en attendant l'art
by The Art Newspaper - about 53 minutes
The Putin ally has been a vocal supporter of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine
by Designboom - about 1 hour
WEAVING CONNECTION BETWEEN MATERIAL, STRUCTURE AND CULTURE
 
PITAKA launches Weave the Next — Weave Our World, a global call to action to the creative community to express their understanding of the world from natural patterns to future imagination. The brand, founded in 2015, recasts weaving as a design language that connects material, structure, and culture. This initiative marks a new chapter in collaborative material exploration, woven aesthetics, and product design, welcoming creators to submit their visions between April 24 – May 25, 2026. PITAKA integration of aramid fiber and weaving techniques | all images courtesy of PITAKA
 
 
INNOVATION THROUGH  STRUCTURAL INTEGRITY & CULTURAL...
by The Art Newspaper - about 2 hours
Gradel’s investigations led to the revelation that 2,000 objects from the British Museum‘s collection had been stolen or damaged
by Parterre - about 2 hours
Hans Hotter masterfully captures the poignancy of this sublime Brahms Lied.
by Hyperallergic - about 2 hours
In a twist that sounds straight out of our annual April Fools edition, the American Arts Conservancy — the nascent MAGA-studded nonprofit commissioning this year’s US Pavilion at the Venice Biennale — is fundraising for the exhibition via a “Donate” button on its website. In fact, there’s a lot that’s curious about the financing for Alma Allen’s pavilion. Staff Reporter Isa Farfan has the story.Personally, I encourage you to skip the pavilion donation and get a Hyperallergic membership instead. For less than 10 bucks, you’ll support our work and get access to exclusive members-only events, like today’s virtual conversation with artist and MacArthur grant winner Jeremy Frey and Hyperallergic...
by Designboom - about 3 hours
the city as a controlled hallucination
 
The contemporary city does not begin with planning. It begins earlier, in spaces where experience is tested. Before infrastructure takes form, environments are staged, adjusted, and refined through controlled settings. Early amusement parks such as Coney Island operate as compact worlds where fantasy, technology, and mass culture converge into spatial experiments, early prototypes of urban life. They construct immersive environments where illusion is organized, movement is scripted, and experience is engineered. What appears as escape already functions as a model.
 
The shift from world fairs to amusement parks marks a transition to continuous spatial systems....
by The Art Newspaper - about 3 hours
The sweeping exhibition "The Promise of Change" demonstrates the painter’s fascination with art history and mythology, and his movement between dreams and documentary
by The Art Newspaper - about 3 hours
Exhibition at Charleston in Lewes, England, explores the work of the now 'non-existent' artist who was linked to avant-garde circles including the Bloomsbury Group
by Designboom - about 3 hours
spY spins gold and silver halos into a reflective cloud
 
SpY’s HALOS large-scale installation is composed of a matrix of gold and silver reflective circles, suspended in midair and set in continuous rotation. Located at the heart of a former railway factory in Florence, the work unfolds a continuous choreography of movement and reflection that permeates the space it inhabits with light. As they rotate, the suspended circular forms visually intertwine, generating a constellation of reflections produced through the interaction of light and material.
all images by Ruben PBescos
 
 
Overlapping Reflections Shift with Movement Through Space
 
The vertical architecture of the atrium, organized across three...
by ArtNews - about 3 hours
While much attention—and controversy—has been generated in recent months over the return of Russia to the Venice Biennale, another outcast nation will also have its first presence at the global art exhibition in six years, albeit in an unofficial capacity: Belarus. For the first time, the Belarus Free Theatre, an underground theater group, will stage an official collateral exhibition at the 61st Venice Biennale. The show, titled “Official. Unofficial. Belarus.,” is set to explore how art is “made, censored, and experienced under authoritarian power and constant surveillance,” according to an official description. It’s a provocative and timely subject, made more so by the fact that the Belarus...
by Designboom - about 4 hours
Responsive Architectural Practice Rooted in Context
 
Founded in 1983, A&M Architects has developed a body of work grounded in context, continuity, and long-term thinking. The Athens-based studio approaches each project as a specific response to its users, its environment, and the conditions that shape it. Rather than beginning with a predefined formal language, the practice works through the relationships between people and place. Architecture is understood as a framework that supports everyday life, enabling interaction, adaptability, and a sense of belonging. Across scales and typologies, this approach results in spaces that are clear, resilient, and open to change. The emphasis is placed on how buildings...
by Aesthetic - about 5 hours
The opening of V&A East Storehouse signals a recalibration in how institutions might live with their collections, not as static reservoirs of heritage but as permeable, operational spaces of encounter. Set within the wider emergence of V&A East, the Storehouse reframes access as a continuous condition rather than an occasional event, dissolving the distance between storage, study and display. It arrives at a moment when museums are increasingly asked to perform not authority but to open their infrastructures to forms of public legibility that were once hidden. Its arrival also invites comparison with the Depot Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, where transparency and verticality have already recast the...
by archdaily - about 5 hours
Array
by Designboom - about 6 hours
uzbek craft reimagined for an ethereal installation in milan
 
For a few days each year, Milan transforms into a kind of collective dreamscape: its historic interiors and industrial edges reimagined as sites where design moves beyond function into the realm of ritual, memory, and imagination. Within this shifting landscape, Uzbekistan’s first national exhibition ‘When Apricots Blossom’ emerges not simply as an exhibition, but as a living laboratory of cultural exchange, where objects carry stories across geographies and generations.
 
While the display includes several disparate elements — an apricot branch sculpture, a lattice yurt structure, and a textile installation which drapes the facade (see...
by ArtNews - yesterday at 23:46
The Bienal de São Paulo has announced the two chief curators for the 2027 edition of the Brazilian exhibition: Amanda Carneiro and Raphael Fonseca. The duo’s theme for the Bienal will be announced in the coming months. Held in Oscar Niemeyer–design Pavilhão Ciccillo Matarazzo in Ibirapuera Park, the exhibition is the largest of its kind in Latin America. “The selection of Amanda Carneiro and Raphael Fonseca for the 37th edition is part of this evolving history,” said Andrea Pinheiro, president of the Fundação Bienal de São Paulo, which manages the biennial. “For the second time, two Brazilian curators are taking on, together and on equal footing, the artistic leadership of an edition. It is a...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 23:40
In the past, donors to the United States Pavilion at the Venice Biennale have proudly announced themselves as patrons of the contemporary art world’s most prestigious event. This year, however, under the thumb of the Trump administration’s State Department, the funding for Alma Allen’s national pavilion remains unusually opaque. Unlike the numerous sponsors that publicly backed Jeffrey Gibson’s monumental 2024 US Pavilion, including the Ford and Mellon foundations, no organizations or individuals have yet to claim any direct funding ties to Allen’s exhibition. Instead, the American Arts Conservancy (AAC), the year-old nonprofit tapped to execute the 2026 pavilion, is fundraising for the exhibition...
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 23:35
Inside the cavernous former train station that now houses Hamburger Bahnhof, 400,000 wooden cubes stack and topple into piles. Conceived by Lithuanian artist Lina Lapelytė and commissioned by Chanel, “We Make Years Out of Hours” is a large-scale installation that invites the public to remake structures from these 10-centimeter blocks made of pine and spruce. Lapelytė often combines sound and performance and collaborates with both professionals and novices. This participatory work continues the artist’s interest in collective making and caretaking, particularly as it relates to shared authorship and how we might amend and reshape what currently exists. A trio of weekly performances on Tuesdays,...
by ArtNews - yesterday at 23:19
Two New Jersey residents pleaded guilty to running a years-long counterfeit art scheme that funneled fake works into the legitimate market, defrauding buyers of at least $2 million. Erwin Bankowski, 50, and Karolina Bankowska, 26, admitted in federal court in Brooklyn to wire fraud conspiracy and misrepresenting Native American–produced goods, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York. The pair, a father and daughter, now face up to 20 years in prison, along with at least $1.9 million in restitution.  Prosecutors say that between 2020 and 2025, the two consigned more than 200 counterfeit works to galleries and auction houses across the United States, slipping them into...
by ArtForum - yesterday at 23:03
Arts Collective will open a new arts center in Northampton, England on May 1st with an exhibition from Northamptonshire-born artist Rose Finn-Kelcey. The planned complex is the result of a £5.2m renovation of Northampton’s municipal offices and town hall annex, and will include 17 artist studios, several community spaces, and a new gallery.  The central […]
by ArtNews - yesterday at 23:00
A Spanish judge has ordered the Museo del Prado in Madrid to hold onto a painting attributed to Diego Velázquez at the center of a divorce dispute between steel magnate José María Aristrain and his ex-wife Gema Navarro, according to El País.  The painting ended up at the Prado through a chain of state intervention. After Navarro filed a complaint alleging the work had been wrongly kept from her, a Madrid judge, acting with the support of prosecutors, ordered Spain’s Ministry of Culture to take custody of it citing its potential importance to the country’s historical heritage. The ministry then designated the Prado as custodian. The work was removed from Aristrain’s Madrid residence and...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 22:45
Arleene Correa Valencia, "It’s Easier To Leave Before The Sun Rise: It Hurts Less If We Don’t Say Goodbye / Es Más Facil Salir De Madrugada: Sin Despedida Duele Menos" (2025) (image courtesy Fridman Gallery)This story was copublished with Next City, a nonprofit news organization reporting on solutions for more sustainable, accessible, inclusive, and equitable cities.Visitors walking into Manhattan’s Fridman Gallery are instantly met with Arleene Correa Valencia’s four-by-five-foot acrylic and textile composition depicting six figures outlined in thread and fabric. They’re riding in the back of a red pickup truck, and their faces are blank. Toward the back of the space, her 16-foot-long “En El...
by ArtForum - yesterday at 22:17
The organizers of the Vancouver Biennale have appointed Brazilian artist and documentary filmmaker Marcello Dantas senior curator of the event’s 2027–29 iteration, the Art Newspaper reports. Dantas is currently art director at immersive museum Ster Ik in Tulum, Mexico. He recently cocurated, with Maya El Khalil, the 2024 iteration of Saudi Arabia’s Desert X AlUla. […]
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 22:05
LOS ANGELES — The Box LA, the risk-taking experimental space that nurtured unconventional art forms, is closing after 19 years. Although it was established as a commercial gallery, The Box’s programming often evoked the freedom of a nonprofit, presenting work not typically embraced by the market, especially performance art. Its final exhibition, a retrospective of the mercurial artist Wally Hedrick presented with Parker Gallery, ran through April 4. A closing celebration will take place on June 6, with a fashion show of costumes by Johanna Went, in collaboration with Asher Hartman. “It feels right to end this way, with the kind of work we always existed to support: radical, enlightening, and not easily...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 22:01
Cover of Performing Chance: The Art of Alison Knowles In/Out of Fluxus by Nicole L. Woods (courtesy University of Chicago Press)In October 1962, Alison Knowles turned the simple act of preparing a salad into a new kind of art. Proposition #2: Make a Salad debuted at London’s Institute of Contemporary Arts as part of the raucous Festival of Misfits, an event curated by poet and art dealer Victor Musgrave that introduced the Fluxus group to Great Britain. In the performance, the artist and her colleagues chopped and mixed the fresh ingredients in a pickle barrel on the stage of a small concert hall before plating and serving the dish to the roughly 100 people in attendance. The event was an early example of...
by ArtNews - yesterday at 21:43
“What does Damien Hirst have to do with McDonald’s? Nothing.” So begins a perplexing Instagram video introducing an installation organized by Nicolas Ballario, founder of a Milan-based communications agency, that was on view as part of Milan Design Week. The immersive installation, “POOL. Ti sblocco un ricordo” (“Pool: I’ll Unlock a Memory for You”), is part of a series of offsite exhibitions collectively called Tortona Rocks, in the Tortona neighborhood of Milan. The centerpiece of “POOL” is a large swimming pool-shaped pit full of hundreds of thousands of colorful balls, like a McDonald’s PlayPlace ball pit on steroids. So, what does the provocative British artist have to do with all of...
by The Art Newspaper - yesterday at 21:17
Robert Dunlap promised investors a coin backed by works by Dalí, Picasso and other renowned artists
by ArtForum - yesterday at 20:07
The controversy surrounding the Russian Pavilion at the 2026 Venice Biennale continues to escalate: according to new reports from Italian news outlets, Russia’s group exhibition “The tree is rooted in the sky” will only be accessible to members of the press and industry insiders during the Bienniale’s preview between May 5th and May 8th. When […]
by archaeology - yesterday at 19:30
TAMPA, FLORIDA—According to a statement released by the University of South Florida, a mass grave containing the remains of victims of the Plague of Justinian (A.D. 541–750) has been identified at the site of Jerash in northern Jordan by a team of researchers led by Rays H.Y. Jiang of the University of South Florida. Hundreds of people were buried within several days in this mass grave dug in the city’s hippodrome. “By linking biological evidence from the bodies to the archaeological setting, we can see how disease affected real people within their social and environmental context,” Jiang said. Examination of the remains from the grave suggests that these individuals lived in different areas across...
by archaeology - yesterday at 19:00
Sanskrit seal HYDERABAD, INDIA—The Times of India reports that researchers led by epigrapher K. Muniratnam Reddy from the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) have decoded a Sanskrit inscription written in Brahmi characters on a seal discovered in what is now Pakistan. The translation reads, “Devadaruvane Svami Kotesvarah,” indicating that the fifth-century a.d. seal belonged to a temple dedicated to Shiva, a principal Hindu deity. Reddy and his colleagues explained that the inscription refers to a pivotal story about Shiva set in the Devandaru forest that is recorded in a sacred text called the Skanda Purana. The seal is thought to be the oldest known depiction of the story, Reddy concluded. To read...
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 18:43
“We live with so many hard things,” says Sheila Hicks, “that we’re crying for softness.” The pleasure, simplicity, and tactile qualities of textiles ground a new film from Louisiana Channel, which explores the ways in which fiber art remains both evocative and relevant in this increasingly digital era. “7 Artists on Soft Sculptures” weaves together a variety of distinct approaches to textiles. Nick Cave describes incorporating found plastics, toys, metals, fringe, and more into elaborate suits that mask the wearer’s identity, while Icelandic artist Shoplifter shares her obsessions with brightly dyed synthetic hair, which she transforms into immersive installations. And Kaarina Kaikkonen offers...
by Fad - yesterday at 17:55
What do you want in abstract painting – materiality, gesture, content of some sort? Cristallina Fischetti gives you all three
by artandcakela - yesterday at 17:49
By Nancy Spiller Alec Egan's painting "Dawn House," in his show "The Groundskeeper" at Vielmetter Los Angeles, is tender, serene, and calm — a lavender and peach sky sheltering the triangular top of a house flanked by two palm trees and the tip of a cypress. In its companion painting, "Night House," the sky takes a sinister turn with layers of dark blue, sunset orange, and a roiling strip indicative of flames mixed with what might be smoke. It hints at something of what Egan, his wife, and...
by Fad - yesterday at 17:42
Summer dressing for babies sounds simple, fewer layers, lighter fabrics and it’s done. But ask any parent who has dealt... Read More
by Fad - yesterday at 17:19
Filipa Ramos will curate the 2027 edition of the Lofoten International Art Festival, bringing her ecological and multispecies research to the Arctic biennial.
by ArtForum - yesterday at 17:13
The Fundação Bienal de São Paulo has named Brazilian curators Amanda Carneiro and Raphael Fonseca chief curators of the Thirty-Seventh São Paulo Bienal, to take place in 2027. The São Paulo–born Carneiro has been a curator at the Museu de Arte de São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand (MASP) since 2018. Among the exhibitions she has mounted […]
by Fad - yesterday at 17:01
Frieze New York 2026 reveals a major line-up of solo booths, dual presentations and curated gallery sections
by ArtForum - yesterday at 16:28
“The Machine,” David Lamelas’s survey at Dia Chelsea, highlights the varied and timely nature of the peripatetic Argentinian artist’s work. The institution’s deputy director Humberto Moro curated the show, which was realized in close conversation with the artist, who considers each new installation of the work to be an “original,” as it needs to be […]
by Fad - yesterday at 15:11
Lisson Gallery and Matthew Marks present a major Ken Price exhibition in London, showcasing the artist’s groundbreaking ceramics, sculpture and works on paper.
by Parterre - yesterday at 15:00
Barbara Hannigan mesmerizes as both a brilliant vocalist and a proficient opera conductor in a double bill of Strauss and La voix humaine with the New York Philharmonic.
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 14:59
Growing up in the Australian Outback, where he first picked up a camera as a teenager to document his surroundings in the bush, Jon McCormack developed a keen eye for the beauty and subtleties of nature. Throughout his career, he’s stepped foot on all seven continents. Yet the idea for his new book, Patterns: Art of the Natural World, emerged from a period of quieter reflection. Like many of us during the pandemic, McCormack’s travels were limited to his immediate area. He began visiting the same spots repeatedly and “discovered a new way of seeing, using photography to reveal the hidden harmony and symmetry of the natural world,” says a statement. Patterns, forthcoming from Damiani Books, draws upon...
by Aesthetic - tuesday at 14:00
Classical sculptures meet traditional studio portraiture in the work of Åsa Johannesson. The artist’s long-term project The Queering of Photography, turns both traditional genres on their head. The experimental work investigataes the complex relationship between queer identity and photographic representation. The artist creates formal, yet playfully subversive images of human figures, Roman statues and studio props to challenge and reimagine how identity and desire are represented. The project evolved from a series of interconnected works – Looking Out, Looking In; Frame; Figural, Figurative; Turn; and Skin – spanning performative black-and-white studio portraits, studies of Roman statues and...
by Parterre - tuesday at 12:00
While refined, Lisa della Casa sings "Four Last Songs" deeply alert to the text and with effortless vocalization that sounds fresh and spontaneous.
by Aesthetic - tuesday at 9:00
In Diana Markosian’s latest body of work, intimacy is framed as an unstable condition, continually reconstructed through absence, repetition and emotional residue, where love persists beyond its apparent ending in altered, shifting forms. Relationships appear less as fixed narratives than as structures in motion, shaped as much by what has disappeared as by what remains visible. Replaced, now on at Gallerie d’Italia, organises emotional experience through cycles of return in which memory functions less as retrieval than ongoing re-authorship. Photography and film work together to stage this instability, allowing scenes to reappear in subtly altered emotional registers, as if slightly out of alignment with...
by Aesthetic - tuesday at 6:00
Tate Modern’s programme is a global cultural barometer – less a sequence of shows than a continuous reconfiguration of how contemporary art is experienced, narrated and absorbed. The recent Tracey Emin: A Second Life survey sharpened this direction, folding autobiography into institutional scale with an intensity that blurred confession and spectacle. It sat in productive tension with earlier landmark presentations such as Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Rooms and Olafur Eliasson’s The Weather Project, both of which recalibrated perception itself as curatorial material. More recently, El Anatsui’s expansive material assemblages and A World in Common: Contemporary African Photography have extended this...
by Thisiscolossal - monday at 20:19
What better way to meditate on nature’s most majestic features than to recreate its details one stitch at a time? Since picking up a needle and thread in 2020, Cassandra Dias has translated rugged cliffsides, neat vineyards, and sun-streaked mountains into lush embroideries. The Southern California-based artist uses a technique known as thread painting, which combines a variety of stitches to create richly textured scenes. Having developed a dreamy, impressionistic style, Dias’ embroideries mimic the pointed and gestural movements of a paintbrush, with the depth of impasto. Whether depicting a single autumnal tree or a wide seascape stretching for miles, the artist’s works direct attention to the...
by archaeology - monday at 20:00
SUFFOLK, ENGLAND—The East Anglian Daily Times reports that archaeologists from Cotswold Archaeology uncovered traces of a cremation pyre in the East of England, near the coast of the North Sea. The blackened soil and pieces of burnt bone were found within a ring ditch, which had once been covered by a mound that was destroyed by agricultural plowing. Most of the human remains were likely transferred to an urn for burial at another location. The pyre has not yet been dated, but the researchers suspect it dates to the Bronze Age, since another cremation at the site has been dated to that period. Charcoal and burnt plant material in the soil will also be analyzed for more information about the ritual, the...
by archaeology - monday at 19:30
WARSAW, POLAND—Researchers led by Elena Klenina and Andrzej B. Biernacki of Adam Mickiewicz University and their colleagues identified intestinal parasites in residues taken from four chamber pots recovered from two archaeological sites in the Roman province of Moesia Inferior, which is located in what is now Bulgaria, according to a La Brújula Verde report. Three of the pots in the study were found in a villa located near the Legio I Italica army camp, where high-ranking officials likely stayed when they visited the region. Cryptosporidium, a protozoan that can cause severe diarrhea, was one of the parasites detected in the second-century A.D. pots from the villa. These vessels also contained evidence of...
by booooooom - monday at 19:00
Matthew Walton is an emerging artist based in Toronto. He holds a B.A.A. (Hons.) in Animation from Sheridan College. His mixed-media practice combines drawing and painting, often merging the human form with a distinct graphic sensibility. The result is figurative compositions that strike a distinct textural contrast between softness and hardness. Embracing gestures and mannerisms once repressed, his work is also a celebration of authentic self-expression.
Froot Loops features Matthew’s mixed-media-work-on-paper series highlighting the quiet charm of everyday queerness. Each piece reimagines a separate mundane moment, transformed by Matthew’s bold, graphic approach to figuration and his vibrant technicolor...
by archaeology - monday at 19:00
STRASBOURG, FRANCE—According to a statement released by Frontiers, the protective coatings on a 2,200-year-old Roman shipwreck found off the coast of Croatia were made of pine tar, or pitch, and a mixture of pine tar and beeswax. Beeswax was added to heated tar to make a mixture known to Greek shipbuilders as zopissa, which is more flexible and easier to apply. In addition to analyzing the chemical makeup of the coatings on the ship, archaeometrist Armelle Charrié of Strasbourg University and her colleagues examined pollen trapped in the sticky pitch at the time of application. “Analysis of pollen in the coating made it possible to identify the plant taxa present in the immediate environment during the...
by Thisiscolossal - monday at 18:22
Over the course of two decades, Queens resident Joe Macken meticulously built an entire city from the ground up. In fact, he built New York City—the whole thing—one building, house, and bridge at a time. Now, his expansive scale construction is on view in He Built This City: Joe Macken’s Model at the Museum of the City of New York. Macken began working on the 50-by-27-foot model in 2004, first in Middle Village, Queens, before moving to Clifton Park, New York. It comprises 340 individual sections, each built from everyday materials like cardboard and glue, with many of the buildings constructed of balsa wood and detailed with pencil and paint. He completed the structure in 2025, and it’s now on...
by Parterre - monday at 15:00
Opera Baltimore concludes its season with a piercing semi-staged production of Pelléas et Mélisande.
by Aesthetic - monday at 14:00
Enter Art Fair, Scandinavia’s leading international art fair, returns to Copenhagen this August. The event presents a curated selection of leading galleries from across the global contemporary art landscape. Taking place at the iconic Lokomotivværkstedet, Enter Art Fair’s eighth edition offers a vibrant platform for art across all media, generations and geographies. Julie Leopold, Director and Founder, says: “as Scandinavia’s largest international art fair, we are proud to present a curated platform that connects audiences with some of the most exciting galleries and artists working today. The fair is a meeting point for art professionals, collectors and first-time buyers alike – and for 2026,...
by Parterre - monday at 12:00
Funnily enough, I’m not remotely a Rachmaninov fan, but this performance by Galina Vishnevskaya in her considerable prime always gives me the chills.
by booooooom - friday at 15:00
Kelsey Shwetz  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Kelsey Shwetz’s Website
Kelsey Shwetz on Instagram
by hifructose - thursday at 19:13
“What I am advocating for is a type of grace,” says Matthew Hansel. “Both in the way we see ourselves and in the way we see others. I am celebrating the impossible mix of contradictory things that make us human, including the parts of ourselves we hide from the world.” Hansel’s tour of our hidden […]
The post Matthew Hansel’s Hidden Demons first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by artandcakela - 2026-04-23 01:13
By Jorge Rodriguez-Jimenez Gustavo Rimada is showing his third solo show and largest to date at Thinkspace Projects. The show, titled “Rhythmic Sequence,” brings together his masterfully vivid acrylic paintings and his newly found love for ceramics. Offering mugs with faces that both haunt and delight, Rimada, who was born in Mexico and raised in California, is blending his Mexican heritage and his California lifestyle to create bold and culturally stunning works of art. Rimada’s ceramic work...