By the Mango Belt & Tamarind Road – Compassing, Protocoling, Metaphoring,’ will take place from January 28th to February 1st ...
Lars Holdgate reviews the solo exhibition of Alexander Basil, ‘Error 404’ at Galerie Judin as part of our featured topic, ...
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith at Fruitmarket by Adela Lovric // Jan. 9, 2026. Jaune Quick-to-See Smith’s groundbreaking career as ...
Moyra Davey: ‘Hell Notes,’ 1990/2017, Super-8-film transferred to HD, color, sound; ‘EM Copperheads 151–210, J.L. + R.B.G.,’ ...
‘The Power of Small Things’ may be an anniversary exhibition—marking 15 years of Soy Capitán—but there is certainly little pomp. Quiet and understated, the show presents the work of 17 artists, who ...
Eve Arnold’s retrospective ‘Capturing Compassion’ at f³ – freiraum für fotografie showcases the artist’s luminous career as one of the first women photographers to join the renowned Magnum Photos ...
Yearning is an existential reality, a natural consequence of being alive. In our very beings, at the deepest atomic level, we are anchored and driven by desire, longing and wishfulness. At times, we ...
As I stand in the bright white foyer of carlier | gebauer, the archway to the gallery looms ahead like a yawning mouth. Crossing into Pakui Hardware’s ‘Thresholds,’ I step onto what might be the ...
This article is part of our feature topic Ghosts. Mark Leckey’s solo show at the Julia Stoschek Foundation, ‘Enter Thru Medieval Wounds,’ feels haunted from the moment you enter (through a medieval ...
The exhibition text at the Brücke-Museum’s retrospective of Irma Stern—a splendid portraitist of finely defined facial cues and colorful idiosyncrasies, who was born in 1894 to a German-Jewish family ...
A lone barstool on a low stage, dim lighting, tables carved with text…is this a grimy comedy club in a Brooklyn basement? No, it’s the Berlin Biennale! Mila Panić, an artist and comedian from Bosnia, ...
In ‘Zilijifa,’ Ibrahim Mahama’s exhibition at Kunsthalle Wien, a full-size diesel locomotive—hollowed out and elevated high enough for visitors to walk beneath—rests on pillars made of thousands of ...