en attendant l'art
by ArtForum - about 2 hours
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 - about 2 hours
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 - about 2 hours
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 - about 2 hours
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 Designboom - about 6 hours
Regeneration of Urban Village Memory by BENTU DESIGN
 
Inorganic Growth is a research-driven project by BENTU DESIGN that converts construction waste from demolished urban villages into 3D printed urban furniture. By combining material reactivation with digital fabrication, the initiative transforms discarded concrete, brick rubble, and mortar into printable composites with cementitious performance. The developed material contains up to 85% recycled solid waste, positioning demolition debris as a reusable resource within a closed production system.
 
The project, featuring a chair and stool made from recycled construction waste, integrates material recovery, on-site processing, and additive manufacturing...
by archdaily - yesterday at 22:00
Array
by Parterre - yesterday at 18:23
Confused dramaturgy dampens an otherwise sparkling night of singing in Opera Baltimore’s Lucrezia Borgia.
by Designboom - yesterday at 16:15
Resonique ladder fuses functional object and sculptural form
 
SO KOIZUMI DESIGN has developed Resonique, a ladder that explores the relationship between functional structure and sculptural form. The project draws on the structural logic of ladders while referencing the flowing geometries associated with brass musical instruments. Through this combination, the object shifts from a purely utilitarian tool toward a design piece that engages both function and spatial presence.
 
The ladder integrates the stability of conventional ladder construction with curved elements inspired by the forms of brass instruments. Polished stainless steel pipes define the structure, creating continuous lines that guide the eye...
by archdaily - yesterday at 16:00
Array
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday 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 Parterre - yesterday at 15:00
American Bach brings out the operatic side of Bach in a program featuring sparkling vocal talents.
by Parterre - yesterday at 15:00
Mascagni's Zanetto, a slight, Renaissance scene, gets a new recording from the Berlin Opera Group. 
by ArtNews - yesterday at 14:16
Five hundred artworks by Charles Bronson, one of England’s most infamous outsider artists, are set to be auctioned by U.K. auction house David Duggleby Auctioneers in Murton, according to the BBC. The works, which belong to a single owner, will be offered as one lot on March 11. Now 73, Bronson was born Michael Peterson and currently calls himself Charles Salvador. A former bare-knuckle boxer, he was first sent to prison at the age of 21 for armed robbery. Attacks on fellow inmates and staff, including an incident in which he took an education worker hostage for 44 hours, have led to his spending most of his life incarcerated. He is currently serving a life sentence, much of which has been spent in solitary...
by ArtNews - yesterday at 14:11
Thaddeus Mosley, a sculptor whose abstractions formed from reused wood earned him a significant, fervent following in the late stages of his career, died in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on Friday at 99. His family announced his passing, with his son, Pittsburgh City Councilman Khari Mosley, calling him “a dedicated family man, ubiquitous community pillar, and an inimitable creative force.” Many of Mosley’s sculptures are made using salvaged hunks of walnut, sycamore, and cherry wood that he transported to his Pittsburgh studio. Carving these materials using variously sized gouges, he made his wood sleek and curvaceous, often allowing his wood’s grain to dictate the movement of the tools he used to sculpt...
by Aesthetic - yesterday 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 Parterre - yesterday at 12:00
The great bass Len Dresslar became famous (if unknown) as the voice of the Jolly Green Giant on all those ads that those of us (of a certain age) grew up on
by Hyperallergic - yesterday 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 Designboom - yesterday at 11:00
inside symbols and social ritual in ga-adangme funerary culture
 
In her book Buried in Style, Swiss anthropologist and photographer Regula Tschumi documents Ghana’s funerary traditions, exploring how ritual objects, figurative coffins, and commemorative practices translate grief into form, color, and collective memory. For more than twenty years, Tschumi has been returning to southern Ghana, following Ga-Adangme funerary culture as a living system of images, symbols, and social rules. What initially appeared as a striking visual phenomenon unfolded slowly, almost reluctantly, into a much broader cultural language. ‘It went step by step,’ she recalls during our interview. ‘When I started, there was...
by Aesthetic - yesterday 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 Designboom - saturday at 5:30
Blumarine Opens a New Boutique in brera
 
Blumarine has opened a new boutique in Milan’s creative neighborhood of Brera, with architecture and interior design by NM3 shaping a refined retail interior along Via Fiori Chiari.
 
Set within an historic street frontage at number 28, the boutique occupies a single level of roughly 170 square meters and presents five large windows to the street. These openings offer a clear view inside, where the architecture establishes a composed sequence of materials and volumes that frame the brand’s collections. The Milan store interprets Blumarine’s aesthetic through NM3’s understated design language.
images © Delfino Sisto Legnani (unless otherwise stated)
 
 
nm3...
by Designboom - saturday at 2:30
Spoa, a series of mushroom-inspired energy devices
 
Meet Spoa, a series of conceptual mushroom-inspired devices that can convert wasted energy into reusable electricity to charge gadgets and appliances at home. The three modules collect the electromagnetic fields from around the house and store them in the devices so owners can reuse them to power up or charge their gadgets. Each of the concept devices has a specific role, named after a part of the fungal body.
 
It starts with the Cap Spoa, which is a small and portable device that sits flat against a surface and absorbs electromagnetic fields from below. The Slim Spoa is designed for tight spaces, like beside a fridge or behind a television, and it has a...
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 ArtForum - friday at 22:40
The Hasselblad Foundation has named South African photographer Zanele Muholi as the recipient of its 2026 Hasselblad Award. The prize, which includes 2 million Swedish kronor (US $218,000), a Hasselblad camera, and a gold medal, is considered the world’s most prestigious given in recognition of a living photographer. Past recipients include Nan Goldin, Alfredo Jaar, Ingrid Pollard, Cindy Sherman, Dayanita […]
by ArtNews - friday at 22:28
Los Angeles County Museum of Art director Michael Govan is speaking publicly for the first time about the museum’s long-awaited David Geffen Galleries. The interview, which went live today, appears in the relaunch of True Colors, Vanity Fair’s art-world newsletter written by Nate Freeman. The newsletter will now land in inboxes weekly on Fridays with interviews, art-market intelligence, and dispatches from across the art world. The debut edition features Govan discussing the museum’s controversial new building designed by Swiss architect Peter Zumthor, a $720 million structure set to open to the public next month after years of construction, debate, and rising costs. In the interview, Govan framed the...
by ArtNews - friday at 22:15
Sotheby’s is preparing to bring works from the collection of the late dealer and financier Robert Mnuchin to auction this May in New York, adding a fresh trove of blue-chip material to a season the house hopes will build on its blockbuster November and a strong start to the spring sales. The consignment is made up of 24 works from the personal collection Robert assembled with his wife Adriana Mnuchin, long known among collectors for its focus on museum-quality examples of postwar abstraction and modern art. The sale will be led by Rothko’s monumental 1957 canvas Brown and Blacks in Reds, estimated at $70 million to $100 million, along with a second Rothko from 1949 estimated at $15 million to $20...
by Hyperallergic - friday at 22:13
WASHINGTON, DC — On Sunday, March 1, a “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame” appeared in Farragut Square, a public park located near the White House. Waterproof stickers resembling the terrazzo stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame are printed with Epstein’s likeness below the names and titles of politicians, billionaires, arts patrons, and other figures mentioned in the recently released batch of 3 million files related to the convicted sex offender. The installation names around 20 people in total, including Epstein himself, sex trafficker and accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell, arts patron Les Wexner, billionaire and Museum of Modern Art trustee Leon Black, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, Microsoft...
by ArtNews - friday at 20:53
Pedro Friedeberg, an artist affiliated with the Mexican offshoot of the Surrealist movement and who is now best known for his absurdist designs, including the iconic Hand-Chair, died on Thursday in San Miguel de Allende. He was 90, according to his New York gallery, Ruiz-Healy Art. Friedeberg’s diverse practice included paintings dense with dreamy imagery and design objects that looked like body parts and animals. Though commonly labeled a Surrealist, he bristled against being associated with that movement. When a W magazine journalist made the error of claiming that he was the last of the Surrealists in 2024, Friedeberg said, “That’s a terrible mistake. I’m neither a Surrealist nor the last of...
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 The Art Newspaper - friday at 18:36
The duo has won a court order to force an art dealer to reveal details of his transactions with an unnamed intermediary
by The Art Newspaper - friday at 17:26
Ben Luke talks to The Art Newspaper's Melissa Gronlund about the outbreak of war in a region that has invested heavily in arts and culture, while Ben Sutton discusses the 82nd Whitney Biennial in New York. Plus, a newly-discovered Rembrandt at the Rijksmuseum.
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 The Art Newspaper - friday at 16:58
Russia’s decision to put on a show in Venice has prompted criticism from Russian dissidents and Ukrainian artists
by booooooom - friday at 15:00
Deb JJ Lee  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Deb JJ Lee’s Website
Deb JJ Lee on Instagram
by Parterre - friday at 15:00
Despite some fine performances, Così fan tutte at the Livermore Valley Opera doesn't quite click into place.
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 The Art Newspaper - friday at 13:18
Before the artist’s former home was bombed in the war, two little-known paintings in the 1930s depicted its exterior in an unexpected colour
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 Aesthetic - friday at 7:00
The Black Arts Movement emerged as a profound cultural awakening and radical reimagining of representation, galvanised by mid-20th century civil rights struggles and sustained by a belief in art’s transformative power. Writers, musicians, visual artists and performers sought not merely to reflect the world but to remake it, centring Black identity, dignity and autonomy within a cultural landscape that had long marginalised these voices. At its core, the movement insisted that creative production was inseparable from political engagement, asserting that culture could not remain neutral in the face of systemic oppression. Themes of self-definition, collective empowerment and the reclamation of history resonate...
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 Aesthetic - thursday at 17:10
At the intersection of fashion, art, and the uncanny, Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin have for four decades challenged the ways we perceive images. Can Love Be A Photograph – 40 Years of Inez & Vinoodh, at the Kunstmuseum Den Haag, offers a monumental survey of a career defined by its refusal to settle, blending the quotidian with the surreal and the personal with the performative. Their work operates in the liminal space where digital manipulation, intimacy, and high-gloss fashion imagery converge, revealing both the extraordinary and the unsettling within everyday life. “Inez & Vinoodh have been able to create something utterly fantastic; an invisible reality that looks artificial but is not. A...
by Thisiscolossal - thursday at 15:20
The construction of Grundtvigs Kirke in Copenhagen took nearly two decades, beginning in fall of 1921 and finally reaching completion in 1940. Designed by Peder Vilhelm Jensen-Klint, it transforms the humble brick into a masterpiece of Expressionist architecture. Its pointed interior arches and vaulted ceiling, stepped crenellations, and hulking exterior nod to medieval Gothic and Romanesque styles while also exhibiting a profoundly modern sensibility. David Altrath, a Hamburg-based photographer whose work emphasizes urban and architectural elements, captures Grundtvigs’ details in an atmospheric cumulative portrait. Bathed in mellow, golden light, the church’s pale yellow bricks appear to glow,...
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 Juliet - thursday at 6:07
Alla Galleria Massimo Minini l’incontro tra Sheila Hicks e Paolo Icaro non è un semplice dialogo tra due pratiche all’apparenza contrastanti, ma un campo di giocosa tensione. Da un lato la materia nuda, opaca, essenziale di Icaro; dall’altro le vibrazioni cromatiche di Hicks. La distanza è evidente, quasi strutturale. Ed è proprio lì che il progetto trova la sua forza.
“Live Wires. Sheila Hicks and Paolo Icaro”, installation view, 2026, courtesy of the artists and Galleria Massimo Minini, ph. Petrò Gilberti
Seduta vicino alla sua opera “The Captured Comrades” (2026), nobile e statuaria, Sheila osserva con uno sguardo vispo il via vai che la circonda. È lo sguardo di una donna che ha vissuto...
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
by Juliet - wednesday at 6:06
La mostra Converging Trajectories: Ettore Spalletti meets Gino De Dominicis and Franz West indaga i punti di tangenza tra artisti che, pur attraverso linguaggi differenti, hanno condiviso un’idea di arte come esperienza totale. Un percorso che coinvolge sia il piano poetico sia quello storiografico, mettendo in evidenza il legame tra le personalità indagate e la città di Pescara, centro dinamico di sperimentazione nella seconda metà del Novecento. Oltre alla Galleria Vistamare, che ospita la mostra nella sua sede milanese, si ricorda il fratello di Ettore Spalletti, Vittoriano, appassionato collezionista, e Mario Pieroni, che nella sua galleria romana propose nel 1969 un primo confronto tra l’artista...
by booooooom - tuesday at 22:57
This collection includes work from 60+ artists and also happens to be our biggest volume yet—276 pages and, for the first time, in a much larger format.