en attendant l'art
by Parterre - about 56 minutes
The purely musical performance preserved here is thrilling, ratcheted to a higher intensity than the Deutsche Grammophon studio recording
by Hyperallergic - about 56 minutes
Good news: Hyperallergic has just received another journalism award. Noah Fischer's comic “Prospect Heights Ghost Story,” published last year in collaboration with the Economic Hardship Project (EHRP), won a 2026 New York Press Club Award. Congrats to Noah and big thanks to Alissa Quart from EHRP for the successful collaboration.Today in the news, anti-Trump guerrilla protest art in DC keeps getting more creative. The latest is an arcade game that lets you choose between ordering a Diet Coke or invading Iran. It's satire at its finest.Also in this edition: The Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood emerges as the city's new art hotspot, a peek inside Mozart's life, and Michael Glover on the...
by The Art Newspaper - about 2 hours
Descendants of the 19th-century photographer, who captured Tennyson and Darwin, celebrated her life and work at the unveiling
by The Art Newspaper - about 2 hours
Plus a market-conscious Basquiat and a Seagram-adjacent Rothko
by ArtNews - about 3 hours
Trevor Paglen, the New York–based artist known for his incisive engagement with knotty technological issues including surveillance and AI, will curate the third edition of “Zero 10,” Art Basel’s new sector dedicated to the art of the digital era, the first to take place at the fair’s Swiss edition (June 17–21). Major international galleries, including Marian Goodman, Hauser and Wirth, and Almine Rech, will present work by widely known contemporary artists such as John Gerrard, Agnieszka Kurant, Avery Singer, and Hito Steyerl. Paglen will work alongside digital art strategist Eli Scheinman, who organized the first two editions along with Vincenzo de Bellis, Art Basel’s chief artistic officer and...
by ArtForum - about 12 hours
In Artforum’s May issue, Harmon Siegel revisits the magazine’s 1967–71 essay series “Problems of Criticism,” which featured contributions from critics including Clement Greenberg, Barbara Rose, Max Kozloff, and Rosalind Krauss.The final installment was Krauss’s “Problems of Criticism X: Pictorial Space and the Question of Documentary,” a response to what she calls the problem of non-falsifiability in criticism.   In […]
by The Art Newspaper - about 12 hours
Featuring nearly 400 objects ranging from gowns to ancient Greek armour and vases, “Costume Art” argues the dressed body is the only form of artistic expression that connects each of the museum’s collecting areas
by The Art Newspaper - about 13 hours
Geometric pattern explosion as abstract artist’s Diné rugs and blankets get first public showing, in New York City
by Hyperallergic - about 13 hours
Artist Elisabeth Smolarz is well known in Ridgewood for running a popular seasonal ice cream window, but her photography ironically engages with the unsettling effects of isolation.Her photo collage and video installation, "Soft Confinement," one of several works at Supermoon Art Space’s exhibition for Ridgewood Open Studios, features a lone male figure walking through a hi-tech dystopic landscape while AI-generated images on screens include affirmations and lullabies.“We’re in a moment right now where a lot of people experience loneliness,” Smolarz told Hyperallergic. “I realized from my students at Pratt how lonely they are and that led me to do work with AI.” Fortunately, life in the...
by The Art Newspaper - yesterday at 23:42
More than 150 guns and an iron cannon were recently discovered at the Síis Já cenote in Yucatán
by ArtNews - yesterday at 23:37
An ancient Roman residential and agricultural complex has been unearthed across from a shopping mall in Coatia, according to Croatia Week. The news was first reported by Slobodna Dalmacija. Led by archaeologist Eduard Visković, a team from the consulting company Kantharos discovered the complex during excavations at the Mostine archeological site near Split. The team had been checking for ruins around the Bauhaus retail center before further commercial development proceeded in the area, continuing work started in 2011 with the excavation of an early Christian church there. Covering approximately 6,500 square feet, the complex appears to have been a country estate that produced olive oil. The archaeologists...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 23:27
As Somalia’s first-ever national pavilion debuts at the 61st Venice Biennale, a coalition of local cultural organizations says that artists based in the country “were not meaningfully consulted, included, or recognised in a process that should have belonged to the nation more broadly.”Last month, the Somalia Arts Foundation (SAF), the country’s self-coined first contemporary art institution, issued a statement denouncing the absence of Somalia-based artists from the pavilion’s artist lineup, which included only artists living in diaspora. In a separate missive, the Somali queer collective Warbixinta Cidda decried the appointment of Italian graphic designer Fabio Scrivanti as the pavilion’s...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 23:10
WASHINGTON, DC — Three fully functional arcade cabinets appeared at the DC War Memorial this morning in the latest installment of anti-Trump protest art in the nation’s capital. Visitors are invited to play “Operation Epic Furious: Strait to Hell,” also accessible online, which lambasts President Trump's erratic and flippant public messaging as the United States and Israel’s prolonged war on Iran continues with no end in sight.   The anonymous artist collective Secret Handshake, which was behind other protest works near the National Mall, including a golden toilet lambasting Trump’s gaudy White House renovations and a 10-foot-tall birthday card for Jeffrey Epstein, has claimed...
by ArtForum - yesterday at 22:43
Swiss art dealer Bruno Bischofberger, who fostered the famous collaboration between Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat, died on May 9. He was eighty-six. His death was announced on May 9 by his namesake gallery, which he had operated since 1963. Bischofberger played a crucial role in introducing US Pop artists to Europe and forged close, […]
by ArtNews - yesterday at 22:41
An excavation in Moharam Bek, a neighborhood in central Alexandria, has uncovered a trove of archaeological findings dating from the Greek, Roman, and Byzantine periods. The news was announced by Egypt’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities earlier this month and reported by Greek City Times. The items range from Greek and Roman statues to smaller objects like coins, lamps, and ceramic vessels. Also uncovered were architectural structures like a public bathhouse, decorative mosaics from a Roman villa, and high-tech water systems. Mohamed Abdel Badi, of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA), said in a statement that the site provides “a comprehensive model of the development of residential and service...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 22:38
Sophie Rivera, "Untitled" (c. mid-1980s), color photograph (photo courtesy El Museo del Barrio)In the final room of the exhibition Sophie Rivera: Double Exposures at El Museo del Barrio, the first survey of the late Nuyorican photographer, who passed away in 2021, I found myself inexplicably drawn to a grid of abstract photographs by the gallery’s restroom. They belonged to two different series, one printed in a rust-colored red, the other in a deep, purple-hued black and white; something about the rounded, overlapping forms they depicted felt immediately familiar. These must be pinhole photographs, I thought to myself, nodding like a dutiful photo historian: Just look at the vignetting and that classic...
by ArtForum - yesterday at 22:34
After eighteen years in the position, the director of DC’s National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) Susan Fisher Sterling has announced she’s retiring, per a press release. Sterling has spent close to four decades at the institution overall, having joined in 1988 as an associate curator just one year after the museum’s founding. […]
by ArtNews - yesterday at 22:21
An exhibition of Swiss German artist Paul Klee, at New York’s Jewish Museum, is now complete, thanks to the arrival of a long-delayed loan from the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Angelus Novus (1920) has now taken its place in “Paul Klee: Other Possible Worlds,” which opened March 20 and focuses on work from the last decade of the artist’s life. The piece, measuring just 12 inches high, was previously stuck in Israel as a result of the war that country and the US are waging in Iran, which began with major joint bombardments on February 28.  Up until Monday, it was represented by an authorized facsimile and a note in accompanying wall text reading, “Due to current conditions affecting international...
by ArtNews - yesterday at 22:16
Lucas Cranach the Elder’s Cupid complaining to Venus (1526–27) once hung in the Munich apartment of Adolf Hitler, the Art Newspaper reports. Now owned by the National Gallery in London, the painting, showing Roman god Cupid complaining to his mother Venus about being stung by bees, can be seen in the center of a blurry, black-and-white photograph dating to the 1940s that was published in a 1978 furniture catalog. That image was most recently republished in 2023 in the journal Kunstchronik in an article by art historian Birgit Schwarz, who is writing a book on Hitler’s personal art collection. Schwarz had previously confirmed Hitler’s ownership of the painting when she discovered, in 2006, an album at...
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 21:41
For a little more than two decades, Bavarian photographer Markus Brunetti has scoured Europe for its most impressive basilicas, monasteries, duomi, and other striking ecclesiastical landmarks. Working closely with collaborator Betty Schöner, with whom he travels around the continent in a firetruck that has been converted to a photo lab, the pair snap thousands of images of each structure in meter-by-meter detail, often over the course of several years. Through a meticulous editing process that includes layering and arranging each shot into composite images, Brunetti creates precise, high-resolution views of the facades that we never experience in real life. Perspective is skewed so that the ornate temples and...
by archaeology - yesterday at 20:00
ARNHEM LAND, AUSTRALIA—According to a Phys.org report, Patrick Schmidt of the University of Tübingen and Peter Hiscock of the University of Queensland reanalyzed stone tools from two archaeological sites in Australia’s Northern Territory. It had been previously thought that heating rocks as part of the knapping process began in Australia about 40,000 years ago. Heat-treating the minerals helps the process along, Schmidt said, by forming new atomic bonds in the rocks. “This leads to the loss of pore space, allowing better force transmission when a fracture runs through the material. In terms of stone knapping, this means that less force is needed to make flakes and blades,” he explained. In general,...
by ArtForum - yesterday at 19:20
In solidarity with the resignation of the entire 2026 Venice Biennale voting jury, fifty-four individual artists and twenty-two teams affiliated with national pavilions have now withdrawn from consideration for the Visitors’ Lion awards. The Visitors’ Lions were hastily established by the Biennale after the resignation of the jury, who were, of course, responsible for the assignment of the Golden […]
by archaeology - yesterday at 19:00
TOKAT, TURKEY—Hürriyet Daily News reports that mosaics dated to the second century A.D. have been uncovered in north-central Turkey. The images feature a female figure and Greek inscriptions meaning “luxury” and “abundance.” First uncovered in 2025 through an illegal excavation in Zile, the mosaics were subsequently brought to light during rescue excavations conducted by experts from the Tokat Archaeology Museum, said Alper Yılmaz of Ondokuz Mayıs University. “When we evaluate them within their architectural context, it is clear that they were part of an important structure in Roman social life,” he added. The mosaics will be preserved in place when the excavation is completed. For more on...
by archaeology - yesterday at 19:00
ONTARIO, CANADA—The remains of another four sailors from the Franklin Expedition have been identified through DNA matches with living descendants, according to a Live Science report. Led by Sir John Franklin, the expedition left England in 1845 on two ships to travel the Canadian Arctic and look for a route to connect the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. All 129 men were lost by 1848. William Oren, a seaman; David Young, a boy first class; and John Bridgens, a subordinate officer’s steward, all sailed on HMS Erebus and died at Erebus Bay. The fourth man, Harry Peglar, was Captain of the Foretop on HMS Terror. His body was found about 125 miles from where the icebound ships had been abandoned, indicating that...
by artandcakela - yesterday at 17:37
By Melanie Chapman Let the Art (and the Artist) Speak for Itself Outside of the art world, painter Celeste Dupuy-Spencer may not yet be as familiar a name as Jean-Michel Basquiat or Vincent Van Gogh, but to those who followed her artistic growth over the past ten years, she was on her way. Perhaps therein lay the problem. For those who knew Celeste personally and/or had the opportunity to work with her professionally, there is still a profound sense of loss permeating most conversations...
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 15:41
In ballpoint pen on found fragments of philosophical and historical texts, Habib Hajallie delves into the emotional realm of memory, connection, and loss. The Kent-based artist often celebrates Black cultural figures and beloved family members, along with examining his own personal experiences as a British man of Sierra Leonean and Lebanese heritage. In his current solo exhibition, Black & Blue at Larkin Durey, Hajallie grapples with the devastating stillbirth of his daughter and the “indescribable emotions that sit beneath language,” says the gallery. For this show, the artist deliberately switched from using black ballpoint ink to blue. As he made these works, Hajallie also reflected on the loss of his...
by Aesthetic - yesterday at 15:24
The 61st edition of the Venice Biennale, In Minor Keys, curated by the late Koyo Kouoh (1967-2025), is now open. It will run until 22 November at the Giardini, the Arsenale and in various locations around the city. Here is Aesthetica‘s run-down of 10 standout national pavilions to discover this year – paying attention to timely themes such as communication, connection, ecology, identity and legacy. Swiss Pavilion | The Unfinished Business of Living Together In April 1978, an episode of the Swiss public programme Telearena aired. The live broadcast debated the “problem of homosexuality”, and, whilst controversial, marked one of the first occasions when individuals from the LGBTQ+ community gained a...
by Parterre - yesterday at 15:00
To celebrate the 100th anniversary performances of Turandot at the Met starting next week, Patrick Dillon gives a listen to seven versions of "Signore, ascolta!" for Perspectives on an Aria.
by Parterre - yesterday at 15:00
Vivacious performances outweigh a host of odd directorial choices in the Washington National Opera's West Side Story
by Aesthetic - yesterday at 14:00
Liberation, modernism and the politics of self-determination form the conceptual spine of Architects of Liberation: Modernism in Western Africa, an exhibition opening this July at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. It examines how architecture became a critical medium through which newly independent West African nations articulated sovereignty, identity, and futurity in the decades following colonial rule. Rather than treating modernism as a neutral or imported style, the exhibition frames it as a charged and adaptive language, refracted through the urgencies of nation-building and rapid urban transformation. Across Benin, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal and Togo, architectural...
by Thisiscolossal - monday at 13:00
Dear readers, In a collection of her published diary entries, Virgina Woolf wrote, “Thinking is my fighting.” This sentiment was a prominent theme in her 1940 essay, Thoughts on Peace In an Air Raid, in which the British writer framed the importance of individual thought as a crucial antidote to war and the rise of fascism. I’ve been thinking a lot about Woolf’s quote and its relevance today, largely connected to discourse on education. While literacy rates in the U.S. continue to plummet, a soaring number of individuals are adopting habits antithetical to thinking—offloading even the smallest of cognitive tasks onto Chat GPT, doomscrolling for hours on social media, and numbing the mind with...
by Parterre - monday at 12:00
Victoria de los Ángeles has always been my Violetta of choice, a portrayal that never ceases to move me.
by Aesthetic - monday at 10:00
How can ideas transform into a visual experience? How can engineering and technology intersect with art? What does it mean to embody perception? These are the questions at the heart of Manlin Zhang’s practice. The research-led visual artist is uniquely placed to navigate these intersections, having previously trained at the College of Physics and Optoelectronic Engineering She develops a structured, process-driven approach to image-making, treating painting as embodied research rather than illustration. Her work features layered surfaces and visual structures that sit between the organic and constructed.  Zhang effortlessly traverses science and art, and nowhere is this better demonstrated than...
by Aesthetic - monday at 7:00
In 2010, the world was recovering from a seismic financial crash. The Great Recession was the worst economic downturns since the Great Depression (1929 – 1939), and in the USA, households lost an average of 26% of their net worth. The effects rippled across the world, and in the UK, unemployment reached its highest rate in a decade, whilst earnings failed to keep up with prices. It was in this climate of uncertainty, desperation and hardship that photographer and writer Johny Pitts embarked on a five-month journey across Europe, armed with several notebooks and a camera. The project grew from a necessity both intimate and political: to understand what it means to be Black in Europe, beyond cliches, identity...
by Parterre - sunday at 12:00
I feel that the best years of Maria Callas’s vocalità, when we hear such a unique freedom and generosity in her singing, were captured in her early recordings.
by Aesthetic - sunday at 9:00
Fotografiska has become one of the most visible forces reshaping how photography is exhibited and experienced in the contemporary museum landscape. Founded in Stockholm, 15 years ago, now it has expanded internationally to cities including Berlin, New York and Tallinn, it operates less as a conventional institution and more as a fluid cultural platform. Its programming model is built around scale and accessibility – presenting major photographic names alongside emerging practitioners in ways that collapse hierarchy while retaining curatorial clarity. Recent years have seen a steady sharpening of its global identity, with exhibitions that move between documentary urgency, staged spectacle and conceptual...
by Thisiscolossal - saturday at 0:02
In Love Letters, Hilary Pecis captures the mundane moments and under-appreciated views of daily life. The Los Angeles-based artist presents a suite of new acrylic paintings in her signature saturated style, focusing on snippets of a backyard pool, the corner of a studio worktop, and a friendly picnic complete with a radiant strawberry cake. Pecis prefers to work from photos and translates singular moments onto linen. Utilizing a uniform opacity in her paints, she incorporates both comparable and exaggerated colors and affords particular attention to texture and pattern. Frilly fronds on a plant, light radiating off the water’s surface, and the rough texture of a woven tablecloth each evidence the artist’s...
by ArtForum - friday at 22:28
Thousands of marchers flooded the thoroughfares of Venice to protest the presence of Israel at the Venice Biennale, with many national pavilions shuttering in solidarity. The New York Times reported that the pavilions belonging to Austria, Belgium, Egypt, Japan, the Netherlands, and South Korea closed. Austria’s pavilion bore a sign noting that some of its […]
by Thisiscolossal - friday at 20:11
Despite its name, the Canadian Tuxedo is a distinctly American look. The denim-on-denim getup dates back to the 1950s, when Bing Crosby sported a full Levi’s ensemble while in Vancouver, setting a sartorial trend that continues today. The national mythology woven into this utilitarian material is also the focus of Brooklyn-based Nick Doyle, who layers denim atop denim into large wall sculptures. From a pair of aviators reflecting puffy clouds to a vast Rocky Mountain landscape framed by brick, the works evoke a sort of nostalgic road trip west, as if chasing a big break, and ultimately, realizing the American dream. “First Come the Dreamers” (2026), bleached and collaged denim on panel, 25 x 72 inches...
by archaeology - friday at 20:00
SOUTH GYEONGSANG, SOUTH KOREA—A genetic study of the remains of four 2,000-year-old dogs recovered from two archaeological sites on the Korean Peninsula suggests that the canines belonged to a lineage separate from other dog populations in East Asia, according to the Korea JoongAng Daily. It had been previously thought that dog populations in East Asian shared a single lineage. Hyeongcheol Kim of the Gaya National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage, Suyeon Kim and A-reum Yu of the National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage, and their colleagues determined that ancient Korean dogs resembled the Australian dingo and the New Guinea singing dog. Korean dogs were also found to carry DNA from European...
by archaeology - friday at 19:30
AUSTRÅTT, NORWAY—According to a Science Norway report, a hiker discovered a rare gold fitting for a scabbard near the southwestern tip of Norway. The ornament, which dates to the first half of the sixth century A.D., was topped with thin gold threads twisted into patterns for a shimmering effect. “This places the object among the finest works from the period, created by highly skilled goldsmiths,” said Siv Kristoffersen, who retired from the University of Stavanger Museum of Archaeology. Such patterns, she added, were used to depict animals. In this case, the two animal heads face each other in profile. One animal was placed on the upper edge, while the other was inverted and placed on the lower edge of...
by booooooom - friday at 15:00
Derek Beck  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Derek Beck’s Website
Derek Beck on Instagram
by artandcakela - thursday at 17:00
By Coral Pereda Serras Among established and other art spaces in Melrose Hill, sits 1028 N. Western Ave., home to Western Avenue Collective artists studios. This 1922 building hosts 22 artist spaces among which is El Nido, an artist-run curatorial and research space by VC Projects. El Nido, borrowing from its Spanish name, is nested in this distinctly LA courtyard and through "Photography Into Sculpture: An Homage and An Update," emerges as a portal into the imagined memories of a Victorian...
by hifructose - wednesday at 21:40
ABOVE: Installation view, Jeffrey Gibson, boshullichi / inlvchi – we will continue to change, Kunsthaus Zürich, 2025, photo by Franca Candrian, Kunsthaus Zürich Jeffrey Gibson was far more open about the act of dreaming and the beliefs that make-up spirituality than I expected. I started our conversation saying that I like to keep things loose, […]
The post Jeffrey Gibson: More Colors than The Eye Can See first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by booooooom - wednesday at 15:00
Orpheus Acosta  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Orpheus Acosta’s Website
Orpheus Acosta on Instagram
by hifructose - 2026-05-06 00:16
At some point, I realized I didn’t want to choose between the past and the present. I was interested in allowing them to coexist,” says baroque-style painter Nieves González, who distorts trappings of traditional portraiture to exalt modern day women. Her recent portrait of British pop star Lily Allen, for example, places contemporary attitude—and fashion—within […]
The post Baroque-style Painter Nieves González distorts trappings of traditional portraiture to exalt modern-day women first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by artandcakela - 2026-05-05 17:00
By Lorraine Heitzman Erik Otsea's show, Clever Animals & Static at Alto Beta is a menagerie of a different sort. His tabletop ceramic sculptures are quirky but solemn hand-built industrial shapes that suggest machine parts found in abandoned factories or as models for obscure patent applications. They conjure Soviet-style brutalist architecture and futuristic inventions, all simple geometric forms that hint at a bygone time when we believed that life could be improved through industry. So...
by artandcakela - 2026-05-02 18:16
By William Moreno The painter constructs, the photographer discloses. Susan Sontag, “On Photography” William Camargo’s current exhibit of twenty-four plus works, dated 2019 through 2025, reads as a mini survey, with photographic images and installations thematically placed throughout the modest gallery. It’s his largest showing of works to date. Early in his career, the Anaheim native considered fashion and product photography, photojournalism and conflict reportage, finding the latter...
by booooooom - 2026-05-01 15:00
Blake Masi  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Blake Masi’s Website
Blake Masi on Instagram
by Shutterhub - 2026-04-30 11:00
 
Join us on Sunday 07 June from 1.30pm to celebrate the launch of INTO THE TREES by photographer Jo Stapleton, curated by Karen Harvey and published by Shutter Hub Editions.
INTO THE TREES is an expressionist photographic account of Jo’s interactions with trees and woodland, later remembered and reimagined in the darkroom using a range of alternative processes and techniques.
Drinks and canapés will be served from 1.30pm before the formal launch event at 2pm, including a book signing and interview discussion between Karen and Jo about the making of the book and the role photography has to play in helping to protect our wildlife and green spaces.
To celebrate the launch of the book, Jo has produced a...
by artandcakela - 2026-04-28 17:49
By Nancy Spiller Alec Egan's painting "Dawn House," in his show "Groundskeeper" at Vielmetter Los Angeles, is tender, serene, and calm — a lavender and peach sky sheltering the triangular top of a house flanked by two palm trees and the tip of a cypress. In its companion painting, "Night House," the sky takes a sinister turn with layers of dark blue, sunset orange, and a roiling strip indicative of flames mixed with what might be smoke. It hints at something of what Egan, his wife, and two...
by hifructose - 2026-04-23 19:13
“What I am advocating for is a type of grace,” says Matthew Hansel. “Both in the way we see ourselves and in the way we see others. I am celebrating the impossible mix of contradictory things that make us human, including the parts of ourselves we hide from the world.” Hansel’s tour of our hidden […]
The post Matthew Hansel’s Hidden Demons first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by hifructose - 2026-04-21 21:25
To celebrate the cult movie director’s 80th birthday, we bring you our interview with John Waters from Hi-Fructose Isssue 69. You can still get a copy in print of this issue here. Happy Birthday to The King of Puke! ABOVE: Portrait of John Waters, photo by Greg Gorman, © Academy Museum Foundation Early on in the […]
The post Happy 80th Birthday to The Pope of Trash: An Interview With John Waters first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.