Noemi Smolik

Showing results 1-20 of 20

At Kunsthalle Praha, a group exhibition traces bohemian living from post-war Paris to New York, Tehran, Vancouver, Beijing and, finally, Prague

BY Noemi Smolik |

At Jan Kaps, Cologne, the artist highlights the economic precarity of sex workers and the movements encouraging positive change

BY Noemi Smolik |

At Bonner Kunstverein, the artist investigates our relationship to everyday objects

BY Noemi Smolik |

At Zeno X Gallery, Antwerp, the artist takes a second look at the social and emotional aspects of images 

BY Noemi Smolik |

We should use this moment to propose new ways of making and showing

BY Pablo Larios |

The artist explores the influence of myths and tales on present-day Georgia at Bundeskunsthalle, Bonn

BY Noemi Smolik |

Viewers of the artist's exhibition ‘Let It Come Down’ at Bonner Kunstverein, Germany, experience the curious inbetweenness of a limbo state

BY Noemi Smolik |

Clages, Cologne, Germany

BY Noemi Smolik |

Priska Pasquer, Cologne, Germany

BY Noemi Smolik |

Jan Bonny and Alex Wissel’s new film project, ‘Rheingold’, sends up the ethical superiority of art making versus capitalist production

BY Noemi Smolik |

The audacious mixing of heritage and innovation in the Georgian capital

BY Noemi Smolik |

Wim T. Schippers on his long and diverse career

BY Noemi Smolik |

Despite its troubled history the Latvian capital is looking to the future

BY Noemi Smolik |

Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany

BY Noemi Smolik |

Kazimir Malevich, who is the subject of a retrospective at Tate Modern, London, is generally considered a difficult mystic 

BY Noemi Smolik |

Bruce Nauman spoke with Noemi Smolik about his first projects with European gallerists, curators and artists and about how to turn a neon sign into a black square

BY Noemi Smolik |

dOCUMENTA (13) Artistic Director, Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, spoke with Noemi Smolik about creating the exhibition and throwing out the concept

BY Noemi Smolik |

Imposition, discipline and confinement; wooden tunnels, metal corsets and classrooms

BY Noemi Smolik |

Vladimir Solovyov is now – thanks to Lenin’s censorship – the most important philosopher you’ve never heard of

BY Noemi Smolik |