Review

Showing results 261-280 of 2143

Is this a show about the artist’s youth or is it about something bigger – landscape?

BY Dan Fox |

A new show at London’s IMT gallery attempts to exorcise the horror of British politics

BY ​Jack Smurthwaite |

His works in ceramic recall histories of colonialism and manufacturing, while alluding to our digital age

BY John Vincler |

This year’s edition of the triennial advocates for several marginalized groups but fails to create enough space for their individual discourses

BY Adam Kleinman |

Beyond the fun and spectacle of ‘Tim Walker: Wonderful Things’, something more subtle, yet equally important, is happening

BY Laurie Taylor |

From international newspapers to the artist’s personal image archive, an exhibition at K21, Kunstsammlung NRW, Düsseldorf, examines the mass of information and its impact on agency

BY Sarah E. James |

The artist’s extensive solo show at Kunsthalle Düsseldorf is full of moments of vulnerability

BY Harry Burke |

This year’s edition of the biennial in Moss, Norway, proves that it can trigger emotions but fails to show empathy

BY Chloe Stead |

A timely show at the Netherlands’ Cobra Museum is devoted to eight women connected with the mid-century avant-garde movement

BY Juliet Jacques |

Should art explain, solve or soothe? In ‘The Seventh Continent’, answers are thin on the ground

BY Jennifer Higgie |

In ‘This Marram’, TM Davy ushers you into a very personal – and almost enchanted – sliver of Fire Island

BY Shiv Kotecha |

The artist’s extensive retrospective at the Migros Museum, Zurich, shows that the social diversity Willats portrays does not translate into an aesthetic diversity

BY Jörg Scheller |

At the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, it’s hard to tell what’s real and what isn’t

BY Alan Gilbert |

A new installation at CCA, Glasgow, reflects on capitalism’s failure to protect even the identities it formed

BY ​Hussein Mitha |

In three video installations, the artist stages theatrical mise-en-scènes at Salzburger Kunstverein

BY Hili Perlson |

‘Māori Moving Image’ reflects the depth and breadth of animation, film and video created by New Zealand’s Indigenous artists 

BY Matariki Williams |

The newly reissued novel maps the intimate spatial connections between fascism and patriarchy in postwar Austria

BY Matthew Turner |

A new retrospective shows a different side to the cosmic dreamer

BY Figgy Guyver |

Two shows at David Zwirner, New York, champion the artist's ability to capture the sound of a now-bygone world

BY Andrew Durbin |

Hernandez catalogues the avenues and intersections that make Los Angeles a city, and not only a web of connections between the area’s freeways and suburban sprawl

BY Jennifer Piejko |
PREV 14 / 108 NEXT