedient

BY Amy Sherlock |

An interview with Chris Reinecke about her LIDL performances in collaboration with Jörg Immendorf, and her recent work

BY Hans-Jürgen Hafner |

Q. What could you imagine doing if you didn’t do what you do? A. Being a charismatic leader.

BY Roger Hiorns |

Q. What should change? A. Everything. Q. What should stay the same? A. Everything

BY Djorde Ozbolt |

Q. What do you wish you knew? A. There are so many things

BY Candida Höfer |

Wim T. Schippers on his long and diverse career

BY Noemi Smolik |

An interview with Aric Chen, M+ curator of architecture and design, about his plans for the collection and revisiting historical global narratives

BY Beatrice Leanza |

The second of three articles exploring art, class and precarity: an interview with writer and sociologist Didier Eribon

BY Paul Clinton |

An activist as well as an artist, Navjot Altaf talks about why political struggle is a process, not an event

BY Prajna Desai |