en attendant l'art
by Hyperallergic - about 23 minutes
At the end of November of 2011, I saw my dad take his last breath. I came back to the United States after participating in all the death-related rituals that helped organize my pain in México. New York City was not a place to live my mourning, and right around December of the same year, I felt an intense longing to become small again. I needed to work with children. Another time, around 1990, I’d had a similar urge after finishing my own cancer treatment. I was seeking life.I felt dizzy and disorganized working those first jobs with children. I went to art school and did not have an official training in childhood education, so I learned on the go. The children didn’t respond to logic, or at least not the...
by ArtNews - about 32 minutes
Wouldn’t it be fascinating if one of the greatest museum heists of all time was somehow associated with one of the most sordid crime rings in recent history? And wouldn’t it be great if you could get a piece of the $10 million reward? That was the prospect presented by a video by Instagrammer Emily Kaplan (whose handle is @newsnotnoise and whose slogan is “Truth > Agenda”), in which she says that two artworks stolen decades ago from Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum show up in a tax estate document released by the U.S. Justice Department as part of the millions of files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. “I think I just solved the biggest art heist in the world using the...
by Hyperallergic - about 41 minutes
Photographer Jerry McMillan, who played a key role in documenting the mid-century art scene in Los Angeles, died on Monday, February 9, at the age of 89. The cause was “old age and a broken heart,” according to his son. McMillan’s wife had passed away a week earlier.Born on December 7, 1936, McMillan grew up in Oklahoma City, where he was childhood friends with Ed Ruscha and Joe Goode. In 1957, he drove to Los Angeles to attend the Chouinard Art Institute (now the California Institute of the Arts), joining Ruscha, Goode, and fellow Okie transplants Patrick Blackwell and Mason Williams. The group lived together in Hollywood, then Los Feliz, and dubbed themselves the “Students Five.”After graduating,...
by Hyperallergic - about 52 minutes
Should I allow my work to be sold to people whose politics I hate? I’m not okay with the ongoing injustice in Minneapolis and I don’t want to pretend this is just a difference of opinion. —distraught painter in AmericaShort answer. No. You should not allow your work to be sold to MAGA supporters. The entire administration is corrupt and supporting it is a choice. You don't owe them your work.Whether you can exercise that right, though, depends on your financial situation, your relationship with your gallery, and how much leverage you have. For some artists, decision-making will be straightforward. For others, it comes at a high cost. You decide whether you can incur that cost. But individual...
by Thisiscolossal - about 55 minutes
When we think of terms like “flowing” or “fluid,” we could be referring to the nature of water, but we can also just as easily apply these concepts to our understanding of art and craft. Fabrics “pool” and different mediums converge. The nature of creativity is often referred to in terms of an “ebb and flow.” Ecologically speaking, bodies of water are metaphorically woven into the fabric of our planet. Rivers and lakes sustain an abundance of life, shape cultures, and course through history. Amid the ongoing climate crisis, how do artists express concerns about water and the environment? Water | Craft, a group exhibition at the Minnesota Marine Art Museum, dives into this question. The museum...
by ArtNews - about 1 hour
A Centre Pompidou satellite museum that was expected to open in Jersey City is officially not happening anymore, the city’s Mayor said on Wednesday. The museum, officially known as the Centre Pompidou x Jersey City, would have been the only North American satellite operated by Paris’s biggest museum of modern and contemporary art, which is currently closed for renovations. The Pompidou also runs satellites in Shanghai and Málaga, Spain. Others are expected to open in Hanwha, South Korea, and Paraná, Brazil, yet both pale in comparison to the most ambitious Pompidou satellite in the offing: Kanal, a new museum in Brussels. Some have raised concerns, however, about whether Kanal will ultimately open as...
by Designboom - about 1 hour
janu dubai set to rise over dubai’s financial district
 
Herzog & de Meuron takes to the UAE to design Janu Dubai, a mixed-use development bridging hotel, residences and workspaces. The single vertical address is set to be developed by H&H in partnership with Aman Group, and will introduce the Janu brand to Dubai through a pixelated tower recognized by curving columns.
 
Sited at Al Mustaqbal Street and 17th Street, the building will occupy a major spot within the financial district’s dense grid of offices, galleries, and restaurants. Its 1.3 million square foot footprint will accommodate a 150 room hotel, 57 branded residences, a private members’ club, offices, and retail.
Herzog and Meuron shape Janu...
by Hyperallergic - about 1 hour
In Memoriam is published every Wednesday afternoon and honors those we recently lost in the art world.Ted Berger (1940–2026)Head of the New York Foundation for the ArtsHe managed nearly $23 million in grants since joining the New York Foundation for the Arts in 1973, helping bring arts education to schools. He championed many artists who are now household names, including Meredith Monk and Spike Lee. Jerry McMillan (1936–2026)Los Angeles photographerJerry McMillan, "Self-Portrait" (c. 1970) (image courtesy Craig Krull Gallery)Remembered as a pioneer of "photo-sculpture," he expanded definitions of the photographic medium and documented Los Angeles's burgeoning contemporary art scene. “So much of...
by ArtNews - about 2 hours
The UK can’t seem to get enough of David Bowie. “David Bowie Is,” an exhibition about the late pop icon’s life, music, videos, and art, was organized by the V&A in London, where it opened in 2013 and proceeded to tour the world for five years. The V&A also recently opened the David Bowie Centre, a permanent installation of objects drawn from the musician’s 90,000-item archives, housed in the museum’s new storage facility in East London. Now comes “David Bowie: You’re Not Alone,” will open on April 22 at Lightroom, a venue for immersive exhibitions near London’s Kings Cross Station. “You’re Not Alone” is organized by Mark Grimmer, the creative director of “David Bowie Is.” The...
by Hyperallergic - about 2 hours
Three weeks after the Queens Museum announced the forthcoming departure of Executive Director Sally Tallant, the board has tapped Queens native Debra Wimpfheimer as its next leader, starting this summer. Wimpfheimer, currently the museum's deputy director, has held senior roles at the Flushing Meadows–Corona Park institution for 22 years.As Tallant bookends her seven-year tenure to steer the Southbank Centre’s Hayward Gallery in London, Wimpfheimer will take the reins on several ongoing projects at the Queens Museum. She has already been credited with extensive fundraising efforts for the institution's expansion, and will direct the next phase of its development, which will include a new...
by hifructose - about 3 hours
A bad Facebook experience turned Brown off to social media, but he ultimately brought David Henry Nobody Jr. to Instagram... Read the full article by clicking above!
The post David Henry Nobody JR Exposes Himself first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by Designboom - about 3 hours
zU-studio revives Lasala Plaza Hotel’s common areas
 
zU-studio led the reconstruction of the ground floor and first-floor common areas of Lasala Plaza Hotel in San Sebastián, Spain, as part of a broader repositioning of the property. The intervention redefines the shared spaces through a contemporary architectural language while acknowledging the character of the historic building.
 
The hotel’s entire ground floor has been reorganized as a lounge-bar environment designed to function throughout the day, accommodating activities from morning use to evening gatherings. The layout emphasizes openness and flexibility, allowing the space to adapt to different configurations and levels of...
by Thisiscolossal - about 3 hours
Although James Reka finds total freedom in his studio practice, it’s public art that he gravitates toward. The Australia-born artist researches the history of a building or neighborhood as he conceptualizes a mural and enjoys the constraints of creating within a particular geographic and cultural context. “Public art needs to connect with the local community,” he says. “It does need to have a narrative or a message, even if it’s very subtle. I am mindful of this and choose to view it as a challenge to explore certain themes and color combinations that my studio work does not.” Rheine, Germany Reka renders minimalist shapes into dense compositions with a distinctive sense of vitality and movement....
by The Art Newspaper - about 4 hours
The gifted works come from the estate of longtime supporter Jan Petry and the collection of Los Angeles-based scholar Gordon W. Bailey
by ArtNews - about 4 hours
In a new interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Harmony Korine—a filmmaker and multimedia artist whose boundless imagination has careened into painting, poetry, music, digital art, and pretty much every other artform that exists—talks about moving past his previous pursuits and going all-in on AI. From the Miami office of EDGLRD, the creative studio Korine started around the time of his infrared movie Aggro Dr1ft in 2023, the provocateur said he hasn’t read a book in decades and the only movie he saw last year was the Smurfs film that starred Rihanna as the voice of Smurfette. Instead, he has been spending his time thinking about “more post-narrative, sensory, experimental kinds of entertainment.” In...
by Thisiscolossal - about 4 hours
Redolent of African basketry, hairstyles, headwear, and pottery, Donté K. Hayes’ abstract ceramic sculptures may be interpreted as poetic vessels, even though they lack traditional openings. While we easily associate clay pots and round woven forms with ideas related to storage, protection, and even spiritual significance, they also nod to the human head as a holder—a kind of receptacle for culture, language, personal expression, and dreams. For the past several years, Hayes has approached porcelain with an emphasis on mostly monochrome black forms with meticulously hand-marked surfaces with textures that appear almost strand-like. Recently, he’s begun incorporating colored porcelain into the bulbous...
by ArtNews - about 5 hours
Cultural organizations and reformers in the UK are up in arms against government contractor Serco for removing artworks from court facilities in England and Wales.  A February 10 report from Lay Observers, an independent monitor, found that Prisoner Escort and Custody Service, a government agency, provided artworks to all courts. Lay Observers found that only courts operated by prisoner transport company GEOAmey put the work on display. Some facilities operated by government contractor Serco, says the report, “initially put up the artwork but quickly removed it following instructions from Serco management. No satisfactory explanation has been given as to why one supplier permits this while another does...
by Designboom - about 5 hours
gustaf westman launches curling bowl for 2026 winter olympics
 
Gustaf Westman turns the Winter Olympics into a tabletop event with Curling Bowl, a glossy, sky-blue snack vessel shaped like a curling stone. Referencing the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, the object translates the logic of the sport into a playful ritual, designed to hold popcorn, chips, or candy, becoming the ‘stone,’ while the integrated handle doubles as both grip and tray. Cast in a high-gloss pastel blue, the bowl adopts the rounded mass and elevated handle of a traditional curling stone, softening it into Westman’s signature inflated geometry. 
all images via @gustafwestman
 
 
from ice rink to dining table
 
Curling, a...
by Parterre - about 8 hours
Iván Fischer's Mahler 3 with the Budapest Festival Orchestra at Carnegie Hall is memorable but crude, sometimes exhilarating and often tedious.
by Parterre - about 8 hours
A chic production of Violanta at the Deutshce Oper Berlin continues the Korngold craze on the other side of the Atlantic.
by The Art Newspaper - about 9 hours
Louis Fratino talks to Ben Luke about his influences—from writers to musicians, film-makers and, of course, other artists—and the cultural experiences that have shaped his life and work
by Aesthetic - about 9 hours
Yemeni-Egyptian-American artist Yumna Al-Arashi (b. 1988) creates work with a singular purpose: to oppose the oppression and stereotyping of women worldwide. The artist uses a range of media – photography, book, sculpture – to explore how the Arab world is depicted, question the legacy of colonialism in our thoughts and contemplate matriarchal traditions that are all but lost. Huis Marseille presents Al-Arashi’s first solo museum exhibition, titled Body as Resistance, which brings together her entire oeuvre. Featured works include dyptich Axis of Evil (2020), which depicts four women from the countries designed “rogue states” by the US government and Shedding Skin (2017), made in a bathhouse in...
by The Art Newspaper - about 9 hours
Wimpfheimer has worked at the institution since 2002, most recently as deputy director to Sally Tallant, who is London-bound
by The Art Newspaper - about 10 hours
Works commissioned by the government’s Prisoner Escort and Custody Services were quickly taken down by Serco, according to a report
by Designboom - about 10 hours
Delvaux opens first flagship store in dubai mall
 
Delvaux opens its first flagship store in the United Arab Emirates at Dubai Mall’s Fashion Avenue in 2022, marking a significant milestone for the Belgian luxury leather goods maison. Designed by Vudafieri-Saverino Partners and brought to life through the interior fit-out by Italian specialist barth, the boutique translates Delvaux’s heritage of craftsmanship into a contemporary retail setting in one of the world’s most prominent luxury destinations. Conceived as an immersive spatial narrative, the project reflects both the maison’s savoir-faire and Dubai’s role as a global crossroads for high-end fashion and culture.
barth realizes Delvaux’s...
by Designboom - about 11 hours
Shomali Design conceives geometric Villa elevated above ground
 
Sarchina Villa is a small-scale residential project by Shomali Design conceived to minimize ground contact while strengthening the relationship between architecture and landscape. The primary volume is elevated above the site and supported by four inverted-cone white brick columns. These structural elements lift the building clear of the terrain, preserving visual and physical continuity at ground level and allowing grass, air, and movement to pass beneath the structure.
 
The elevation creates a shaded patio below the main volume, extending the usable space of the villa while reinforcing its lightweight presence. The overall form is defined by...
by The Art Newspaper - about 11 hours
Having a legal structure and policy that allows institutions to make moral decisions on returning objects is crucial
by Aesthetic - about 11 hours
The best design shows reveal how creativity, science, innovation and technology intersect – influencing the very world around us. Those working in the space blend traditional art with bold new methods, creating something striking and unexpected. These five international exhibitions shine a spotlight on the pioneers pushing the discipline forward, inviting audiences behind the scenes of their practice. Together, they trace the complex and fascinating evolution of design, unpack the methods and thinking behind the work, and explore how these ideas resonate within contemporary culture and everyday life. Hella Jongerius: Whispering Things  Vitra Design Museum, Weil am Rhein | Opens 14 March  Hella Jongerius is...
by Aesthetic - about 13 hours
Photography, painting, textiles and video collide in the works of Cooper & Gorfer, the Stockholm-based duo of Sarah Cooper (b. 1974) and Nina Gorfer (b. 1979). They are internationally renowned for constructing “visually dense and psychologically charged” portraits, in collaboration with women from diverse backgrounds. Cooper & Gorfer’s works are instantly recognisable: colourful, layered and full of symbolism. Each “visual tapestry” is a testament to their distinctive, multidisciplinary approach to storytelling, and, most importantly, to the lived experiences of the individuals depicted in the frame. Cooper & Gorfer’s latest exhibition, Altered Gaze, is now open at Jackson Fine Art, Atlanta. The...
by Juliet - about 17 hours
In un mondo dell’arte che, nell’attuale frangente di deriva imperialista, autoritaria e bellicista, è apparso finora troppo silente e timido, la Fondazione Merz di Torino ha scelto di schierarsi. Diverse mostre e iniziative che vi hanno avuto luogo di recente, a partire dalla mostra dell’artista palestinese Khalil Rabah nel 2023, si sono collocate senza timore nel discorso politico, attraverso un fare cultura che è anche informare e creare comunità. Prendendo spunto da una considerazione tratta da uno scritto di Mario Merz, “la cultura si sveste e fa apparire la guerra”, la mostra collettiva Push the Limits 2 si pone in continuità con questi intenti e costituisce il secondo capitolo di una...
by Thisiscolossal - about 21 hours
Jason Mitcham’s childhood home in Greensboro, North Carolina, is no longer standing. In 2011, the local government seized the house and the land he grew up on via eminent domain to widen what was then High Point Road into what’s now Gate City Boulevard. Mitcham last saw the site in 2023, when a paved highway blanketed where the neighborhood once stood, and fragments of garages and barns still marked the landscape. To memorialize this beloved landmark, Mitcham hand-painted “Ever Behind the Sunset,” a touching stop-motion film that combines a series of expressive compositions with audio from the artist’s mother and his own home videos taken throughout the 1980s. Panels of thick, gestural brushstrokes...
by ArtForum - tuesday at 23:22
The organizers of Frieze New York have revealed the sixty-six galleries that will be participating in the event’s fourteenth iteration, slated to take place May 3–17 at the Shed, which has hosted it since 2021. The exhibitors represent twenty-six countries and include stalwarts such as Gagosian, Hauser & Wirth, Pace Gallery, Perrotin, Thaddaeus Ropac, White Cube and David Zwirner. Among […]
by Thisiscolossal - tuesday at 20:51
The expression “wherever you go, there you are” is often wielded to describe futile attempts to escape hangups, anxieties, and a variety of unwanted emotions. Although this truism is typically offered as a negative, it can also be read as a positive that provides comfort and stability amid new environments. In I Bring Home with Me, Ghanaian artist Amoako Boafo recreates his Accra studio in an architectural reproduction within Roberts Projects’ Los Angeles gallery. Boafo is known for his stylized portraiture of Black people, whose skin the artist renders in swirling gestures made with his fingers. This exhibition presents a collection of paintings embedded within the life-sized replica, created in...
by ArtForum - tuesday at 19:29
The Minneapolis-based designer discusses his viral anti-ICE protest signs
by ArtForum - tuesday at 17:19
MoMA PS1 has named the fifty-three artists and collectives whose work will be featured in this year’s iteration of the Queens-based institution’s quinquennial Greater New York survey, set to open April 10 and run through August 17. For the first time since 2010, it will coincide with the Whitney Biennial; it will be followed by the New Museum Triennial, […]
by ArtForum - tuesday at 17:17
The Hepworth Wakefield in West Yorkshire, England, has named Olivia Colling as its new executive director and Laura Smith as its artistic director. Both are natives of Yorkshire and are being promoted from within the institution. The announcement comes as the gallery, named for renowned British sculptor Barbara Hepworth, prepares to celebrate its fifteenth anniversary. […]
by ArtForum - tuesday at 17:14
Onetime French culture minister Jack Lang has resigned his role as president of L’Institut du Monde Arabe over his links to financier Jeffrey Epstein. The ties between Lang, who held key roles in the French government between the 1980s and the 2000s, and Epstein, a convicted sex offender who died in jail in 2019, were revealed in […]
by Parterre - tuesday at 15:30
Juan Diego Flórez's charm and artistic sensibility remain as vibrant as ever, as seen at a recent Carnegie Hall recital.
by Parterre - tuesday at 15:00
Parterre Box highlights a busy few months of Verdi performances for Marina Rebeka and Ludovic Tézier with an exciting sample of their debuts in Nabucco.
by Aesthetic - tuesday at 10:00
The very first Biennale was founded in 1895 in Venice, as an international exhibition designed to bring artists from across Europe together in the Giardini gardens, fostering exchange and dialogue between nations. Originally established as a celebration of artistic innovation, it created a precedent for large-scale exhibitions that could combine national pride with cross-cultural engagement. Over time, the Biennale expanded its remit beyond painting and sculpture to include architecture, film, performance and multimedia works. It is a festival of ideas, a convergence of memory, place and political reflection, where art ceases to exist in isolation and becomes a catalyst for social engagement. Biennales have...
by Art Africa - tuesday at 8:00
Amina Agueznay and Meriem Berrada present Asǝṭṭa, a monumental installation exploring craft, memory and transmission at the Arsenale. From the exhibition ‘Ankabouth’ 2015-2016. Courtesy Fondation Société Générale Morocco © Yasmina Bouzid The Kingdom of Morocco […]
by Juliet - tuesday at 5:30
FRENCH PLACE, realtà nata a Londra nel 2020, inaugura la nuova sede di Milano con CORALE. L’impianto critico della mostra permette alle ricerche degli artisti di incontrarsi in un magico e spontaneo punto di tangenza, secondo una visione che sostiene la libertà e l’opacità delle singole poetiche. CORALE rispecchia una condizione polifonica, un ecosistema in cui il visitatore si muove tra progetti e identità diverse.
AA.VV, “CORALE”, installation view, ph Francesco Paleari, courtesy of FRENCH PLACE
La pratica di Matthias Odin, primo artista in residenza, coniuga l’esperienza del situazionismo francese, ancorato alla nozione di psicogeografia coniata da Debord, alla circolarità del movimento...
by hifructose - monday at 22:59
In 1979, with the publication of The Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams, Williams unintentionally coined a term that would come to define an art movement. But he began intentionally carving out its place in the world long before... Read the full article on Robert Williams by clicking above.
The post Birth of A Movement: The Art of Robert Williams first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by Parterre - monday at 15:00
In an all-Mozart program with the San Francisco Symphony, Golda Schultz shows that her soubrette days are behind her.
by Aesthetic - monday at 14:00
Photographer Samuel Laurence Cunnane travels around the world by van, capturing fleeting scenes that result in luminous images, revealing remarkable beauty hidden in plain sight. The Irish artist makes his London debut at Southbank Centre’s Hayward Gallery with Blue Road, a show that encourages viewers to look more intently in moments of stillness. It is the fifth exhibition in the RC Foundation Project Space Exhibition series, which showcases the next generation of emerging international artists. The titular work depicts a stretch of newly tarmacked road that appears as a deep blue river, gleaming in the early evening light. Elsewhere, dense green foliage parts to reveal a figure in the distance, obscured...
by Juliet - monday at 6:29
Con More Than This, la Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna accoglie un progetto espositivo che mette in tensione due dimensioni in apparenza inconciliabili: l’istituzione museale storica e una pratica pittorica radicalmente contemporanea, nata all’interno di un contesto formativo e laboratoriale. La mostra, curata da Daniele Capra, riunisce dodici artisti formatisi all’Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia nell’ambito dell’Atelier F, restituendo non tanto una “scuola” intesa in senso stilistico, quanto un metodo condiviso fondato sul lavoro, sul confronto e sulla continuità del fare.
AA.VV., “More Than This”, installation view at Pinacoteca Nazionale, Bologna, 2026, ph. Irene Fanizza, courtesy...
by Juliet - sunday at 10:11
La sala espositiva di KAPPA-NöUN accoglie il visitatore con un’installazione che concentra in un unico gesto scultoreo la riflessione di Giovanni Termini (Assoro, 1972; vive a Pesaro) sulla memoria, sul lavoro e sugli strati di esistenza che si sedimentano negli oggetti attraversati da molteplici vite. PostAzione, il titolo di questo progetto espositivo, nella sua formulazione linguistica racchiude un duplice significato: da un lato evoca la posteriorità dell’azione, il venire dopo, l’agire in risposta all’ascolto di memorie precedenti; dall’altro designa la postazione di lavoro, quel luogo quotidiano in cui l’artista compie le sue operazioni trasformative.  Al centro dello spazio, un tavolo da...
by Juliet - saturday at 9:57
Bologna è la città dell’Alma Mater Studiorum, l’Università di Bologna, da quasi mille anni presidio di conoscenza. ART CITY Bologna 2026, alla sua quattordicesima tappa, per questa edizione ha scelto di proporre lo Special Program Il corpo della lingua, curato da Caterina Molteni. I lavori degli artisti proposti si inseriscono e dialogano perfettamente con varie sedi universitarie. Il corpo della lingua significa parlare di esperienza fisica, vocale e di relazione fra corpi, saperi e spazi. Il titolo rende omaggio all’omonimo saggio di Giorgio Agamben, in cui il filosofo delinea una vera e propria anatomia del linguaggio.
Jenna Sutela, “nimiia cétiï”, 2018, Laboratorio didattico del Distretto...
by booooooom - friday at 15:00
Emmalyn Pure  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Emmalyn Pure’s Website
Emmalyn Pure on Instagram
by Shutterhub - 2026-02-05 09:00
 
There’s just 2 weeks left to submit your work for Feeling Seen, a community-centered photography project inviting you to share what you’re experiencing right now.
We want photographers to capture the essence of their current emotions, sensations, and surroundings. Our sense of feeling goes beyond the physical – it’s emotional, atmospheric, and relational. It’s through these feelings that we connect with one another on a deeper level.
It’s about exploring how photography can express both internal and external sensations – whether it’s the rush of anticipation, the dis/comfort of the body, nostalgia of memory or tension of conflict. This project believes in photography’s power to evoke real...
by hifructose - 2026-02-04 19:37
“When I look for places in the city to locate my sculptures, or take photographs, it is a bit similar to [mushroom hunting]. I like to observe the city with that gaze for little details.”Read the full article by Silke Tudor by clicking above.
The post In Plain Sight: Isaac Cordal Creates Tiny Worlds Which Mirror Our own first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by hifructose - 2026-02-04 19:17
The frolicking skeleton children, bat-human creatures, and a lizard girl named Claudine embody the wild imagination of Matt Gordon, a mixed-media artist based in Plymouth, Michigan. Read the full article by Andy Smith by clicking above!
The post Secret Hideout: the Art of Matt Gordon first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by booooooom - 2026-02-04 15:00
Maurizio Rampa  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Maurizio Rampa’s Website
by Art Africa - 2026-02-04 10:18
An exhibition opportunity foregrounding empowerment, representation and lived experience Unpublished Africa invites African women photographers to submit work for its Women’s Month 2026 exhibition, building on earlier research and exhibitions focused on empowerment and visibility […]