en attendant l'art
by Designboom - about 6 hours
Nicola Turner fills YSP chapel with wool and horsehair forms
 
Nicola Turner brings her most ambitious site-responsive work to date to Yorkshire Sculpture Park (YSP), where Time’s Scythe, a sprawling installation made from raw wool and horsehair, occupies the historic Chapel until September 27th, 2026. The work begins on the exterior of the building, spilling from the bell tower and entering through an upper window before cascading over the balcony into the nave, where visitors move among its sinuous, bulbous forms. The earthy smell of the material amplifies its sensory presence, while a flock of sheep grazing the surrounding landscape extends the work’s reach beyond the walls of the building.
Nicola...
by Parterre - about 7 hours
Ten years since the death of countertenor Brian Asawa, Charles Stanton remembers his friend and corrects the record on his untimely passing.
by Aesthetic - about 8 hours
In 1912, Pablo Picasso and George Braque began experimenting with combining artworks on a page. As art critic Michael Bird wrote, it “transformed collage from parlour game to avant-garde medium.” The process soon became popular in Modernist and Cubist circles, as artists sought new methods of creative expression, Yet, this narrative, as Fiona Rogers writes in the introduction to Cut Out, presents “historians and art critics with something of a conundrum.” The reality is that there were makers all over the world, mostly women, folk and Indigenous artist, who have been relegated to the margins of the practice. Cut Out, a new publication from Thames & Hudson presents collage, assemblage and montage as a...
by Parterre - about 10 hours
This task feels near impossible, as I listen to a LOT of art song singers on repeat, across decades and continents (from piano to orchestral works)  — mostly for pleasure, but also for study. 
by Hyperallergic - about 10 hours
Last week, I visited Gracie Mansion in Manhattan for a conversation with artist and New York First Lady Rama Duwaji. It was her first interview with a journalist since her husband, Zohran Mamdani, took office on January 1. I didn't know what to expect as I had never met Duwaji before or heard her speak in public. In what became a standard studio visit, I discovered a humble and thoughtful artist who refuses to use her celebrity for easy career gains. Though we spoke primarily about her practice, the interview got picked up by dozens of publications worldwide because of Duwaji's apology for foolish teenage tweets that a far-right rag dug up from the depths of the internet in an attempt to hurt her...
by Designboom - about 13 hours
the CINEMA OF DREAMS DURING MILAN DESIGN WEEK 2026
 
ROOM FOR DREAMS opens its doors on Monday, April 20th, with a multilayered takeover of the ME Milan Il Duca exploring dreams as rigorous tools for social and cultural transformation. During Milan Design Week 2026, the project unfolds across the Aldo Rossi-designed hotel at Piazza della Repubblica with large scale installations, live talks, daily rituals and a dedicated cinema space. Designed by Paf atelier, the Cinema of Dreams is the beating heart of our temporary creative ecosystem – part installation, part screening room, entirely its own world.
Brought to life in collaboration with visionary archives and filmmakers, the daily program is curated...
by Designboom - about 13 hours
Gearing up FOR MILAN DESIGN WEEK 2026
 
Milan design week 2026 is just around the corner, and designboom returns with it to guide you through this year’s most exciting events, exhibitions, and must-see installations! From April 20th to 26th, 2026, the world’s biggest design event is set to transform the streets of Milan into a celebration of creativity and promises an electrifying mix of design, architecture, and innovation spread across the city.
 
To make sure you don’t miss a thing (and know where to go!), we have once again curated a selection of must-see events, talks, exhibitions, and experiences that will ensure you leave Milan full of powerful new insights and lasting impressions. Chief among...
by Designboom - about 16 hours
plastic waste transforms into coral-like sculptural accessories
 
rushera is a recycled sculptural accessory series developed through a collaboration between design studio Object with Name and material manufacturer Plastic Bakery. The work investigates how discarded plastic can be reprocessed into new objects through controlled fabrication methods, while also examining the relationship between synthetic waste and natural forms.
 
The project is based on a narrative that references the interaction between marine environments and plastic debris. This concept is translated into a series of sculptural accessories that combine irregular geometries and layered material textures. The forms draw on visual...
by Juliet - about 17 hours
La retrospettiva dedicata a Mario Schifano al Palazzo Esposizioni Roma si apre con un ambiente immersivo che orienta fin da subito la lettura curatoriale. Nella Rotonda centrale, la ricostruzione della sala da pranzo realizzata nel 1968 per l’appartamento romano degli Agnelli introduce un ambiente totalizzante, in cui cieli stellati e sequenze di palme costruiscono una dimensione sospesa tra memoria e artificio. L’elemento decorativo si trasforma qui in spazio mentale: il paesaggio, lungi dall’essere evocazione naturalistica, appare come immagine già filtrata, già mediata, in cui affiora – senza mai dichiararsi apertamente – una traccia biografica legata alle origini libiche dell’artista.
Mario...
by ArtForum - about 20 hours
At the Art21 gala with the downtown darling and Greater New York standout
by ArtNews - about 20 hours
Finland’s political leadership will not attend the Venice Biennale this year if the Russian Pavilion goes on view as planned, marking the latest escalation of European opposition to Russia’s return to international exhibition. In a statement released Thursday, Finland’s Ministry of Education and Culture said that its position is that Russia must not be allowed to participate “as long as Russia’s war of aggression in Ukraine continues.” However, Minister of Science and Culture Mari-Leena Talvitie said some public officials from Finland will still attend in order to support Finnish arts and culture. While the move stops short of a full withdrawal, Finland’s decision underscores growing political...
by Hyperallergic - about 20 hours
This was supposed to be a profile of Tania El Khoury, the multidisciplinary Lebanese artist, winner of the 2026 Creative Capital Award, Distinguished Artist in Residence and Associate Professor of Theater & Performance at Bard College, and founding director of the school’s Center for Human Rights & the Arts. But then the war escalated. On March 2, two days after the United States and Israel launched their first coordinated strikes on Iran, the latter intensified its brutal bombardment of Lebanon. As of writing this, over 2,294 Lebanese have been killed by Israel, including 177 children and 91 healthcare workers. At least 357 of these deaths took place on April 8, dubbed Black Wednesday, when Israel dropped...
by The Art Newspaper - yesterday at 23:59
Low exhibitor turnover and deliberative buying underscore a market built on long-term connections, while younger dealers shape the city’s evolving cultural context
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 23:46
Having lived my entire adult life under right-wing authoritarian Viktor Orbán’s regime, his colossal defeat at Hungary’s parliamentary elections last Sunday by Tisza, the largest opposition party, still feels hard to believe. Witnessing people in my hometown, Budapest, erupt with joy — dancing in the streets, strangers high-fiving each other — makes me hopeful that after 16 years, the Orbanization of culture and the instrumentalization of art institutions to broadcast the regime’s ethno-nationalist, conservative Christian agenda may finally be coming to an end.The Hungarian art scene now stands at a watershed moment, much like in 1989 after the collapse of the Soviet Union, and the task of restoring...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 22:46
The first thing one encounters upon entering Joan Semmel’s Soho loft is an eerie oil self-portrait of the artist sitting on a stool, the flash of her camera exploding in a ring of light. Her silver-framed work, “Mirrored Screen” (2005), rests on a wall near the entrance of her second-floor Spring Street studio, where she has lived and worked for more than half a century. It almost looks like a mirror when Semmel stands in front of it, with her arched eyebrows and dark eyes, although her long, dark, wavy hair is now gray, streaked with white. The piece is part of a series on locker rooms she made more than 20 years ago, when she was interested in narcissism in popular culture. Her fitness center on...
by ArtNews - yesterday at 22:41
Nearly a year after Spain’s Supreme Court ruled that the National Art Museum of Catalonia (MNAC) must return the Sijena Monastery murals to the Royal Monastery in Aragon, in northeastern Spain, the Barcelona museum still hasn’t let go of the disputed—and delicate—13th-century artworks. The ruling, in May 2025, followed more than a decade of legal battles between the Aragonese government and MNAC. The Sijena murals—often referred to as the “Sistine Chapel of Romanesque art”—were removed from the monastery in 1936, after it was set on fire during the Spanish Civil War. They were restored by MNAC, transferred to canvas, and have been on view there, controversially, since 1961. The museum was able...
by Designboom - friday at 22:00
keit bakery opens in berlin with minimalist interiors
 
KEIT Bakery in Kreuzberg, Berlin, designed by Studio Michael Burman, presents bread-making through a compact interior defined by stone, wood, and steel. The project brings a textural minimalism to a familiar program and backdrops production and display with an expressive material palette.
 
The layout reads immediately through its centerpiece. A large counter traces a curved path across the room, guiding both movement and attention. Formed from a reclaimed millstone, the surface has been cut into three segments and reassembled into a continuous, fan-like sequence. Its mass carries a sense of age and use, while the geometry introduces a controlled sense...
by Hyperallergic - friday at 21:44
In a bold crossover, the Metropolitan Museum of Art will present the slender works of 20th-century Swiss sculptor Alberto Giacometti inside its Ancient Egyptian Temple of Dendur this summer. Made possible by a loan from the Paris-based Fondation Giacometti, Giacometti in the Temple of Dendur will showcase 17 of the artist’s sculptures within and around the first-century BCE Roman Period temple. The late artist’s foundation will loan 14 of the works for the exhibition, and The Met will contribute three works from its own collection. The temple honors the Egyptian goddess Isis, a deity associated with motherhood, magic, and healing, and her two brothers. The majority of the forthcoming exhibition’s 17...
by The Art Newspaper - friday at 21:13
The works, which span prehistory to the time of contact with Spanish colonisers, were identified in Hidalgo state during construction of a passenger train line
by ArtForum - friday at 20:56
After years of supporting the Henry Street Settlement, a social services nonprofit on New York’s Lower East Side, via a partnership which ended in December of 2025, the Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA) has announced that the new beneficiary for its Park Avenue Armory fair in 2026 will be the Whitney Museum of American Art, Hyperallergic reports. […]
by ArtForum - friday at 20:27
Minneapolis’s Walker Art Center has decided to cut ties with its longtime internal restaurant, Cardamom, after the eatery said it planned to switch over to a QR code ordering system, thereby eliminating its front-of-house staff.  As a result of its decision, Cardamom would cut sixteen hosts and servers, retaining only kitchen staff and bartenders, MPR News reported; the museum certainly feels […]
by ArtNews - friday at 20:11
Sotheby’s has returned to profit after several loss-making years, though the underlying financial picture remains complicated. The auction house posted a $53 million pre-tax profit in 2025, according to financial documents reviewed by the Financial Times, a turnaround from a $190 million loss the year prior. Sales rose nearly 20 percent to $7.1 billion, lifting revenue from its core auction business 26 percent to about $1 billion. Full-year figures released by Sotheby’s show a broader improvement across the business. The company reported total revenue of $1.4 billion in 2025, up 21 percent year-on-year, alongside an adjusted EBITDA of $363 million, one of the highest levels in its history. The rebound...
by archaeology - friday at 20:00
Transverse section of a fragment of charcoal ash observed under an environmental scanning electron microscope JERUSALEM, ISRAEL—Analysis of charcoal found at the site of Gesher Benot Ya’aqov in northern Israel shows that early hominins used readily available tree species for firewood, according to a statement released by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. For tens of thousands of years, hunter-gatherers repeatedly returned to Gesher Benot Ya’aqov, which was situated near a lake. Ethel Allué of the Catalan Institute of Human Paleoecology and Social Evolution, Naama Goren-Inbar of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and an international team of scientists examined more than 250 pieces of charcoal from an...
by ArtNews - friday at 19:46
The Denver Art Museum has returned a marble head of a bearded man stolen from the ancient city of Smyrna to Turkey. This marks the latest in a growing list of successful restitutions tied to the country’s renewed campaign to reclaim its cultural heritage from museums worldwide.  The sculpture’s provenance indicates it was likely carved in the fifth century BCE in Smyrna—the ancient Greek name for present-day Izmir. Situated on Turkey’s Aegean coast, the city is among the world’s oldest continuously inhabited seaports and trade centers, a distinction that has also made it a frequent site for archeological excavations and, inevitably, a target for illicit antiquities trafficking. According to...
by ArtForum - friday at 19:32
The organizers of the British Art Show have announced the theme and artists for the event’s tenth and largest edition, to open this fall. The traveling contemporary art exhibition, held every five years, is the largest recurring show of its kind in the UK and features recent works by the country’s artists. Curated by Ekow […]
by archaeology - friday at 19:30
HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE—According to a Phys.org report, Weronika Tomczyk of Dartmouth College and her colleagues examined more than 300 dog bones recovered from the site of El Castillo de Huarmey in northern Peru, where a royal tomb of the Wari Empire was uncovered. “Only some remains were found in undisturbed contexts, while most came from the fill disturbed by the looters’ activity in the 1980s,” Tomczyk said. She and her colleagues focused their study on mandibles or tibias in an effort to avoid sampling the same dog more than once, resulting in a group of at least 20 individuals of various ages, from puppy to senior dogs. Most of the bones, which range in size, showed minimal butchery marks. Some of...
by artandcakela - friday at 19:01
By Katherine Kesey In the last few years, Los Angeles's Melrose Hill neighborhood has quickly become one of the city's most walkable arts districts. This past Saturday night, there were nearly ten coordinated openings, and I attended almost all of them. Taken individually, the shows were equally captivating. Together, they were a warm and exciting medley of passionate color, lighthearted mystery, and wry humor. Hannah Tishkoff, Beyond Love There is No Belief. 2026. Acrylic, oil, and pennies...
by ArtNews - friday at 19:00
A small group of high-value works from the collection of entrepreneur and philanthropist Jennifer Gilbert will go to auction at Sotheby’s this spring, with proceeds directed toward Lumana, a Detroit-based arts nonprofit she is developing. The works will be split across Sotheby’s May contemporary sales and its June design auction. The top lots include Joan Mitchell’s Loom II (1976), estimated at $5 million to $7 million, and Kenneth Noland’s Circle (1958), carrying a $4 million to $6 million estimate—an ambitious figure that, if achieved, would set a new high-water mark for the artist.  Other works by George Rickey and Harry Bertoia round out the group, which leans heavily on midcentury...
by archaeology - friday at 19:00
LONDON, ENGLAND—According to a statement released by King’s College London, the location of a property purchased by William Shakespeare in 1613 has been pinpointed on a previously unknown plan identified by Lucy Munro of King’s College London. Located in the Blackfriars neighborhood of central London, the property was situated in the gatehouse of the medieval priory that gave the neighborhood its name, but scholars had been uncertain as to where that gatehouse stood on the site. Munro recovered two documents from the London Archives and one from England’s National Archives that helped resolve this problem. The first document is a plan of the Blackfriars precinct that was drawn in 1668, after the Great...
by Thisiscolossal - friday at 19:00
Feline antics are notoriously chaotic. “The cat is, above all things, a dramatist,” author and Egyptologist Margaret Benson is to have said. Sacred to ancient Egyptians, domestic cats share more than 95% of their genetic makeup with tigers, and they can leap five times their height and turn into veritable spring mechanisms when startled. Also, would the Internet be the same without cat memes? For Léo Forest, these lovable, independent, wily, and territorial creatures provide an endless source of inspiration for dynamic pencil drawings. The Paris-based artist’s playful works tap into the physical and emotional quirks of cats, from brawling pairs to individuals in the midst of grooming, scratching, or...
by The Art Newspaper - friday at 18:54
Opening this weekend, the Green-House incorporates a historic 1895 cast-iron and glass structure and serves as the “new front door” to the famed burial ground
by ArtForum - friday at 18:38
Dozens of staffers at Artnet and Artsy have been laid off following the consolidation of the two companies under UK-registered investment firm Beowolff Capital, Artnews reports. The cuts came one day after the announcement of the merger between Artnet—the operator of an online auction database, a sales arm, and the widely read digital publication Artnet News—and Artsy, an […]
by The Art Newspaper - friday at 16:42
The country’s ministry of culture has written to the UN body for “immediate and swift intervention to protect” the Chama' Citadel after reports of damage by Israeli forces
by The Art Newspaper - friday at 16:17
In this week's episode, Ben Luke gets a sneak peak of London's new V&A East Museum, speaks to California-based correspondent Jori Finkel about the new home of Lacma's collection, and learns about a work by William Blake on show at the National Gallery of Ireland
by Thisiscolossal - friday at 15:02
In a converted 18th-century chapel on the grounds of Yorkshire Sculpture Park, a strange form creeps through openings in the architecture. One can imagine its clipper- and knife-footed tendrils scurrying across the floor as it spills from an upper aperture and even slithers around part of the building’s exterior. Its otherworldly genesis is at the hands of Nicola Turner, known for her monumental, contorted textile installations that often heave and surge from structures and public spaces. Turner’s solo exhibition, Time’s Scythe, comprises forms made of recycled wool and horsehair, which she hand-stitches inside of mesh to create the bulging, knotted forms. “This is Turner’s first large-scale...
by Parterre - friday at 15:00
SoCal goes Scandi in two recent concerts, with one featuring an appearance by Lise Davidsen.
by booooooom - friday at 15:00
John Sanderson  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
John Sanderson’s Website
John Sanderson on Instagram
by Fad - friday at 13:01
You’ve probably seen it everywhere: smoothie bowls on Instagram, post-workout shakes at the gym, even quiet recommendations from friends who... Read More
by Fad - friday at 12:55
The human body holds tension in ways we rarely think about. A stressful week at work, an old sports injury,... Read More
by Fad - friday at 12:52
Florida homes face a unique set of challenges — intense heat, humidity, hurricane season, and a real estate market that... Read More
by Parterre - friday at 12:00
I listen to about as much art song as I do opera and could have filled every day of April with favorite selections.
by Aesthetic - friday at 10:00
Chairs hung from the ceiling. Colourful playgrounds as interior spaces. Two-metre-high seating towers. This is the world of Danish designer Verner Panton (1926–1998), who is being celebrated by Vitra Design Museum this spring. The retrospective exhibition, Form, Colour, Space, opens in line with the 100th anniversary of Panton’s birth – a centenary which is also to be marked by other major destinations, including the Museum of Decorative Arts in Berlin and Designmuseum Danmark. Panton is recognised for shaping design in the second half of the 20th century, by taking a playful, sculptural approach to domestic space. This show is a chance to be immersed in his vision, to which colour, textiles and light...
by Fad - friday at 8:50
Launched in 2025, the Art Basel Awards recognise leading artists and organisations shaping contemporary art, offering global visibility, support, and year-round programming.
by Juliet - friday at 4:27
Con Baselitz. Avanti!, il Museo Novecento di Firenze propone un attraversamento non lineare della ricerca di Georg Baselitz, affidato alla curatela di Sergio Risaliti. Più che una retrospettiva o un’indagine cronologica, il progetto si configura come un dispositivo che insiste sul presente dell’opera, sulla sua capacità di rinnovarsi nel tempo senza mai stabilizzarsi in una forma definitiva. Il titolo stesso introduce una direzione: “avanti” non come progresso lineare, ma come movimento continuo, tensione che attraversa l’intero percorso dell’artista. In questo senso, la mostra evita la trappola di una lettura storicizzante, privilegiando invece una relazione diretta con la dimensione processuale...
by booooooom - thursday at 21:47
For our fourth annual Photo Awards, supported by Format, we selected 5 winners for the following categories: Colour, Nature, Portrait, Street, and Student. It is our pleasure to introduce the winner of the Nature category: Sophie Altemus.
Born and raised in Los Angeles, Sophie Altemus is a photographer currently studying at Oberlin College in Ohio. Working primarily in the realm of snapshot photography, she carries a camera with her everywhere she goes.
This year’s awards were sponsored once again by Format, an online portfolio builder specializing in the needs of photographers, artists, and designers. With nearly 100 professionally designed website templates and thousands of design variables, you can...
by archaeology - thursday at 20:30
Marble head of a bearded man from Smyrna, Turkey İZMIR, TURKEY—The Denver Art Museum has repatriated a marble sculpture head of a bearded man taken from the site of the ancient city of Smyrna to Turkey, according to a Yeni Şafak report. Records show that the sculpture, thought to have been carved in the fifth century A.D., was unearthed in the city’s agora in 1934, said Culture and Tourism Minister Mehmet Nuri Ersoy. “Through cooperation and constructive dialogue with the Denver Art Museum, we have brought this artifact back home,” Ersoy added. The sculpture is now on display at the İzmir Archaeology Museum. To read about marble panels excavated in a Roman villa at Ephesus, go to "Kaleidoscopic...
by archaeology - thursday at 20:00
HIDALGO, MEXICO—According to a Mexico News Daily report, 16 paintings and petroglyphs have been discovered on cliffs near the Tula River and the La Requena Dam, at central Mexico’s El Venado site, which is named for the depictions of deer on rock faces there. Archaeologists from Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History investigated the area prior to construction of a passenger train route. The oldest of the newly found artworks has been dated to 4,000 years ago, while the later images were made between about A.D. 900 and the arrival of the Spanish in the early sixteenth century. The rock art includes images of people with shields, headdresses, and weapons. One of the figures is shown...
by Thisiscolossal - thursday at 20:00
It’s one thing to marvel at the inner workings of a transistor radio or a timepiece, but for artist Manabu Kosaka, that curiosity reaches a whole new level. Using nothing but paper, the artist makes scale replicas of cameras, watches, gaming consoles, shoes, food, and more with a preternatural attention to detail. Not only does a 35mm film camera include a strap and a back hatch that opens, the lever used to advance the film and other gears are also built into the top, some of which are even moveable. Around ten years ago, Kosaka faced uncertainty about the direction of his work. “During that time, I spoke with a friend who works in art direction, and they suggested that I try creating with simpler...
by Thisiscolossal - thursday at 16:42
Until just the past few decades, textiles were generally created with only practical applications in mind. Although fiber and cloth in its myriad forms had been produced for millennia around the globe, fabrics were woven for either domestic or industrial use, and crafts such as knitting, weaving, basket- and net-making, and more were considered purely functional. Think clothing or decor. Even ornate medieval tapestries were conceived as utilitarian objects, used in stone buildings like churches and large homes to soften sounds and insulate against the cold. Within the canon of Western art history, in particular, the hierarchy of fine art has long been quite definite: painting and sculpture were chief among...
by Fad - thursday at 16:09
Opening its 20th Anniversary season on 15th May 2026, Bold Tendencies is the internationally acclaimed contemporary arts programme
by Parterre - thursday at 15:00
An invigorating double bill at the San Francisco Symphony challenges how Bach "should" be performed.
by Aesthetic - thursday at 14:00
This year, CONTACT Photography Festival celebrates its 30th edition. The Toronto-based event is dedicated to exhibiting, analysing and celebrating lens-based media in all its forms. Over the past three decades, it has attracted over 20 million visitors and presented the work of over 8500 artists, Darcy Killeen, Chief Executive Officer, says: “this is a milestone for our organisation, and we are truly grateful to the thousands of artists who have participated and shared their work with the public in exhibitions and programs across Toronto and on our website.” This year, the featured lens-based and mixed-media artists employ practices variously incorporating themes of decolonization, community-building,...
by Featureshoot - thursday at 10:01
Filipino fishermen unload catches of Yellowfin tuna, Bigeye tuna, and Blue Marlin, after being at sea for approximately one month, at General Santos fish port, the Philippines, on Wednesday, May 21, 2025. General Santos is known as the Philippines’ tuna capital and hub for tuna fishing and exports of the products. The city hosts numberous processing facilities where the fish, primarily tun, is packaged or canned for sale ot the Filipino market and for export worldwide. ©Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac Overfishing in Southeast Asia, on view until April 26, 2026, at the Bronx Documentary Center, is a powerful and layered exhibition by photojournalist Nicole Tung, laureate of the 15th Carmignac...
by Shutterhub - thursday at 10:00
In the forest nothing stands still. Time layered through thoughts and feelings, leaves kicked and crunched as we walk. The trees talk to each other, sending mycelium messages, carbon gifts, and warnings of drought or illness. From ancient wisdom to popular culture, it’s all here.
If a tree falls in the forest and there’s nobody there to hear it, did it make a sound? Of course it did. And if Jo Stapleton was there to capture the moment, there would be a visual symphony of light, shape and form to follow.
Published by Shutter Hub Editions, this beautiful collection of 100 images by Jo Stapleton is an expressionist photographic account of her interactions with trees, forest and woodland, later remembered and...
by Juliet - thursday at 7:59
Considerato un maestro dell’enigmatico, Pietro Roccasalva costruisce un immaginario denso e stratificato, elaborando simboli complessi, i quali attingono con libertà a più ambiti culturali e popolari, dando forma a un linguaggio pittorico profondamente colto e al tempo stesso perturbante. Nella sede milanese della galleria Massimo De Carlo, all’interno degli ambienti progettati da Piero Portaluppi, lo spazio espositivo si apre a una narrazione intima e stratificata. Poco oltre la sala principale, quasi defilato, emerge un dipinto raffigurante la madre dell’artista: una figura trasfigurata ma ancora riconoscibile, colta in una posa sospesa, mentre regge una sorta di cornucopia colma di oggetti...