en attendant l'art
by Thisiscolossal - about 30 minutes
From factories and barrel-roofed buildings to gabled churches and towers, Charles Young’s sprawling yet diminutive city of paper models continues to grow. Known for his miniature constructions and animations that often double as three-dimensional color studies, the sculptor and animator highlights a wide range of architectural styles with an emphasis on color pairings. Since 2020, Young has been making hundreds of miniature structures inspired by A Dictionary of Color Combinations by Japanese costume designer and painter Sanzo Wada (1883-1967). (There’s even a fun, interactive website based on the book.) So far, Young has completed 258 buildings from the first volume, which focuses on two-color...
by ArtNews - about 34 minutes
Hatshepsut (ca. 1505–1458 BCE), the most powerful of ancient Egypt’s female rulers, was also one of the most successful, notable for reopening old trade routes, commissioning massive building projects—including her own mortuary temple at Deir el-Bahri—and ushering in an era of political stability, economic growth, and artistic innovation. Her rise to the throne began when, after the death of her husband Thutmose II, she appointed herself regent for her young stepson, Thutmose III; some years into her regency, she claimed the title of pharaoh, fashioning herself as a living god. Yet as archeologists discovered when excavating Deir el-Barhri in the early 20th century, all physical reminders of Hatshepsut...
by ArtNews - about 36 minutes
Last week, the Underground Railroad Education Center (UREC) in Albany, New York, filed a lawsuit against the National Endowment for the Humanities, accusing it of cancelling a $250,000 grant on the basis of race. The suit was filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of New York by a group of lawyers affiliated with the organization Lawyers for Good Government, according to an NBC News report. The canceled grant, the suit states, is part of the Trump administration’s ongoing efforts to cut support for any initiatives related to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts. This, according to the UREC lawsuit, is a violation of the organization’s First and Fifth Amendment rights. The center...
by ArtNews - about 39 minutes
The Brooklyn Museum revealed plans to renovate and build a new home for its African art collection dating back to the early 1900s, making it one of America’s oldest institutional collections of art from Africa and the diaspora it informs. The $13-million project aims to establish a dedicated 6,400-square-foot destination on the museum’s third floor, to open with a display of more than 300 artworks from antiquity to the present in the fall of 2027. “This is more than a new collection gallery—it’s a bold reframing of how African art is understood and celebrated in American museums,” Brooklyn Museum director Anne Pasternak said in a statement. “At the same time, this renovation is a major step in...
by Hyperallergic - about 1 hour
KINGSTON, N.Y. – I have written extensively about East and South Asian artists who make art in the diaspora, such as Jiha Moon and Sangram Majumdar. In their work, one sees traces of their bifurcated life. But this marks the first time I am writing about a Scandinavian artist working in the diaspora because it is evident that the color, light, landscape, and stories of her childhood have made an impact on her work. Anki King, whose work is on view at the Lace Mill in Kingston (through March 29), was born on a farm in Norway, attended Oslo Drawing and Painting School, which did not grant a degree at the time, and emigrated to America in 1995, when she was 25. Since then, she has lived in New York, becoming...
by Fad - about 1 hour
As you walk through Mägi’s first major exhibition here, you find yourself rooting for him as he finds his place within Modernism
by Hyperallergic - about 1 hour
We are living in a strangely apocalyptic moment where a perverse logic runs the machinery of public life while insisting everything is just fine. Around the world, political systems are tightening control over commerce, education, culture, and communication. Independent critical thinking is increasingly treated as subversive rather than a civic virtue. Public space, once the laboratory for egalitarian expression, is shrinking under surveillance, privatization, and corporate branding.So where does socially engaged art fit into a world progressively hostile to independent thought?There is a peculiar naïve optimism embedded in the history of social practice art. It assumes that art, when placed in the public...
by Hyperallergic - about 2 hours
Ghanaian artist Ibrahim Mahama, whose renowned installations and large-scale sculptures interrogate his home country’s civil and material society, has threatened to sue his government after members of its police force allegedly assaulted him. According to local news coverage, members of Ghana’s Special Operations Team, also known as the “Black Maria,” allegedly assaulted the well-known artist on March 21, following Eid al-Fitr prayers in Tamale, the northern city where Mahama founded the Savannah Centre for Contemporary Art and Red Clay Studio. Officers reportedly began assaulting several motorists, including Mahama, after attempting to clear traffic. Mahama reportedly lost two teeth and was treated...
by Fad - about 2 hours
Hailed as ‘the Rockstar of the English Baroque’ and ‘the original starchitect’
by Hyperallergic - about 2 hours
In Memoriam is published every Wednesday afternoon and honors those we recently lost in the art world.Calvin Tomkins (1925–2026)Celebrated art writer On staff at the New Yorker for more than 60 years, Tomkins penned elegant, refined, and iconic profiles of artists like Marcel Duchamp, Robert Rauschenberg, and Jean Tinguely. His crystalline prose shook off art jargon, cutting cleanly to the core of each subject he took on. “I go around and get a sense of what’s going on and then write about something that interests me,” he once said about what compelled him in his process. He published several books on subjects as wide-ranging as postmodern art, the 1980s art world, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art....
by The Art Newspaper - about 2 hours
New research has confirmed the site of the giant ancient metropolis, but further archaeological work has been delayed due to issues such as travel restrictions
by The Art Newspaper - about 2 hours
The interactive map has recorded 69 damaged sites so far, but experts say the verified cases represent only a fraction of the destruction as war continues
by Hyperallergic - about 2 hours
Frank O’Hara and MoMA: New York Poet, Global Curator (2025) by Matthew Holman is published by Bloomsbury and available online and through independent booksellers.
by ArtForum - about 2 hours
The writer and artist discusses her visual work, on view at New York's American Academy of Arts and Letters
by hifructose - about 3 hours
Henrik Aarrestad Uldalen captures people in oils with all the precision and clarity of a camera. He then places these incredibly lifelike images in impossible scenes. Uldalen’s models float in blank spaces. They precariously climb staircases that spiral upside down. They fall from buildings that tilt at odd angles. The Oslo-based artist’s work isn’t so […]
The post Weightless: The Paintings of Henrik Uldalen first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by artandcakela - about 3 hours
Studio Loan wants to connect LA artists with the space they need — for free By Kristine Schomaker 60% of artists in Los Angeles don't have a studio outside their home. Or one at all. I think about that number a lot. Because space — or the lack of it — shapes everything. What you can make. How you can show it. Whether you can even invite someone in to see the work. Studio visits matter. Not in some abstract networking way, but in the real, tangible way where someone comes to your space, stands...
by Designboom - about 3 hours
Monologue Café: A colossal sculpture in the landscape
 
Korean studio SOSOKKI ANAC takes to a forested landscape in Gangwon-do to design this Monologue Café as a series of angular brick volumes. The monolithic structure rises from the ground in sharp, deliberate formations. The building reads as a continuous mass, its surfaces folded and inclined, with each plane catching light differently across the day.
 
Set along a quiet edge of water and low vegetation, the project avoids a single, fixed viewpoint. As visitors move around it, the café shifts in profile, sometimes appearing compact and vertical, elsewhere stretched and low against the terrain. The reddish brick facade gives the structure a consistent...
by Thisiscolossal - about 3 hours
Baldernock is a small parish located in the hills just north of Scotland’s largest city. It’s only seven miles between the village and Glasgow city center, but its atmospheric moorland and rolling fields, dotted with sheep, feel a world away. For photographer Camille Lemoine, who currently lives in Glasgow and grew up in Bladernock, the familiar rhythms of small town life, agriculture, and the country’s legendarily mercurial weather lend themselves to a series called Down Tower Road. Intimate images capture steel gray clouds, gnarled trees, elegant grasses, and clusters of purple heather. Lemoine also emphasizes the presence of the female body, whether communing with the earth in a narrow track through a...
by Fad - about 3 hours
a designer who blurred the boundaries between fashion, art and performance long before it became standard practice.
by Designboom - about 4 hours
New york city in handmade, miniature wooden model
 
For 21 years, artist Joe Macken has built a handmade, miniature model of New York City, which has now gone on public view for the first time. On display at the Museum of the City of New York until the summer of 2026, the exhibition and model take over the Dinan Miller Gallery on Fifth Avenue, where the public can study the city ‘from above,’ through their eyes. Titled He Built This City: Joe Macken’s Model, the exhibition presents a 50-by-27-foot installation that shows the city, crafted by the artist’s own hands using materials that are readily available.
 
Artist Joe Macken started the work in 2004 using balsa wood, cardboard, and glue, and for...
by ArtNews - about 4 hours
To receive Morning Links in your inbox every weekday, sign up for our Breakfast with ARTnews newsletter.The HeadlinesTHE SHOW MUST GO ON. Gabrielle Goliath’s banned performance artwork commemorating Palestinian poet Hiba Abu Nada, initially meant to be shown at South Africa’s Venice Biennale pavilion, will now go on display outside the main exhibition, reports the Guardian. The Chiesa di Sant’Antonin church in Venice’s Castello district will host the artwork, which was nixed over its “highly divisive” content, as a video installation for three months, beginning May 4 and staged in partnership with the London arts center Ibraaz. The South African pavilion, meanwhile, will remain empty, for...
by The Art Newspaper - about 5 hours
Henry S. McNeil Jr.’s collection, led by a major Judd "stack" sculpture, is expected to exceed $30m at Christie's this spring
by ArtNews - about 5 hours
South Africa’s contribution to this year’s Venice Biennale will be both absent and impossible to ignore. Months after the government abruptly canceled a planned pavilion by artist Gabrielle Goliath, the work at the center of the dispute is now set to appear in Venice anyway, just not inside the Biennale proper. Instead, according to The Guardian, Goliath’s Elegy will be installed nearby at the Chiesa di Sant’Antonin, where it will run for three months beginning in May.  The official South African pavilion, meanwhile, will sit empty. The unusual arrangement caps a controversy that has been simmering since January, when that country’s culture minister Gayton McKenzie pulled the plug on...
by Thisiscolossal - about 6 hours
For the 13th edition of Design Shanghai, Hu Yuehua presented a bold bouquet intersecting organic forms and human craft traditions. “Weaving Nature” is a large-scale composition of indigo and ochre leaves, blooms, and growths stitched together from dyed cotton and linen. Tightly nested in a wall-like garden, the individual pieces form a dense field of color and texture. Loose threads, raw edges, and tight rows of pleats radiate across the upright piece, merging evidence of the artist’s hand with the natural forms she depicts. Design Shanghai concluded last week, but you can see more of the projects on display at the annual event on its website. Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a...
by Parterre - about 6 hours
With Gustavo Dudamel in the spotlight at Parterre Box this week, Grand Tier Grab Bag foreshadows one of the New York Philharmonic's upcoming operatic engagements.
by Parterre - about 6 hours
El último sueño de Frida y Diego at the Lyric Opera of Chicago is a visual and sonic wonder, but a weak libretto dampens its effect.
by Aesthetic - about 6 hours
Riding a bike. Singing. Going to a football match. These are everyday activities for most people, but not for Iranian women. Instead, they are part of a wealth of experiences that have been restricted for women and girls since the 1979 Revolution. In the decades before the Revolution, the women’s movement in Iran had made important strides. The right to vote and to take their rightful place in various contexts was improved, and more and more doors opened in society. But since, a series of laws once again limited women’s rights in the public arena and laid the foundations for a gender-segregated reality. Creative duo Atoosa Farahmand and Oscar Hagberg depict the lives of women and girls in Iran, marked by...
by Parterre - about 6 hours
Kent Nagano gives a boost to the Opéra national de Paris's revival of Nixon in China.
by booooooom - about 6 hours
Kristina Tzekova  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Kristina Tzekova’s Website
Kristina Tzekova on Instagram
by The Art Newspaper - about 6 hours
The 17th-century Bernardine Monastery was one of several buildings hit in the Ukrainian city’s historic centre, which is a Unesco World Heritage Site
by Fad - about 7 hours
Situated in the city’s River Oaks District, the gallery launched on 20th March 2026 with an inaugural presentation
by Designboom - about 7 hours
Freddy Mamani on his fusion of architecture and heritage
 
Bolivian architect Freddy Mamani emerges not simply as a stylistic outlier, but as a practitioner of a living utopia; one grounded in cultural continuity rather than speculative abstraction. Known for his vibrant Neo-Andean architecture, Mamani has reshaped the monochromatic cityscape of El Alto in his native country, transforming its once monochromatic skyline into a bold expression of identity. His work resists the homogenizing tendencies of global modernism, instead proposing an alternative vision of progress rooted in indigenous knowledge and collective memory.
 
Mamani’s architecture operates less as a projection of an ideal future and more as...
by The Art Newspaper - about 7 hours
A leading figure in Hong Kong’s art world, championing artists, events and venues, Adrian Cheng tells us what is on the agenda during Art Basel
by Parterre - about 9 hours
The Met in HD proved to be a major gateway drug for me, showing me my first Don Carlo in 2010.
by Designboom - about 9 hours
discarded concrete pipes turn into public pavilion in Busan
 
Concrete Utopia by designer Hyunje Joo reconfigures discarded concrete pipes into an open-ended public pavilion at the Museum of Contemporary Art Busan in South Korea. The project examines the environmental implications of concrete, one of the most widely used and carbon-intensive construction materials, and proposes reuse as a spatial and conceptual strategy.
 
Concrete, second only to water in global consumption, generates significant greenhouse gas emissions during production. In response to the climate crisis and the material dominance of contemporary cities, the project addresses the condition of the ‘concrete city’ through the adaptive...
by Designboom - about 10 hours
MPC sample is a portable retrofuturistic DJ-set device
 
Akai Pro releases MPC Sample, a portable retrofuturistic sampler that plays tracks through the embedded speaker for on-the-go DJ sets. Small enough to fit in a bag, the standalone sampler, sequencer, and effects processor also comes with a built-in microphone for recordings. The design is a descendant of the MPC60, the 1988 machine that set the visual language for the project. The MPC60 had a grid of pads at the center, knobs on the right, and a display above, and in the MPC Sample, it follows that design line. 
 
The 16 pads sit in a four-by-four grid and are backlit in RGB, each one can change the sound depending on how hard and how long the user...
by Fad - about 10 hours
But he’s being ironic, given how artfully he re-presents reality:
by Juliet - about 11 hours
A Milano la quindicesima edizione della fiera italiana dedicata alla fotografia si è presentata come luogo di incontro e influenza delle più interessanti ricerche nell’ambito dell’immagine. Tramite uno sguardo mirato alla rappresentazione della complessità del contemporaneo, la direttrice Francesca Malgara, ha delineato il tema della Metamorfosi come ambito che interpreta al meglio i cambiamenti repentini tipici della realtà del nostro tempo, mettendolo in collegamento con i profondi cambiamenti avvenuti all’interno del linguaggio fotografico e aprendo il dialogo all’universo di riflessioni sulla realtà che questa tematica suscita.
MIA Photo Fair BNP Paribas 2026, ph. Zima Studio, courtesy MIA...
by ArtForum - yesterday at 22:42
The Wagner Foundation today announced Tomashi Jackson, Lucy Kim, and Yu-Wen Wu as the winners of its 2026 Wagner Arts Fellowships. Inaugurated last year, the fellowships are awarded annually to mid-career or established artists in the Boston area who are engaged with social change. Each fellowship is accompanied by a $75,000 unrestricted grant. The winning artists are offered professional development opportunities […]
by ArtForum - yesterday at 22:28
The auction of a newly-discovered Renaissance portrait, attributed to German master Hans Baldung Grien in January, has been paused following the work being declared a French National Treasure. The last-minute intervention by the French culture ministry means that the work, which was expected to be sold by the auction house Beaussant Lefèvre on March 23, will now […]
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 21:23
Like a miniature chapel with enough space for one person to stand comfortably, Judith Schaechter’s glowing installation, “Super/Natural,” invites viewers to reflect on nature. An exhibition of the same name just opened at Claire Oliver Gallery and pays homage to biophilia, a theory positing that humans seek connections with nature through an innate attraction. Schaechter celebrates this propensity with a cornucopia of florals, insects, birds, and other imaginative organic forms. “The vernacular of stained glass is one of worship and mythology,” Schaechter says. “Super/Natural turns this a bit on its head, creating a secular sanctuary for contemplating beauty, nature, and our relationship to it.”...
by ArtForum - yesterday at 20:53
Celebrated contemporary artist Ibrahim Mahama says he is planning to file charges against Ghanaian state police after suffering a violent attack on Saturday. Mahama, who is from Ghana, says that members of a state police unit called the Black Maria accosted him on a bus he was riding after a visit to a mosque in Tamale, Ghana; the artist says severe […]
by ArtForum - tuesday at 18:34
CONSIDER EXPOSED-BRICK WALLS, and the thought arises that bricks can be both functional and aesthetic, on display even as they disappear into the work of dividing space. Kamrooz Aram’s suite of five collages Variations on Glazed Bricks, 2021, calls attention to this ambiguous condition of being both structural and decorative—as it applies not just to […]
by Thisiscolossal - tuesday at 15:34
As speculation about humans colonizing the moon and Mars ramps up, it’s increasingly likely that we’ll see attempts at living in places previously unthinkable. For Henry Wood, the potential for inhabiting Mars, in particular, has inspired a series of wooden figures with quite a turbulent backstory. “The premise of this growing body of work is that in the not-too-distant future, humanity will establish a doomed colony on Mars,” he tells Colossal. Each figure has a specific history, their difficulties and demise carved into wood. The character he refers to as Scott, for example, found himself stranded at the South Pole, while an onslaught of ice from the sea buried Franklin. The title of the series fits...
by Parterre - tuesday at 14:00
In its first production since departing the Kennedy Center, the Washington National Opera presents a new adaptation of "King of Ragtime" Scott Joplin’s opera Treemonisha.
by Aesthetic - tuesday at 9:00
Experimentation, modernism and the shifting boundary between art and commerce define Lillian Bassman: Bazaar and Beyond, a compelling new exhibition at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Drawing on a transformative gift from the artist’s estate, the presentation reframes fashion photography as a site of radical visual inquiry rather than mere commercial output. Across more than 60 works, the exhibition reveals a practice grounded in process, materiality and reinvention. Here, the magazine page becomes an arena for aesthetic risk, where gesture and atmosphere displace clarity and precision. The show foregrounds the tension between control and spontaneity, tracing how Bassman’s work resists fixity. As Max...
by Juliet - tuesday at 5:31
In Tales from Fractured Minds la memoria personale e identitaria di sette giovani artisti viene analizzata e dissezionata. In un tempo in cui il corpo è terreno politico e l’identità appare costantemente ridefinita e distorta dal ‘fuori’ il ricordo assume una propria dignità e autonomia, trasformandosi in un organismo vivo e puro sentimento umano.
AA.VV., “Tales from Fractured Minds”, 2026, installation view, works by Tatjana Danneberg and Hanna Antonsson, courtesy of the artists and The Address, ph. Alberto Favara
Ad accogliere il nostro sguardo all’entrata di The Address c’è Weekends and beginnings dell’austriaca Tatjana Danneberg, che costruisce, attraverso la raccolta di scatti e...
by hifructose - monday at 17:07
Mary Iverson paints bucolic, sweeping landscapes reminiscent of the late nine-teenth century that look as if were discovered in the dusty corners of an underrated thrift store. At first look, I assume the canvases are found objects, painted over and re-imagined as something quite different than the original painter intended. This is only partially true. […]
The post Worlds Collide: The Art of Mary Iverson first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by booooooom - monday at 14:00
Sami Farra is this artist we selected for this year’s Capture Photography Festival! Sami is an architect and photographer based in Lausanne, Switzerland. Combining image and object, his work questions the photographic medium in its representation of reality, offering a unique vision of our shared environment. Sami’s interest in images developed during his architecture studies which led him to explore the links between photography and architecture in greater depth at CEPV (Centre d’enseignement professionnel de Vevey).
As the winner of our open call Sami’s work will be installed at the Olympic Village Canada Line Station in Vancouver. The images on display are part of a project involving accidental...
by Aesthetic - monday at 9:00
Movement, memory and the infrastructures that quietly shape daily life underpin Phoebe Boswell’s latest commission for London’s Underground, where escalators become both conduit and canvas. Water threads through the work as a conceptual and historical force, linking subterranean rivers with human passage above them. The project situates transit as a site of reflection, where repetition and routine open onto questions of belonging and visibility. Beneath the surface of the city, layered geographies and suppressed ecologies echo the lived experiences of those who move through its spaces. Boswell’s intervention reframes the Underground as a place where histories converge, diverge and resurface in unexpected...
by Juliet - monday at 6:34
La premessa da cui muove la pratica dell’artista olandese Anneke Eussen (Kerkrade, 1978, vive a Vaals), di cui è in corso la prima mostra personale in Italia alla Galleria Studio G7 di Bologna, è l’intuizione della consistenza materica del tempo. La prima conseguenza è l’idea che i materiali (quelli da lei più frequentati sono il vetro, il marmo e il metallo) siano depositari di durate, stratificazioni e momenti vissuti che persistono nella materia anche quando la funzione originaria è venuta meno. In base a questi presupposti, ogni successiva scelta tecnica e compositiva si configura come un gesto di ascolto verso ciò il tempo ha depositato sulla superficie dei materiali infiltrandosi in...
by Aesthetic - sunday at 14:00
Exploration and absence form the twin axes of Sophie Calle’s (b. 1953) compelling body of work. From the delicate interplay of text and image to her investigations into the seen and unseen, her art occupies a space between intimacy and universality, curiosity and revelation. Themes of love, memory, longing, beauty, and mortality pulse throughout her practice, inviting viewers to reconsider the boundaries of perception. In her latest exhibition, Something Missing?, opening 26 March at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark, Calle presents seven major series alongside additional works spanning nearly four decades. Totalling more than 300 individual pieces of photographs, texts and videos, the exhibition...
by Juliet - sunday at 10:57
Nel contesto del progetto di EDICOLA480, di 480 Site Specific, con la direzione artistica del curatore Massimiliano Bastardo, l’intervento di Jona Fierro – artista napoletano, classe 1997 – si presenta come una soglia percettiva più che come una semplice installazione. Come il fuoco brucia la foresta e come la fiamma incendia i monti – Residuo #01 (2025) non costruisce un racconto lineare, né cerca di restituire un’immagine spettacolare della distruzione. Al contrario, si colloca deliberatamente nel tempo che segue l’evento, in quella dimensione sospesa in cui ciò che resta diventa l’unico elemento attraverso cui interrogare ciò che è accaduto.
Jona Fierro, “Come il fuoco brucia la foresta...
by Aesthetic - saturday at 14:00
Each year, Foam presents the Talent Award. The prize spotlights extraordinary new image-makers who are shaping the future of photography. This edition was a record-breaking one, with almost 3,000 submissions from 107 countries. Particularly exciting, the 2026 award marked the first time the Foam Talent Call welcomed artists of all ages in the early stages of their career. Those that submitted reflect a remarkably wide range of narratives, perspectives and artistic approaches. Many consider the constant global change and uncertainty of our times, addressing themes such as political oppression, mental health, religion and faith, displacement and the search for cultural identity. Technological developments are...
by Juliet - saturday at 6:31
Nel cuore di Firenze, una stanza vetrata al piano terra dello storico Hotel Torre Guelfa interrompe il ritmo pedissequo delle vetrine commerciali e degli ingressi alberghieri, infiltrandosi silenziosamente nel corpo della città: è lo spazio espositivo indipendente Marameo. Qui nasce Liminale, la mostra di restituzione della residenza d’artista di Luca Granato, curata da Lucrezia Caliani e visitabile fino al 3 maggio 2026. Durante la serata inaugurale si è tenuta anche Cartografia di un corpo, intervento performativo site-specific della danzatrice e performer Irene Lombardi, realizzato insieme al DJ e musicista elettronico Andrea Lenzi. L’incontro tra esposizione e performance – divenuto nel tempo...