Monograph

Showing results 41-60 of 199

Caoimhín Mac Giolla Léith examines the relationship between image and painting in the work of Marlene Dumas

Illustration and art history collide in Sanya Kantarovsky’s paintings

BY Scott Roben |

Decoding Uri Aran’s mysterious work-tables

BY Declan Long |

The anarchic 1920s Tokyo art movement Mavo and the internationalism of the Japanese Avant-garde

BY Andrew Maerkle |

In Shahryar Nashat’s films and sculptures, dodecahedrons, dance and desire come together in delirious studies of impossible ideals

BY Jörg Heiser |

How Andra Ursuta’s sculptures play with national stereotypes

BY Summer Guthery |

How Darren Bader has pushed the readymade to its extreme

BY Domenick Ammirati |

Laure Prouvost talks about translation, tea, fictitious grandparents, erotic films and trying to make sense of the world

BY Zoe Pilger AND Laure Prouvost |

The consistently inconsistent career of Scottish artist Bruce McLean

BY Colin Perry |

Time-travelling with Pablo Bronstein

BY Charlie Fox |

In the run-up to a major solo exhibition at Chicago’s Renaissance Society, Michael Bracewell considers the work of Mathias Poledna

BY Michael Bracewell |

Digital pasts and futures meet in the work of Aleksandra Domanović

BY Laura McLean-Ferris |

Collaboration and conflict in the work of Eric Baudelaire

Praised by T.S. Eliot and best friends with Harry Smith, Lionel Ziprin was a mystic and poet whose archive is a source of fascination for many contemporary artists, especially Carol Bove, who now houses it in her New York studio

BY Andy Battaglia |

Dominikus Müller discusses the role of words and objects in the work of Jason Dodge

BY Dominikus Müller |

Ken Okiishi: painting in the age of Instagram

BY David Everitt Howe |

Xu Zhen and his cultural production organization, MadeIn Company

Chinese Translation

BY Colin Siyuan Chinnery |

Cally Spooner’s work explores how technology and new media are making performers of us all

BY Alice Butler |

Luca Vitone and the contemporary Italian landscape

BY Barbara Casavecchia |

Magali Reus is part of a group of young, London-based artists exploring sleek surfaces and abject bodies

BY Amy Sherlock |