en attendant l'art
by ArtNews - about 41 minutes
To receive Morning Links in your inbox every weekday, sign up for our Breakfast with ARTnews newsletter.The HeadlinesGAINING PACE. New York-based conceptual artist Anicka Yi has joined Pace, with the gallery representing her in partnership with Gladstone Gallery, 47 Canal, and Esther Schipper. Yi spoke to ARTnews about why artists must go beyond simply participating in conversations about new tech, developing new tools, and finding a gallery that understands her microbiology and algorithmic-based art language. In a warning about where new tech is currently heading, she shared her critique of current machine-learning AI models that draw on existing data, but have no ability for causal reasoning. This,...
by The Art Newspaper - about 43 minutes
Overpainting of the genitals of a figure in the relief panel “Te Fare Amu”—once described as a “serious editorial suppression of Gauguin’s original concept”—is expected to be removed at the Brooklyn Museum
by ArtNews - about 51 minutes
New York–based conceptual artist Anicka Yi has joined the roster of Pace, which will represent the artist in partnership with Gladstone Gallery, 47 Canal, and Esther Schipper. Born in 1971 in Seoul, Yi entered the art world in 2008 after years working in the fashion industry. Her research-based and often conceptual practice combines organic and human-made materials and machines to create imaginative installations that engage the senses—especially the sense of smell. Many of Yi’s best-known works have involved creating scents, like Shigenobu Twilight, in which she created a perfume “portrait” of Fusako Shigenobu, the cofounder of the militant group the Japanese Red Army, which operated between 1971...
by Designboom - about 2 hours
ART PARIS 2026 RETURNS TO THE ICONIC GRAND PALAIS
 
Following its triumphant return to the Grand Palais in 2025, Art Paris is set to reclaim the majestic nave and balconies of this Parisian monument from 9-12 April 2026. As the premier spring event for modern and contemporary art, the 28th edition promises a vibrant dialogue between 165 French and international galleries, showcasing a curated selection that is both regional and cosmopolitan. This edition’s ambitious program invites visitors to navigate the complex intersections of linguistics and the restorative power of art within one of Paris‘ most historic architectural landmarks. Get your tickets here!
banner: Art Paris 2025 by night; above: Art Paris...
by Designboom - about 2 hours
Balloons crafts Biodegradable flower balloons 
 
Meet Ballooms, Canada’s first balloon florist whose bouquets of garden flowers are made from natural and biodegradable latex. Each flower is made using balloon twisting or sculpting, where long, thin modeling inflatables are folded and locked into shapes. Making a single flower takes time and skill because these materials don’t behave so well when twisted tight. In Ballooms’ case, they’re flexible and sturdy, enough to hold onto like a bouquet.
 
The color palette Ballooms uses can catch eyes. It’s not the loud, primary colors seen at a kids’ party. It’s softer: dusty orange, pale blue, cream, and bright yellow-green. These colors bring the...
by The Art Newspaper - about 2 hours
The exhibition, held in Burgos's Gothic cathedral, brings together 44 works spanning six decades of the artist's career
by Hyperallergic - about 3 hours
The Whitney Biennial, a leading survey of American art, opened to the press yesterday. This one is different: moody, contemplative, and with a proclivity for immersive experiences. We're still taking it all in, but you can read our first impressions today: What we liked, didn't like, or feel ambivalent about. Also today, we asked arts leaders in New York City for their thoughts on Diya Vij's appointment as culture commissioner, and what they think her priorities should be. The billion-dollar question: Can she help make one of the world's most expensive cities more affordable for artists? —Hakim Bishara, editor-in-chief Installation view of works by Emilio Martínez Poppe (photo Hrag...
by Parterre - about 3 hours
The one, the only Fyodor Chaliapin, singing Massenet's "Elegie" (with, I believe, a young Piatigorsky on the cello part).
by Designboom - about 3 hours
yont studio transforms former office into hybrid record store
 
In Berlin’s Mitte district, YONT Studio transforms a former real estate office on Torstraße into a hybrid record store and cultural space for the queer house music label SEVEN. The 180-square-meter interior moves beyond the conventional retail shop format, combining vinyl sales with listening stations, label offices, a photo studio, live DJ streaming infrastructure, and areas for community gatherings. Located at Torstraße 220, the project, a platform that supports the local music community, situates itself within a neighborhood historically tied to Berlin’s club culture.
 
Sculptural furniture from the studio’s Brutalist Pink series...
by The Art Newspaper - about 3 hours
Danh Vo talks to Ben Luke about her influences—from writers to musicians, film-makers and, of course, other artists—and the cultural experiences that have shaped her life and work
by Designboom - about 3 hours
YAWN Translates Bauhaus Principles into a Playful Light Object
 
YAWN is a minimalist concrete nightlight by designer Roger Reutimann that translates Bauhaus principles into a compact domestic object. Rooted in structural clarity, material honesty, and the integration of design and production, the project approaches lighting as a spatial and tactile study rather than a decorative accessory.
 
Originally trained as a sculptor, Reutimann developed YAWN through physical prototyping, treating it as a small architectural composition. The stepped base and cantilevered vertical element were refined through iterative models to achieve balance, proportion, and a distinct posture. The resulting form suggests a subtle...
by The Art Newspaper - about 3 hours
Picture featuring his sons, husband David and their dogs goes on show at the National Portrait Gallery in London
by Designboom - about 4 hours
Transforming connecticut’s Manresa Island
 
The unveiling of the vision for Manresa Island marks a significant milestone in the revitalization of Norwalk, Connecticut. Designed by the Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) in collaboration with landscape architecture firm SCAPE, this ambitious project aims to transform a decommissioned power plant site into a vibrant 125-acre public park. Surrounded by water on three sides, the site will serve as both a recreational hub and a center for education and ecological restoration.
 
Originally, Manresa Island was home to the Manresa Institute, a retreat and recreation destination during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. However, in the 1950s, it was converted into a...
by ArtNews - about 4 hours
The Dia Art Foundation will mount a solo presentation dedicated to Lee Ufan as an official collateral event to the 2026 Venice Biennale. Opening May 9, the exhibition will be curated by Dia director Jessica Morgan and staged at the San Marco Art Centre. The exhibition in Venice, along with a display of Lee’s paintings and sculptures at the foundation’s upstate Dia Beacon, is pegged to the artist’s 90th birthday in June. Lee, who is associated with both the Mono-ha and Dansaekhwa movements, is best-known for spare paintings and installations—a few colorful brushstrokes set against a mostly white canvas, for example, or a single rock paired with a sheet of metal.   Morgan worked closely with Lee to...
by Juliet - about 9 hours
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 Hyperallergic - about 12 hours
The Whitney Biennial bills itself as the pulse-check of what American art looks like now. This year’s edition, curated by Marcela Guerrero and Drew Sawyer, with Beatriz Cifuentes and Carina Martinez, consists of the work of 56 artists, duos, and collectives. It's themeless, but spotlights ideas of "relationality," including family, technology, and mythology. I appreciate a non-pretentious biennial that doesn't come with a PhD dissertation. This one feels like that: moody, sensorial, contemplative. Whether that's enough to meet the moment is a different question.Below, our editors walk you through first impressions of this year's Whitney Biennial, which opens to the public this Sunday,...
by ArtNews - about 13 hours
Marc Straus Gallery announced Tuesday that Graham Wilson, the founder of Tribeca’s Swivel Gallery, has joined the gallery as a partner and senior director. As part of the move, Swivel will close its Tribeca space and its artists will move over to Straus, which has locations in Tribeca and the Lower East Side. The latter, located at 299 Grand Street, will host a group exhibition curated by Wilson and showcasing Swivel’s artists, set to open March 19. “The art world is evolving quickly, with rising costs and a growing need for collaboration reshaping gallery operations in New York City,” the gallery said in a press statement. “With our four-story Lower East Side gallery, our Tribeca space, and a...
by ArtNews - about 15 hours
This month, Salvador Dalí’s largest ever painting, a monumental stage set measuring 65 by 100 feet, will head to auction in Paris. The work, which comes from a private collection, will lead Bonhams’s fourth annual sale dedicated to Surrealism on Thursday, March 26 and is estimated to bring $236,000–$350,000. Dalí conceived the 13-panel set for “Bacchanale,” a Surrealist production created for the Ballet Russes de Monte Carlo. (He also wrote the libretto and devised some of the costumes). Key collaborators included Léonide Massine, choreographer and director of the Ballets Russes; Coco Chanel, who designed costumes and accessories; and Prince Alexandre Schervachidze, legendary scenographer for the...
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 23:48
“Warriorhood is an act of living an awakened life,” says Rupy C. Tut, referencing the continual battles that emerge from being a person in the world. Tut has long invoked her family’s history of migration and Punjabi heritage to consider kinship, a theme that has more recently evolved into a recurring warrior character. “The privilege of belonging and being seen as a part of a place, without needing explanations, is not available to my characters, who are finding ways to navigate and battle that out-of-place-ness,” she adds. Depicting suited figures floating amid translucent jellyfish, the dream-like “Battle Ready” is one such work. The creatures’ tentacles trail across the composition,...
by The Art Newspaper - yesterday at 23:46
Records show how masters retained power over enslaved people even after emancipation
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 23:10
PARIS — “The organicity of the human body we’re born inside of is encoded in us,” the Polish artist Magdalena Abakanowicz once said in an interview. This concept of our organic nature as the source of elemental knowledge, at once direct and mysterious, permeates the textural abstractions exhibited in her survey Magdalena Abakanowicz: The Thread of Existence at Musée Bourdelle.Around 80 of Abakanowicz’s works are on view in Paris, spanning large textiles, sculptures, and drawings, dating from the 1960s through the early aughts. At the time, they were censored in Communist Poland as too formalist. Nevertheless, her renown grew. She was included in the 1960s Lausanne Tapestry Biennials and won the...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 22:59
This is our offering, our paean, our plea to the spirits of spring: Hyperallergic's long-awaited guide of more than 70 shows to see this season, should it ever deign to arrive. This year, we opted to sort our spring guide into categories, the better to match your mood. There are the shows everyone's talking about — big names like Duchamp and Raphael (seriously, how is this the first major survey of his in the city?), Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera. There are major surveys, like the New Museum's inaugural show in its expanded building, MoMA PS1's Greater New York triennial, and of course, the Whitney Biennial, which opens to the public on Sunday (but to the press today — stay...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 22:59
New York City arts leaders are hopeful the new cultural affairs commissioner Diya Vij will tackle the industry’s affordability crisis at a time when the Trump administration slashed federal funding for arts organizations and New York’s artists are increasingly leaving the city due to its high cost of living.   “I can’t think of anyone more appropriate for this role at this moment in time, particularly under Mayor Mamdani’s vision for the city,” former Queens Museum executive director Laura Raicovich told Hyperallergic. “Artists’ role in making New York an exciting place to live and work is quintessential, and current conditions make it increasingly difficult, if not near impossible, for...
by archaeology - yesterday at 20:00
Skeleton of a Bronze Age woman discovered at Karczyn-Witowy, Poland GDANSK, POLAND—According to a statement released by the University of Gdansk, evaluation of the remains of people who lived in what is now north-central Poland between 4100 and 1230 B.C. has revealed how their diets changed from the Neolithic period to the Bronze Age. Using radiocarbon dating, DNA analysis, and stable isotope measurements of carbon and nitrogen, a team led by Łukasz Pospieszny of the University of Gdansk suggests that Corded Ware communities of the late Neolithic period herded their animals in forests and wet river valleys. After several hundred years, however, their diet began to resemble that of nearby farmers, who kept...
by archaeology - yesterday at 19:30
MANİSA, TURKEY—Hürriyet Daily News reports that some 3,000 small water vessels called hydriskoi have been unearthed at a temple in western Anatolia’s ancient city of Aigai. The temple is dedicated to Demeter, the goddess of earth and fertility, and her daughter, Kore, or Persephone, who was abducted by the god of the underworld. The vessels are thought to have been used in votive offerings and purification rituals, according to Yusuf Sezgin of Manisa Celal Bayar University. He explained that the region is arid, which would have made agriculture challenging. “At certain times, clean water was presented to the goddess in small terracotta vessels during ceremonies," he said. "These sacred vessels were...
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 19:30
For Masayoshi Matsumoto, also known as Isopresso Balloon, a simple dog-shaped balloon animal is utter child’s play. His elaborate constructions combine a range of colors and can take on virtually any shape. From meticulously textured squids to demure gophers to stout tropical birds, the artist conjures playful and expressive animals from stretchy rubber and air. Lately, he’s been particularly interested in birds, expertly twisting beaks and tail feathers into recognizable species like mallards, swans, and a bright kingfisher. See more on Instagram, and try your hand at balloon art of your own with a range of tutorials on YouTube. He’s currently working on a few new videos geared specifically toward...
by archaeology - yesterday at 19:00
Stone mining hammers GOTHENBURG, SWEDEN—According to a statement released by the University of Gothenburg, six Bronze Age copper, lead, and silver mines have been discovered in southwestern Spain. Previous lead isotope analysis of Bronze Age artifacts unearthed in Scandinavia has determined that much of the metal likely originated in southwestern Spain. “The discovery of the new Bronze Age mines in Extremadura represents only the tip of the iceberg,” said Johan Ling of the University of Gothenburg. “In this region—as well as in Andalusia—we estimate that as many as 150 prehistoric mines may still remain undocumented and uninvestigated,” he added. Some 80 grooved stone axes used to crush and...
by ArtForum - yesterday at 17:32
Critic, poet, and publisher Giancarlo Politi, founder of the influential contemporary art journal Flash Art, one of the first international publications of its kind, died on February 24. He was eighty-nine. Politi, over a career spanning more than five decades, shaped the global contemporary art scene through the establishment of a publishing house, an art-world directory, a […]
by ArtForum - yesterday at 17:29
A painting that has gone unseen by the public since being deauthenticated more than fifty years ago has been determined to be an early work by Rembrandt van Rijn and will go on view at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam this week alongside twenty-five others by the renowned artist. Titled Vision of Zacharias in the Temple, […]
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 17:16
What began as a pile of dirt, rubble, and cement in rural Niland, California, just east of the Salton Sea, eventually became one of the most beloved landmarks and roadside attractions in the region. “Salvation Mountain,” Leonard Knight’s vibrantly painted, three-story mound made of adobe and straw, stands as a tribute to one man’s tenacity and desire to spread a message, topped with its instantly recognizable slogan, “God Is Love.” “Salvation Mountain” is just one of countless artist environments around the U.S., illustrating the unique style, drive, and vernacular of creative builders. Often driven by religious or spiritual fervor, these self-taught artists use whatever materials are at hand,...
by Parterre - yesterday at 16:00
Will Liverman and Keira Duffy brought an eclectic program to their jovial post-blizzard recital at Rhode Island College.
by ArtForum - tuesday at 13:21
Getting personal at Isabella Bortolozzi, Tanja Wagner, Molitor, and Wentrup
by Parterre - tuesday at 12:00
Fyodor Chaliapin is considered one of the greatest basses ever because he combined a dark, flexible, and instantly recognizable bass voice with extraordinary musical intelligence and nuance.
by Aesthetic - tuesday at 9:00
Contemporary design today is as much about narrative as it is about form. At the Design Museum in London, Simone Brewster’s first museum show PLATFORM makes this clear, presenting objects that are functional, sculptural and rooted in cultural memory. Spanning four sections: Passages, Everyday Ornaments, Scales of Emotion and Body Narratives – the exhibition interrogates identity, heritage and value. Brewster combines the precision of architectural thinking with the fluidity of sculpture, suggesting that design must engage social histories and formal innovation. This is design that asks why objects exist, what they communicate and who benefits from their creation. Within the museum’s programme,...
by Juliet - tuesday at 7:17
L’ingannevole equivalenza visiva tra un’immagine fotografica e il frammento di realtà in essa immortalato si fonda su una serie di riduzioni successive: il volume degli oggetti collassa sulla superficie del negativo, la materia si dissolve in traccia ottica e la profondità spaziale si traduce in graduazioni di luce e ombra. Nataly Maier (Monaco di Baviera, 1957) inizia alla fine degli anni Ottanta a interrogarsi su cosa accade a livello visivo e concettuale quando si tenta di restituire alla fotografia quella consistenza fisica e volumetrica che essa può soltanto suggerire attraverso codici rappresentativi. Alla Fondazione Sabe per l’arte di Ravenna la mostra Immagini nello spazio si concentra su un...
by Thisiscolossal - monday at 23:04
Using personal and archival images, Tshepiso Moropa cuts and splices delicate collages that consider the ever-evolving nature of the stories we tell. The self-taught artist draws on her background in psychology and linguistics as she plumbs African archives and oral histories, reinterpreting her findings through minimal, yet weighty compositions. Moropa often grounds her works within dinaane and ditoro, Setswana lore and dreams, respectively. “Each folktale carries a unique blend of history, cultural values, and human experience, serving as a wellspring of inspiration,” she says in a statement. “My work is informed by the timeless wisdom, moral lessons, and magical elements found within Sestwana...
by ArtForum - monday at 21:33
The School of Visual Arts in New York will cease offering a master’s of arts degree in curatorial practice beginning in 2027, Artnews reports. The news comes as the school, like many arts colleges across the country, faces financial difficulty. Artnews last June listed SVA as one of the US art schools most reliant on international students attending its graduate programs, behind […]
by ArtForum - monday at 20:52
New York mayor Zohran Mamdani has appointed curator Diya Vij director of the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs. Vij, who is currently a vice president at Brooklyn nonprofit Powerhouse Arts, is the first person of Southeast Asian descent to occupy the role. She will report to Julie Su, New York’s first deputy mayor for economic justice. In her […]
by archaeology - monday at 20:00
DUBROVNIK, CROATIA—Croatia Week reports that a large sarcophagus with its lid was excavated in Dubrovnik's city center during roadwork in front of the cathedral. Archaeologist Karmen Butigan said that the sarcophagus dates to the Late Antique period. “At this stage we cannot say whether it is in situ or if it has been displaced,” she explained. An archaeological investigation of the area will be conducted, added Mihaela Skurić of the Dubrovnik Restoration Institute. Researchers will also examine the sarcophagus and attempt to learn more about its possible occupant. To read about an ancient riverboat uncovered in central Croatia's city of Sisak, go to "Roman River Barge."
The post Sarcophagus Discovered...
by archaeology - monday at 19:45
TRUJILLO, PERU—A sacred road stretching for more than a mile has been mapped in northern Peru’s Chicama Valley with drones, Andina reports. The straight stone line, which cuts across ravines and open terrain, is thought to have been used by the Chimú people as a ceremonial route linking a fortified settlement, agricultural fields, and a ceremonial complex, said archaeologist Henry Tantaleán of the Chicama Archaeological Program. The aerial imagery has allowed researchers to map the geoglyph in its entirety. The team also noted that agricultural fields along the route had serpentine furrows and were watered with secondary canals that branched from the Gran Canal de la Cumbre. Soil samples from the...
by Thisiscolossal - monday at 19:00
Among the myriad delights of the marine world, nudibranchs count among some of the most adorable. There are around 3,000 known species of these often very colorful, textured, soft-bodied animals. Technically part of the mollusc family, they shed their shells as they grow older, so we sometimes refer to them as “sea slugs,” but the name doesn’t exactly live up to their inherent style. For artist Arina Borevich of Wool Creature Lab, however, these unique minuscule beings truly shine in vibrant, felted fiber. A decade ago, Borevich was working as a cook at a remote biology research station in northern Russia’s White Sea. “I was surrounded by 200 marine biologists and students living and working together...
by booooooom - monday at 15:00
Costanza Starrabba aka Starrenco  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Starrenco on Instagram
by Parterre - monday at 15:00
A uniformly strong cast triumphs over a dull production of Don Carlos at the Dallas Opera.
by Aesthetic - monday at 14:00
In an era dominated by constant scroll and shrinking attention spans, documentary has emerged as one of the most vital languages in contemporary culture. From the political urgency of Navalny to the cultural resonance of Beckham and the environmental meditation of David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet, non-fiction storytelling has become central to how audiences engage with politics, identity and collective memory. Viewers are increasingly drawn to works rooted in truth yet shaped with cinematic precision. Documentary today is not merely reportage; it is authorship, immersion and, often, an act of listening. Across platforms and festivals, audiences are seeking stories that move, challenge and...
by Aesthetic - monday at 9:00
Since 2011, multidisciplinary artist Peggy Weil has been working on what she calls “extended landscapes”: artworks which “visualise the unseen but critical processes of climate change.” This month, two of her video installations, 88 Cores and 18 Cores, are on view at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Here, Weil reformats scientific archives – including ice and rock cores from the Greenland Ice Sheet and Salton Sea Scientific Drilling projects – into scrolling moving-image portraits that reveal invisible layers “beneath our feet, above our heads, and back in time.” The exhibition, titled Core Memory, takes audiences on a downward journey, showing how climatic and geological events are...
by Juliet - monday at 7:47
A Bologna, presso Fondazione MAST, le opere fotografiche complesse, articolate ed emblematiche di Jeff Wall raffigurano situazioni evocative, suggestioni profonde ed eventi mai accaduti. Con la mostra Living, Working, Surviving, la fotografia diventa pittura, la documentazione diventa interpretazione e l’ambiguità diventa il punto di partenza per analizzare i temi più profondi della nostra società.
Jeff Wall, “Dressing Poultry”, 2007, transparency in lightbox, ©: Jeff Wall, Courtesy: Cranford Collection, London
Si potrebbe dire che la mostra Living, Working Surviving di Jeff Wall presso la Fondazione MAST di Bologna non abbia una vera e propria tematica principale. Le fotografie si mostrano ambigue...
by Parterre - sunday at 15:00
Baritone John Brancy smoothly traverses the American songbook at Carnegie Hall. 
by Aesthetic - sunday at 14:00
Artists have always concerned themselves with light – how to capture it, how to distill it, how to play with it. World renowned 20th century painter Henri Matisse once told an interviewer “the chief goal of my work is the clarity of light,” whilst Claude Monet wrote that “light is the most important person in the picture.” Yet, it wasn’t until the 1920s, with the advent of mass-produced artificial lighting, that it began to be used as an artistic medium in its own right. This intensified in the 1960s and 1970s by artists associated with minimalism and postminimalism. This was the era of Dan Flavin’s groundbreaking fluorescent tubes, which took the simplicity of light and made it the central point...
by Aesthetic - sunday at 13:00
In his pioneering book Face Time: A History of the Photographic Portrait, writer and curator Phillip Prodger states: “A great portrait is a psychological exploration, an artistic journey into a person’s heart and soul.” It’s a perfect summary of the power of the camera to go beneath the surface, going beyond a simple snapshot to explore representation, visibility and identity. The artists featured in the Aesthetica Art Prize 2026 longlist create works that undoubtedly make this journey into the very essence of the sitter. Some images reveal the complexities of the human psyche, making the invisible, visible, whilst others draw from distinct cultural ideas of belonging and selfhood, or play with the...
by Juliet - saturday at 6:48
Il CRAC Puglia di Taranto ospita la mostra “Paesaggi”, con le opere di Aldo Damioli e Giovanni Pulze, a cura di Roberto Vidali, e accoglie in contemporanea la donazione di trenta opere che l’Associazione Juliet consegna agli archivi del CRAC, in occasione delle celebrazioni per “JULIET 45 YEARS”. La mostra mette a confronto due pittori italiani di impianto figurativo e concettuale che rimandano a un pensiero che va oltre la superficie della tela dipinta.
Aldo Damioli, “Venezia New York”, 2013, acrilico su tela, cm 80 x 100, courtesy l’Artista
La traccia di fondo che unisce questi due autori si incentrata sul ruolo che il loro lavoro ha avuto nella pittura del nuovo millennio e sui rapporti che...
by hifructose - friday at 19:48
Surrounded in her Massachusetts studio by pins, glue, and piles of brightly colored paper strips, a visitor might initially mistake Lisa Nilsson for a reclusive arts and crafts teacher. But as her nimble hands purposefully curl the paper into shapes, and then magically weave the shapes into identifiable forms, a new impression emerges. Read the full article by clicking above!
The post The Cross-sectioned Paper Sculptures of Lisa Nilsson first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by Juliet - friday at 4:54
Nella sua seconda personale presso la Nicelle Beauchene Gallery di New York, intitolata The gifts, Quentin James McCaffrey costruisce un insieme di dipinti inseriti in ambienti orchestrati con cura, dove tappeti, bouquet, miniature, tendaggi e superfici riflettenti assumono un ruolo strutturale. Non si tratta di abitazioni, ma di configurazioni concettuali in cui ogni componente definisce proporzioni, angolazioni e traiettorie ottiche. L’ordine è essenziale e privo di ornamenti superflui, mentre l’illuminazione stabilisce legami e relazioni tra le forme.
Quentin James McCaffrey, “Mirror with Landscapes”, 2026, oil on canvas over wood panel. Center panel: 12″ x 16″ x 1 1/2″; Side Panels: 12″ x...
by booooooom - thursday at 19:38
For our second annual Illustration Awards, supported by Format, we selected 5 winners from each of the following categories: Editorial, Personal, Advertising & Promotional, Product & Packaging, Student. It is our pleasure to introduce the winner of the Student category: Bella Han.
Bella Han is a freelance illustrator from China and a first year student in the MFA Illustration as Visual Essay program at the School of Visual Arts (Class of 2027). This work is part of a series illustrating one of the most famous Qing Dynasty stories in China, which depicts the opulent yet tragic life of Zhenhuan, a concubine of Emperor Yongzheng, who later became Empress Dowager after his death.
This year’s awards were...
by The Gaze - thursday at 15:27
The Undercurrent Surfaces There are moments in a country’s creative consciousness when the atmosphere tilts. For many of the designers showing at Zurich Fashion Week 2026, the seeds were sown during last year’s pre‑events. And so, after more than twelve months of preparation, this was the week their work stepped fully into the light — an undercurrent now rising into a transformative movement in modern style. As I walked into the Kongresshaus Zurich this February, the first edition of Zurich...