en attendant l'art
by ArtNews - about 31 minutes
Works by artists including Es Devlin, Brian Eno, Nan Goldin, and Grayson Perry will be auctioned in London later this month to raise funds for humanitarian aid supporting Palestinians. The sale, organized by Choose Love, Gideon Berger Studio, Hope 93 Gallery, and art dealer Zayna Al-Saleh, will benefit the Together For Palestine Fund, which supports Palestinian-led humanitarian organizations, according to the National. The initiative follows the Together For Palestine benefit concert held last year, which raised more than $2.6 million for humanitarian groups. Among the works to be offered are Devlin’s Redraw the Edges of Yourself, Perry’s ceramic work Lady With Fireworks, and Goldin’s...
by Designboom - about 40 minutes
Tobia Zambotti & Hildiberg reimagine industrial waste as a lamp
 
The OOOOOlamp by designers Tobia Zambotti and Hildiberg repurposes hollow-core door waste into a lighting object. The project uses discarded particleboard cores from hollow-core doors, an industrial byproduct typically removed during manufacturing, to form the structure of the lamp. Characterized by a sequence of circular perforations, these panels become the basis for a lighting system that integrates illumination directly within existing voids.
 
During the production of hollow-core doors, circular cutouts are introduced to reduce weight and accommodate hardware such as handles or fittings. The resulting perforated boards are usually...
by hifructose - about 44 minutes
The Pacific Northwest is perhaps the wildest, most breathtaking region in the continental United States. With its combination of mountain ranges, conifer forests, lakes, rivers, and ancient sequoias looming over the California coast, the geography and texture of Wyoming, Montana, California, and Oregon return us to North America’s primordial past. It reminds us of when […]
The post Close Encounters: The Paintings of David Rice first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by ArtNews - about 1 hour
Art Gallery of Ontario deputy director and chief curator Julian Cox will leave his post this April after eight years in the role, marking the latest departure at the Toronto museum since it became embroiled in a controversy over a failed plan to acquire a work by Nan Goldin. It was not clear whether Cox’s departure was in any way related to the Goldin controversy, which stemmed from a decision not to add a recent work to the collection following her comments on Israel’s war in Gaza. According to a Globe and Mail report, internal communications from the museum’s director, Stephan Jost, said that certain members of the acquisitions committee had found Goldin’s statements “offensive” and...
by ArtNews - about 1 hour
The forthcoming Venice Biennale will see the first Russian Pavilion since the onset of the nation’s war in Ukraine in 2022, and few outside Russia seem happy about it. Ukraine itself issued a blistering statement about the pavilion this weekend, calling for the Biennale to exclude Russia this time around. “The Venice Biennale is one of the world’s most authoritative art platforms,” Ukrainian foreign minister Andrii Sybiha wrote in a statement posted to social media, “and it must not become a stage for whitewashing the war crimes that Russia commits daily against the Ukrainian people and our cultural heritage.” Sybiha went on to say that Russia “openly uses culture as an instrument of political...
by ArtNews - about 2 hours
British television presenters Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly—better known as Ant and Dec—have secured a court order requiring an art dealer to disclose details of transactions involving Banksy prints in their collection, as the pair attempts to determine whether an intermediary made undisclosed profits from the deals. According to the BBC, a High Court judge ruled on March 4 that there is a “good arguable case” that wrongdoing may have occurred in transactions handled by an unnamed art consultant who helped the duo buy, sell, and loan works from their contemporary art collection. According to court filings reviewed by the Art Newspaper, McPartlin and Donnelly purchased six Banksy prints through...
by Designboom - about 2 hours
a complex for the history and craft of cinema
 
The Xichang Jianchuan Film Museum by Shenzhen-based Tanghua Architects stands in Xichang, China as a prominent presence within the city’s new high-speed rail district. With its monumental concrete structure and folding rooftop, the project is part of the expansive Jianchuan museum campus and contributes to a cultural complex dedicated to the history and craft of cinema.
 
Set within a large master plan that will ultimately include seventeen institutions devoted to different aspects of film history, the museum occupies a central position along the campus’s main route. It’s within this larger context that the team developed a building dedicated to...
by ArtNews - about 2 hours
“No white cubes! No black boxes!” That’s Udo Kittelmann speaking during a tour of “What a Wonderful World: An Audiovisual Poem,” a presentation he organized at the disused Venetian-style Variety Arts Theater, a six-story Los Angeles palace. On view are selections from the holdings of Julia Stoschek, an ARTnews Top 200 collector who primarily focuses on time-based media. Spaces from grand theaters to dingy basements, shadowy bathrooms to dusty hallways host 45 artworks from an international roster including Marina Abramović, Doug Aitken, Chris Burden, Paul Chan, Maya Deren, Cyprien Gaillard, Anne Imhof, Arthur Jafa, Paul McCarthy, Ana Mendieta, Precious Okoyomon, Jacolby Satterwhite, Sturtevant, and...
by Thisiscolossal - about 3 hours
A new home designed by Equipo de Arquitectura begs the question: is it a house in a forest or a forest in a house? The name of the project sheds some light on that, aptly titled “Un Bosque en la Casa,” or “A Forest in the House.” Bricks, steel, glass, and concrete combine in a single-story contemporary home that’s all corners, volume, and apertures, while the trees and tropical plants around it organically soften its angles. Architects Horacio Cherniavsky and Viviana Pozzoli took the lead on this new home in San Bernardino, Paraguay, challenging the notion that nature is in direct opposition to development. “‘A Forest in the House’ proposes an alternative approach to harmonizing the built form...
by Parterre - about 4 hours
A captivating Asmik Grigorian leads the Bayerishce Staatsoper's revival of its Holocaust-set Salome. 
by Parterre - about 4 hours
Ilana Walder-Biesanz discovers how Houston Grand Opera is celebrating 250 years of America and 100 years of Carlisle Floyd with a new production of Of Mice and Men.
by Aesthetic - about 4 hours
Parks. Railway stations. City halls. Hotels. Theatres. Abstract artist Tada Minami (1924-2014) was committed to practice that spanned beyond the confines of the museum. She often left her creations in urban spaces, where they have since formed an integral part of everyday life. Across an almost 70-year career, she covered huge ground, varying her approach to both material and scale. Her works include massive, stainless-steel sculptures that appear to rise sharply skywards; glass and acrylic constructions that reflect the environment; and “Illuminated Walls,” which contain richly-coloured light. Tada is emblematic of a postwar Japan that was rapidly modernising, transforming itself into the nation of...
by The Art Newspaper - about 5 hours
The Flemish master's largest-known work, in London's Whitehall, will now be accessible at close quarters, thanks to a newly-installed lift
by The Art Newspaper - about 5 hours
The artist’s sculpture “Back to Venice” (1988) will also be offered at Christie’s London’s in March
by Designboom - about 6 hours
UNOPIÙ’S COLLABORATIVE VISION FOR MILAN DESIGN WEEK 2026
  For Milan Design Week 2026, Unopiù moves beyond the traditional furniture showcase to present The Collective. This collaborative project, titled Diario di Viaggio (Travel Diary), weaves together the expertise of six distinct designers into a unified aesthetic narrative. By integrating each individual creative language while honoring the brand’s established heritage, the work invites visitors to experience the outdoor realm as a curated, contemporary landscape.
Unopiù presents The Collective | all images courtesy of Unopiù
 
 
SIX CREATIVE VOICES RE-ENVISION OUTDOOR LIVING 
 
The project gathers an international group of designers including...
by The Art Newspaper - about 6 hours
A white fluid on a 3,300-year-old papyrus was used to make the figure of a jackal slimmer, researchers have found
by Designboom - about 6 hours
modular lighting system glowtile comes from ceramic tiles
 
Leucos and RedDuo debut Glowtile, a modular lighting system built from glazed ceramic tiles, hand-blown glass, and anodized aluminum. Unveiled at the 2026 Matter and Shape fair in Paris between March 6th and 9th, the lighting design can be stacked together to form a wall or build a chair. They can also be placed on the floor, allowing the lights to shoot upwards and illuminate the space from below. The collaboration between the Italian lighting brand and design studio works around two types: a square 15×15 centimeter tile and a rectangular 30×10 centimeter one. 
 
Both can be installed on walls or ceilings, arranged in grids, staggered patterns,...
by Designboom - about 6 hours
light and shadow shape Ekadea Ceramic Workshop in Milan
 
Ekadea Studio is a ceramic workshop designed by AACM – Atelier Architettura Chinello Morandi in Milan, Italy. Conceived as an enveloping space, its form emerges from shadow and accompanies visitors as they cross the threshold. Curved walls rise from the base and define functions, paths, and boundaries. A wooden structure, perforated to frame glimpses or solid to accommodate residual spaces, establishes a rhythm of thresholds and shelter. Light spreads in a filtered, soft, delicate way, generating fields of shadow that enhance the artisanal gesture and the materiality of the surfaces. The vaulted ceiling softens the contrasts of the penumbra, tracing...
by The Art Newspaper - about 7 hours
When the venerable Stephen Friedman gallery shut last month, it followed a number of recent closures. Financial filings of the biggest names in the art market paint a picture of collapsing profitability
by Hyperallergic - about 7 hours
As Lunar New Year celebrations continue across the world, nobody embodies the holiday spirit quite like New Yorkers. Case in point: AX Mina visited Abrons Arts Center for its annual mutual aid initiative and art exhibition. With Love, From Chinatown celebrates the kaleidoscope of queer, working-class imagery and art that makes the community so special — and amid a world in turmoil, Mina's reflections remind us of what the Year of the Fire Horse truly represents.Meanwhile, Israel and US airstrikes on Tehran damage priceless artifacts in the Qajar-era Golestan Palace as a “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame” guerrilla installation in DC reminds us of the real reason why Trump waged this needless...
by Parterre - about 7 hours
This performance features Samuel Ramey in what I consider one of the most powerful deliveries of this aria on record.
by Juliet - about 13 hours
Lo spazio del contemporaneo è lo spazio digitale; la maggior parte del nostro quotidiano si svolge a contatto con strumenti digitali, con display iper-connessi e con flussi incessanti. Byung-Chul Han legge il digitale come zona che produce, paradossalmente alle premesse originali, solitudine e frammentazione, “uno sciame di individui isolati” (Nello sciame, 2013). Invece, tra le pieghe di una città analogica che interroga il rapporto tra icone e contemporaneo come Venezia, una mostra collettiva apre su una prospettiva alternativa.  Restiamo umani! Utopie e Distopie nell’Era Digitale presso lo Spazio Berlendis a Venezia conclude la prima edizione del Premio Berlendis (promosso da Marignana Arte e...
by Parterre - yesterday at 22:38
"Even Peter Gelb’s critics concede that he has had a long run of finding pots of gold," says The New York Times of the Metropolitan Opera's dire money troubles. "But is he running out of rainbows?"
by ArtForum - yesterday at 20:26
Thaddeus Mosley, known for his dramatic abstract sculptures made from reclaimed wood, died on March 6 at his home in Pittsburgh. He was ninety-nine. Drawing from disparate influences including Constantin Brancusi, Isamu Noguchi, and African sculpture, Mosley turned out “sculptural improvisations,” as he called them, for over seventy years before finally achieving broad acclaim in […]
by Parterre - sunday at 11:00
Nobody in my experience has come close to rivaling Samuel Ramey as the shy, lovelorn Englishman Lord Sidney from that first cast.
by Aesthetic - sunday at 9:00
Each year, on 8 March, countries around the world come together to celebrate International Women’s Day. The annual event was first held in 1911, when over one million people in Austria, Denmark and Germany took to the streets to mark the occasion. Today, it continues to be a moment to acknowledge the remarkable contribution of women and girls to society and to collectively demand more be done to achieve gender justice. To celebrate International Women’s Day 2026, we’re spotlighting 10 global exhibitions of women artists. Many address issues that are intimate and personal, often treated with taboo by society, but that continue to resonate with millions worldwide. Tracey Emin considers the body as a site...
by ArtForum - sunday at 6:39
According to lawsuits filed on Friday, two employees of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) used ChatGPT to determine whether previously approved National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) grants should be canceled based on proximity to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion frameworks. One suit each was filed against DOGE and the NEH by a group of plaintiffs […]
by ArtForum - sunday at 6:16
Today, the Whitney Biennial opens to the public, and Artforum Senior Editor Alex Jovanovich offers a few tips on what to seek out. (Also: Read Biennial thoughts from Co-Editor Rachel Wetzler and Editorial Assistant Theo Belci.) Carmen de Monteflores There’s a video clip of Andrea Fraser at a 2007 panel discussion about contemporary feminism. In it, she talks […]
by ArtForum - sunday at 6:14
Today, the Whitney Biennial opens to the public, and Artforum co-editor Rachel Wetzler shares a few tips. (Also: Read Biennial thoughts from Senior Editor Alex Jovanovich and Editorial Assistant Theo Belci.) I suspect that you’ll come away with a very different sense of this show’s tone depending on whether you start on the fifth floor […]
by ArtForum - sunday at 6:11
Today, the Whitney Biennial opens to the public, and Artforum Editorial Assistant Theo Belci shares a couple tips. (Also: Read Biennial thoughts from Co-Editor Rachel Wetzler and Senior Editor Alex Jovanovich.) Young Joon Kwak Kwak’s disembodied disco ball—Divine Dance of Soft Revolt (Anna, Travis, and Me), 2024—is a glitzy chandelier better suited to the SoHo […]
by Juliet - sunday at 4:04
È online il bando per partecipare alla 108ª Collettiva Giovani Artisti della Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa, lo storico appuntamento dedicato alla scoperta e alla promozione dell’arte contemporanea emergente. Rivolta ad artiste e artisti under 30 che vivono o hanno scelto di risiedere nel Triveneto, la Collettiva è aperta a tutti i linguaggi del contemporaneo – pittura, scultura, installazione, video, performance e pratiche processuali – e prevede una sezione specifica dedicata al concorso per l’immagine grafica della manifestazione. Per il secondo anno consecutivo, l’iniziativa è parte integrante di CreArt 3.0 #stringing_together, progetto finanziato nell’ambito del Programma Europa Creativa....
by Thisiscolossal - saturday at 15:31
Anyone who’s decried the seasonal blip we call autumn knows how rapidly nature can swing from verdant greenery to leafless branches. The same goes for the missed watering of an overlooked houseplant: skip a week and bear witness to browning edges that curl into a crisp. As quickly as these natural changes occur, so do their remedies or downfalls, and soon we’re spotting new buds or depositing the evidence of our negligence in the compost bin. For Álvaro Urbano, the brief period between blossom and decay is one to be preserved. He sculpts common plants from metal, casting vulnerable life forms into a sturdy material and rendering their colors and textures in paint. It’s an act of making “small...
by Aesthetic - saturday at 14:00
In 1943, Frank Lloyd Wright was commissioned to design a building for the Museum of Non-Objective Painting in New York. By this time, he was already considered one of the greatest architects of the 20th century, having designed the iconic Unity Temple (1908), Fallingwater House (1937) and Johnson Wax Headquarter (1939). Wright’s inverted-ziggurat design was not built until 1959, delayed by modifications to the design; the rising cost of building materials following WWII; and the death of the museum’s benefactor, Solomon R. Guggenheim. When it opened, the masterpiece was soon recognised as an architectural icon, and more than 60 years on, it welcomes 1.3 million visitors a year. In the words of critic...
by Hyperallergic - saturday at 12:00
The Whitney Biennial is opening to the public tomorrow. While it has lost some of its luster over the years, it's still considered a barometer of American art today. Read what our critics and editors thought of the show below. While we're talking New York, do check out our useful guide of art shows to see across the city this spring. We're expecting 60 degrees Fahrenheit this weekend. Happiness is just around the corner. Also, RIP DePaul Art Museum, whose imminent closure has upset many in the art community. Some say this hard decision could've been avoided, and they're fighting against it. Read Seph Rodney on Carol Bove at the Guggenheim, John Yau on Cordy Ryman's abstractions,...
by Aesthetic - saturday at 10:00
Shanghai is China’s only UNESCO-designated City of Design. Its creative industries generated more than ¥2 trillion in 2025 (up from ¥1.64 trillion the previous year), highlighting the city’s expanding influence on the global sector. This month marks the return of Design Shanghai, Asia’s leading international design show, which runs from 19–22 March at the city’s historic Exhibition Centre. The fair will bring together in excess of 500 brands from over 20 countries, with a mission to “position Chinese creativity confidently within the worldwide design conversation.” What’s most evident this year is how centuries-old traditions are continuing to inform contemporary approaches, with craft...
by Juliet - saturday at 6:07
Il lievito non lavora alla luce. Ha bisogno di calore, di tempo, di un ambiente giusto. Non si può accelerare: se provi a forzarlo, muore. Se lo lasci stare, trasforma tutto. Gli artisti, a volte, funzionano allo stesso modo. In biologia si chiama fermentazione: un processo in cui organismi microscopici – invisibili, pazienti – convertono una materia in qualcosa di completamente diverso. Non è magia. È chimica lenta. È la stessa cosa che succede quando un’idea entra in un corpo, ci rimane per mesi, e poi esce trasformata in qualcosa che prima non esisteva, magari in un’opera. Materica, polimaterica, performativa, sonora, non importa. Ora esiste. Vive. C’è. Da questa analogia – precisa, quasi...
by hifructose - saturday at 0:56
Art history, in Hess' painting, is comprised of tiny renditions of famed works that are patch-worked together. They appear like reams of unfurled toilet paper that form vortices. One spiral extends into the past. Another spiral contains the twenty-first century... Read the full article on the artist by clicking above!
The post F. Scott Hess: Art History & The Dreams of a Reluctant Realist first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by Hyperallergic - friday at 23:53
Los Angeles may be recovering from a bit of an art hangover after our dizzying fair week, but there are several excellent shows worth a closer look this month. At Vielmetter, Hayv Kahraman draws on personal loss to create mystical visions of resilience. Painters Jesse Wiedel and Cole Case focus on our nation’s complexities and contradictions, asking what freedom really means at this pivotal moment in time. Relatedly, a two-gallery Wally Hendrick retrospective and a deep dive into Wallace Berman’s Verifax collages emphasize the enduring vitality and revolutionary spirit of these 20th-century countercultural figures. And at Loyola Marymount University’s Laband Art Gallery, a Noni Olabisi survey gives...
by The Art Newspaper - friday at 23:40
The National Capital Planning Commission, widely expected to approve the plans, will hold its final vote in April
by Hyperallergic - friday at 23:18
The relentless Israeli and American airstrikes on Iran have caused significant damage to the Qajar-era Golestan Palace, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the heart of Tehran.One of the oldest monuments in Iran, the Golestan Palace became a symbol of the Qajar dynasty's power in the 18th and 19th centuries. According to UNESCO, the damage was caused by a shockwave from a nearby airstrike on March 2. Photos from the site show debris of shattered windows, damaged ceilings, and broken marble statues.As of Friday afternoon, March 5, US and Israeli attacks have killed over 1,300 people in Iran. President Donald Trump launched hostilities against the country last weekend without approval from Congress, killing...
by archaeology - friday at 22:54
Aerial view of Ostiense Necropolis excavation, Rome, Italy ROME, ITALY—La Brújula Verde reports that an excavation along the Via Ostiense, the ancient road that connected Rome and its river port, Ostia, has uncovered a previously unknown area of the Ostiense Necropolis. Diletta Menghinello of the Special Superintendence for Archaeology, Fine Arts and Landscape of Rome said that five funerary buildings with vaulted roofs from the imperial period have been uncovered. These buildings were aligned northeast-southwest. Two smaller buildings were found in front of them. Another structure, oriented perpendicularly to the main axis, suggests that the funerary buildings may have been placed around a central...
by Hyperallergic - friday at 22:43
The motif of eight horses galloping (八骏图) in traditional Chinese ink paintings indicates strength, victory, and power. One common greeting with the arrival of the Year of the Horse, the current cycle of the Lunar New Year, which began February 17, is “may success arrive with the horse” (马到成功). Certainly, the year so far has been anything but slow.Artist Singha Hon’s gorgeous rendition of this motif for 2026 queers the image of galloping horses by bringing in images from New York Chinatown’s working class. In her painting, the horses gallop together but tend to each other, more an image of mutual aid than military conquest. (Horses, after all, are herd animals.) In the body of a foal are...
by archaeology - friday at 20:30
Residue samples were taken from Mesolithic vessels such as this one for analysis. YORK, ENGLAND—According to a statement released by the Public Library of Science, Lara González Carretero of the University of York and her colleagues analyzed residues in 58 pieces of pottery unearthed at 13 different archaeological sites in northern and eastern Europe. The pottery was dated to between the sixth and third millennia B.C. The scientists employed scanning electron microscopy to look for traces of plants in addition to chemical analysis of fatty residues left behind by animal foods. They detected traces of a wide variety of plants, including grasses, berries, leaves, and seeds, that had been cooked with a variety...
by archaeology - friday at 20:00
This archival photo taken in 1949 shows an archaeological mound in Michigan. DURHAM, NEW HAMPSHIRE—According to a statement released by the University of New Hampshire, Meghan Howey and Michael Palace of the University of New Hampshire compared temperature data collected by Landsat 8 satellite thermal sensor between 2014 and 2024 and the locations of burial mounds built between A.D. 1200 and 1600 in what is now Michigan’s Lower Peninsula. The researchers discovered that the Anishinaabeg, who lived in the Great Lakes area, built burial mounds near more circular-shaped lakes that warmed later in spring and cooled later in fall. Placement of the mounds may therefore have been associated with a longer maize...
by archaeology - friday at 19:30
Skeleton of a man buried with a polished stone tool near the left shoulder, Csőszhalom, Hungary PARIS, FRANCE—An international team of researchers including Sébastien Villotte of the French National Center for Scientific Research examined 125 skeletons unearthed in two Neolithic cemeteries in eastern Hungary, according to a Live Science report. The burials were dated to between 5300 and 4650 B.C. Villotte and his colleagues recorded changes to the skeletons brought about by physical exertion, such as upper-limb overuse and toe hyperextension, which can be caused by working in a kneeling posture. Examination of the remains suggests that all of the men and women in the study engaged in heavy physical work,...
by Thisiscolossal - friday at 17:06
Before digital fonts and the ability to reproduce graphics on a large scale, there were sign painters. Today, printers can spit out countless posters and ads, but there was a time when hand-painted promotional signage was needed for retail windows, and business names were often rendered just the same. Of course, it’s a trade that virtually died out with the advent of new technologies, which made it cheaper and faster to produce public messaging. In the way of LPs and film cameras, though, just because there were new methods in daily use, it certainly doesn’t mean that the art form doesn’t live on. A new book published by Letterform Archive, Lettres Décoratives: A Century of French Sign Painters’...
by booooooom - friday at 15:00
Deb JJ Lee  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Deb JJ Lee’s Website
Deb JJ Lee on Instagram
by Thisiscolossal - friday at 13:53
Dakotaraptor, a fossilized skeleton of which was discovered a little more than 20 years ago by paleontologists in South Dakota, was an extremely lethal prehistoric predator. Its feathered body, powerful legs, and huge jaw gave it an advantage as it roamed its territory some 66 million years ago. But it was really its so-called “sickle claw,” a huge, taloned toe that measures 9.5 inches on the outer curve. For artist Grant Garmezy, the ancient creature presented a unique opportunity to render a life-size sculptural version. Specializing in meticulously detailed, accurate representations of nature in glass, he took on the challenge of recreating the Dakotaraptor’s 14-foot length from snout to tail. “The...
by Aesthetic - friday at 10:00
The Sony World Photography Awards, one of the most anticipated photography announcements of the year, has revealed the 30 finalists and 65 shortlisted entries in the 2026 Professional competition. We’re sharing five striking images from the selection, narrowed down by a jury from over 430,000 submissions across 200 countries and territories. These photographs showcase diverse approaches to the landscape – whether they be natural, or human-made. From melting ice sheets to imposing border walls, the images challenge viewers to reflect on our changing climate and the structures of power that shape our world. Liam Man, Standing on New Ground, (2026). From When Mountains Move. “The state of Earth’s...
by Juliet - friday at 5:48
Benché di primo acchito pittura e immagine digitale sembrino afferire a due dimensioni antitetiche, la prima connessa ai tempi lunghi del lavoro manuale, alla fisicità dei materiali e a una secolare genealogia stilistica e iconografica che spesso si vuole esangue, la seconda alla smaterializzazione, alla planarità retroilluminata, all’automatismo inventivo e all’assenza di prospettiva storica, diversi pittori hanno focalizzato le loro ricerche sull’esplorazione delle reciproche influenze e delle possibili integrazioni tra queste due sfere.
Flavio de Marco, “Screen Life”, installation view at Villa delle Rose, 2026, ph. Ornella De Carlo, courtesy MAMbo – Museo d’Arte Moderna di Bologna |...
by archaeology - thursday at 20:00
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE—According to a statement released by the Nature Publishing Group, Anopheles leucosphyrus mosquitoes may have evolved to feed on humans in Southeast Asia. Upasana Shyamsunder Singh of Vanderbilt University, Catherine Walton of the University of Manchester, and their colleagues sequenced DNA from 38 modern-day mosquitoes from 11 species in the leucosphyrus group. Then the researchers employed computer models and estimates of DNA mutation rates to reconstruct the evolution of these mosquitoes. The study suggests that the bugs switched from feeding on non-human primates to early humans in the region of Sundaland, an area including the Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Sumatra, and Java, between 2.9...
by Thisiscolossal - thursday at 17:46
In the age of the internet, we’re fortunate to have virtual access to museum collections around the world, thanks to objects in the public domain and programs like The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Open Access Initiative. Through a searchable digital catalogue, visitors to the museum’s website can see hundreds of thousands of objects, many images of which are available for download. And it’s not alone—other institutions like the Art Institute of Chicago, The National Gallery of Art, and The Cleveland Museum of Art, among others, make pieces in their collections accessible to all. The thing is, digital images don’t always give us the full picture, so to speak. Even two-dimensional paintings and...
by Juliet - thursday at 9:52
Download preview Juliet 226
COPERTINA
Alicja Kwade “Siège du Monde”, 2025, marmo Azul Macaubas bronzo con patina nera, 96,5 x 54 x 58 cm. Photo Roman März, courtesy dell’artista e Galleria Continua
38 | “Al di là della pittura” – Rilettura di due film creativi di Luca Maria Patella e Marinella Pirelli / Luciano Marucci
46 | Inchiesta sull’Intelligenza Artificiale – Potenzialità e limiti (VIII) / Luciano Marucci
50 | Produzione creativa e identità – Riflessioni sulla genesi e l’evoluzione (XXI) / Luciano Marucci
54 | India – al PAC di Milano / Emanuele Magri
56 | Ismaele Nones – Tra passato e presente / Roberto Vidali
58 | Emilia Marasco – Arte visiva e scrittura / Elisabetta...
by hifructose - wednesday at 20:27
Sam Gibbons isn’t letting you off the hook. Sex, violence, religion, ego—everything comes together in colorful palettes unrestricted by shape or form. His rare, vibrant paintings are teeming with images both familiar and grotesque, and they’re demanding some careful attention Read the full article form our archives by clicking above.
The post Organized Chaos: The Art of Sam Gibbons first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by booooooom - wednesday at 15:00
Alice Angelini  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Alice Angelini’s Website
Alice Angelini on Instagram