Profiles

Showing results 401-420 of 856

How a team of artists, architects and theorists are exposing state violence

BY Kareem Estefan |

Three new books argue for the interconnectivity of all things

BY Carson Chan |

The artist's delirious new satire explores happiness, consumerism and corporate power

BY Patrick Langley |

Deep space, sculpture and Mormonism

BY Travis Diehl |

Chinese video art, post-socialist trauma and the work of Cheng Ran

BY En Liang Khong |

An interview with Antony Hudek on the merger of two highly regarded not-for-profits in Antwerp

BY Harry Thorne |

What is Condo? An interview with its founder Vanessa Carlos

The artist explores blackness in visual culture

BY Laura McLean-Ferris |

A new book and exhibition explore a radical interwar collective: the Kindred of the Kibbo Kift

BY Matthew De Abaitua |

Ancient storytelling meets modern politics in Miguel Gomes’s new trilogy, Arabian Nights

BY Nick Pinkerton |

‘That one artist has applied such a diversity of materials (paper, cloth, plants, violin, electronics) to such a breadth of pursuits (music, dance, publishing, performance art) is remarkable.’

BY Matthew Erickson |

On the life and work of photographer Germaine Krull, currently the subject of a retrospective at Berlin’s Martin-Gropius-Bau

BY Ulf Erdmann Ziegler |

The long-running installation for sound and light dates back to a particular period in downtown New York

BY Andy Battaglia |

Award-winning novelist Ali Smith responds to Sonia Delaunay's joyful and 'simultaneous' approach to life, art and design

BY Ali Smith |

Eileen Gray's restored modernist masterpiece, E.1027, has finally opened to the public

BY Olivia Laing |

Francisco de Goya's influence on modern art

BY Matthew McLean |

Rotlicht wird auf sich bewegende Haut geworfen. In Nahaufnahme, gestaucht oder gedehnt, sieht sie aus wie Ein- und Ausstülpungen innerer Organe. Die Härchen mancher Körperstellen flimmern dabei wie eine Invasion von Wimperntierchen. Dazu Schmatzen, Raunzen, Gurgeln, das enervierend unter die Haut geht. Es ist jedoch kein biologisches Mikroskoptheater, das die Kamera von Vong Phaophanit und der Sound von Cathy Lane der Choreografie von Rosemary Butchers Arbeit Scan hinzufügen, sondern ein werkreflexiver Epilog.

BY Astrid Kaminski |

Maggie Nelson's meditation on a set of oxymorons: the pregnant woman who thinks, the mother who writes and the queer who procreates

BY Stephanie DeGooyer |

Restored to dazzling 4K resolution by Martin Scorsese’s The Film Foundation, in The Tales of Hoffmann, art and imagination are the foundation of the world

BY Tom Newth |

Filmmaker Guy Sherwin's personal approach to documentary

BY Juliet Jacques |