en attendant l'art
by Designboom - about 1 hour
Interconnected Volumes Form Mouvement Flexible Seating series
 
ED Berrios Objet & Mobilier introduces two new editions within its Mouvement series: the Lounge Chair .008 and the Modular Sofa .006. Developed as complementary pieces, the designs investigate soft monolithic forms, asymmetrical balance, and the relationship between furniture, sculpture, and interior space. Produced as limited editions and handcrafted in Italy, both pieces emphasize materiality, proportion, and spatial presence.
 
Mouvement .008 is a lounge chair conceived as a soft monolithic volume. Upholstered in European mineral-tanned bovine nubuck over a solid oak frame, the chair is composed of a seat, backrest, and asymmetrical armrest...
by Fad - about 1 hour
Swoon’s The Life of the Work looks back at more than a decade of work, tracing Caledonia Curry’s journey from the streets into an expansive practice
by The Art Newspaper - about 2 hours
While increasing their built footprints, US museums also need to expand their accessibility to the public. By failing to do so they risk blowing a chance to democratise new spaces at a critical time
by Fad - about 2 hours
Gasworks is going even more global, expanding its international residencies programme with artists from Palestine, Iran, the Caribbean, Canada and beyond.
by Designboom - about 2 hours
fujiko nakaya’s fog fills neue nationalgalerie’s sculpture garden
 
Japanese artist Fujiko Nakaya returns to Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie with a site-specific fog sculpture that occupies the museum’s 90-meter-long sculpture garden through October 25th, 2026. Activated throughout the day, the installation sends slowly moving clouds of pure water mist across the garden, where they drift between trees, sculptures, and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s landmark architecture before dissipating into the air.
 
Few artists have worked with atmosphere as consistently as Nakaya. Since developing her first fog sculpture for Expo ’70 in Osaka, she has treated weather as a sculptural medium, giving temporary form...
by Designboom - about 2 hours
kodak charmera gets millennium edition makeover
 
After selling out its first run of miniature digital keychain cameras, Kodak and RETO return with a second drop that swaps ’80s nostalgia for glossy Y2K aesthetics. The new Charmera Millennium Edition reimagines the collectible blind-box camera as a tribute to the early days of digital photography, wrapping the same palm-sized point-and-shoot in metallic finishes inspired by chrome gadgets, flip phones, and turn-of-the-millennium consumer electronics. The release arrives less than a year after the original Charmera captured the attention of design enthusiasts for shrinking an entire digital camera into a functional keychain-sized object.
all images courtesy...
by Juliet - about 5 hours
Sotto l’impulso teorico del suo Presidente, Guillaume Désanges, il Palais de Tokyo non si limita a ordinare una sequenza di mostre autonome, ma si offre come un vero e proprio ecosistema fenomenologico e politico teso a decostruire il sistema del validismo. Questo paradigma, strutturato su severi criteri fisici e psicologici, impone una rigida gerarchia tra corpi considerati normali e anormali in base alla velocità, alle performance e alla produttività capitalista. Désanges rovescia questa dinamica ricordando come la fragilità non sia una condizione eccezionale o marginale, bensì la coordinata ontologica più ampiamente condivisa dall’umanità e da tutto il vivente. Basta un virus, l’avanzare del...
by Designboom - about 9 hours
exposed concrete and pops of yellow reshape Martí Julià building
 
Located in L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, in Spain, Martí Julià is the comprehensive rehabilitation of a corner building into a contemporary apart–hotel. The project by m-i-r-a redefines the building’s spatial organization, material expression, and urban presence through a combination of preserved structural elements and new architectural interventions. The design is based on a deliberate dialogue between the existing building and contemporary additions. Exposed concrete slabs, structural walls, and irregular surfaces left from the original construction remain visible throughout selected interiors, allowing traces of the previous...
by Designboom - yesterday at 22:00
BEAUTY AND ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS INTERSECT IN ‘SLOW BURN’
 
American artist Shawn Huckins examines humanity’s comfortable detachment from environmental collapse in large-scale paintings composed of two distinct, conflicting layers of reality. Opening on July 11th at K Contemporary in Denver, Slow Burn centers on scenes of raging wildfires, smoke-filled skies, and ‘war clouds’, theatrically framed by hyper-realistic trompe l’œil curtains. The heavy, hyper-realistic drapery appears pulled back just enough to expose the disaster behind it. This visual device establishes a strict physical barrier on the flat surface.
 
Rather than immersing the viewer in the ash and heat, the drawn curtains keep the...
by artandcakela - yesterday at 20:37
By Betty Ann Brown Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, February 22–June 28, 2026 Every moment is an organizing opportunity, every person a potential activist, every minute a chance to change the world.—Dolores Huerta The Royal Chicano Air Force (RCAF, originally the Rebel Chicano Art Front) was an art collective founded in Sacramento in the early 1970s. The visual art members, who focused on printmaking and murals, collaborated with writers, musicians, performers, and teachers. Together, they...
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 16:07
“Spain has an extraordinary, unbroken creative tradition: art, literature, music, research,” says Nieves González. From 16th-century portraitist El Greco to Baroque painters like Diego Velázquez and Bartolomé Murillo, the nation’s art history brims with narrative and intrigue. In the 17th century especially, dramatic contrasts of light and shadow influenced by Italian painter Caravaggio met movement, emotion, and religiosity to create theatrical tableaux. For González, this legacy informs a painting practice that merges past and present. “Creating isn’t something we do. It’s something we are,” the artist says in a statement. “And I come from that; I carry it in my body.” Her expressive...
by Fad - yesterday at 14:12
Catherine Goodman at Boughton House, where monumental paintings and tapestries explore fire, grief, hope and renewal.
by Juliet - sunday at 12:35
Ispirata all’omonimo capolavoro di Caravaggio del 1606-1607 (Le sette opere della Misericordia, olio su tela, 390 x 260 cm, realizzato per la chiesa del Pio Monte della Misericordia di Napoli), la mostra, attraverso video, fotografia e scultura, trasforma un tema della tradizione cristiana in una riflessione attuale sulla cura verso gli altri. Abbiamo rivolto a Helen Broms Sandberg sette domande sul significato contemporaneo della misericordia.
Helen Broms Sandberg, “The Seven Works of Mercy”, performance, video still, 2021. Courtesy of the artist
Costabile Guariglia: Quale intuizione l’ha spinta a trasformare la sua esperienza del dipinto caravaggesco in un progetto artistico sviluppato nell’arco...
by Parterre - sunday at 12:00
Opera conductors … my favorite subject!
by Hyperallergic - saturday at 20:30
Akira Ikezoe welcomes me into his studio wearing a long-sleeve t-shirt made by the Cevallos Brothers, with whom he was recently featured in the Greater New York survey at MoMA PS1. That is just one of several large-scale exhibitions and international biennials Ikezoe has participated in over the last few years, including the Sharjah Biennial last year and this year’s Whitney Biennial. As a result, his studio is sparse, save for a few paintings in progress.Ikezoe offers me tea as we recall meeting in 2023 at the Rehearsal Art Book Fair, co-organized by Bungee Space and Accent Sisters. There, Ikezoe introduced me to his Baby Recipes series (2022), in which babies’ body parts become ingredients in...
by Hyperallergic - saturday at 20:10
At age 19, Charles Seliger received his first solo show at Peggy Guggenheim’s gallery The Art of This Century in 1945, and was one of the youngest artists associated with the emergence of Abstract Expressionism. However, unlike most painters in this nascent movement, he never worked on a large scale, nor did he become a gestural or geometric painter. Devoted to nature and Surrealist automatism, he remained a maverick. That independence explains why he is seldom included in surveys of Abstract Expressionism, especially if they focus on stylistic similarities.In 2010, the year after Seliger died, his then-dealer Michael Rosenfeld presented Charles Seliger: A Memorial Exhibition. Since then, his work has...
by Hyperallergic - saturday at 20:01
Welcome to the 344th installment of A View From the Easel, a series in which artists reflect on their workspace. This week, Arghavan Khosravi pulls from Persian miniature traditions to create surreal assemblages of paint, canvas, and wood.Want to take part? Check out our submission guidelines and share a bit about your studio with us through this form! All mediums and workspaces are welcome, including your home studio.Arghavan Khosravi, Stamford, ConnecticutHow long have you been working in this space?Almost five years.Describe an average day in your studio.An average studio day usually starts with an espresso shot and a news podcast, often from the New York Times or the Washington Post. While listening, I...
by Hyperallergic - saturday at 19:40
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, "I See Red: Going Forward, Looking Back" (1996) (© Estate of Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, courtesy the estate and Garth Greenan Gallery)In the aftermath of the Newark Rebellion of 1967, which saw six days of police brutality at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, nontraditional arts spaces began to crop up around the city. Just over a decade after the 1972 opening of Newark's first Black-owned gallery, Aard Studio Gallery, and on the heels of the Blacks Art Movement, Guyanese artists Victor Davson and Carl E. Hazlewood founded their own nonprofit exhibition space, Aljira, in 1983. Taking its name from the Australian Aboriginal word for “dreamtime,” Aljira championed the...
by Juliet - saturday at 16:16
Entriamo in conversazione con Riccardo Freddo, Head of Museum and Institutional Relationships per Rosenfeld Gallery, Londra. In seguito a comprovate esperienze internazionali tra Roma, Parigi, Los Angeles e New York, dal 2023, anno di fondazione della residenza The Place of Silence, Umbria, il curatore formula un nuovo format che fa dialogare la scena internazionale contemporanea e il patrimonio storico-artistico e paesaggistico italiano, secondo i princìpi della sostenibilità e valorizzazione. Ce ne parla in questa intervista.
Riccardo Freddo, ritratto, photo Eleonora Pascai, courtesy Riccardo Freddo
Sara Buoso: Vorresti parlarci della genesi del tuo progetto curatoriale diffuso in Italia? Le tue scelte si...
by Hyperallergic - saturday at 12:00
This holiday weekend is a strange one. As heat waves wash over much of the United States, so do mixed feelings toward the nation’s 250th birthday today, punctuated by rays of hope — like the Supreme Court’s decision to uphold birthright citizenship this week. Here at Hyperallergic, we’ve been embracing moments of possibility and discovery. John Yau’s review of a group of little-known works by Phillip Guston — influenced in part by his wife, poet Musa McKim, and their larger poetry community — is an example of art history’s ever-yielding worlds. This spirit also resonates in Aruna D’Souza’s feature, examining artists who have upended and subverted the meaning of Lady Liberty. One work she...
by Parterre - saturday at 12:00
He has conducted some of my favorite opera recordings.
by ArtNews - friday at 22:51
Tickets to see the Bayeux Tapestry when it goes on view at the British Museum this fall sold out in just over 24 hours this week, reports the Telegraph. The museum said it was the biggest day of ticket sales in its history. Depicting the Norman conquest of England 1066 and made there in the 1070s, the Bayeux Tapestry (technically an embroidery) is an astonishing 230 feet long and, according to the British Museum, features 58 detailed scenes, each rendered in colored wool on flax. On loan from the Bayeux Museum in Normandy, it will be displayed at the British Museum from September 10, 2026, to July 11, 2027, the first time in its nearly 1000-year history the work has been publicly exhibited on British soil....
by The Art Newspaper - friday at 19:03
Sarabande Foundation’s new space features artist studios as well as a cafe and an education space
by The Art Newspaper - friday at 18:01
The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden and the Art Bridges Foundation have teamed up for the nationwide loan programme spanning from Huntsville, Alabama, to Big Horn, Wyoming
by Fad - friday at 17:01
A focused exhibition of Bridget Riley’s early black-and-white paintings opens today at Dia Beacon, bringing together works created between 1961 and 1964.
by Fad - friday at 16:31
Tallinn Art Hall will reopen following a €13 million, five-year transformation that has radically expanded Estonia’s oldest contemporary art institution.
by booooooom - friday at 15:00
Madeline Gallucci  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
Madeline Gallucci’s Website
Madeline Gallucci on Instagram
by The Art Newspaper - friday at 13:17
The Francois Tomb fresco cycle, now on show at Rome's National Etruscan Museum, is the state's third major acquisition in two months
by The Art Newspaper - friday at 13:12
Tickets for this year's event will cost £3,500 a head to raise funds towards the museum's billion-pound transformation
by Parterre - friday at 12:00
Although Ernest Ansermet is most often associated with orchestral music, his 1964 recording of Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande is still my favorite.
by ArtForum - friday at 12:00
A show about big installation art in the age of the huckster-in-chief
by Juliet - friday at 6:14
L’apparente, seconda personale di Alessandro Roma (Milano, 1977) alla CAR Gallery di Bologna, si configura come un momento di approfondimento di una ricerca che ha trovato nella ceramica smaltata il terreno privilegiato in cui la dialettica tra pittura e scultura smette di essere una questione formale per diventare una domanda filosofica sull’essenza stessa del visibile. Il titolo sembra suggerire che ciò che appare non sia mai semplicemente dato, ma costituisca piuttosto una soglia in perpetuo divenire, uno strato di realtà che si offre alla percezione trattenendo al tempo stesso qualcosa di irriducibile allo sguardo, un’intuizione che le opere in mostra declinano con una coerenza tanto più efficace...
by ArtNews - thursday at 23:58
The National Gallery in London announced that it has acquired a significant history painting by 18th-century artist Angelica Kauffman. The work is now on view at the museum.  Achilles discovered among the Daughters of Lycomedes (1787–88) is the first work by Kauffman to enter a UK national collection in nearly two centuries. Another painting by the artist was bequeathed to the National Gallery in 1835 but was later transferred to Tate Britain, as the museum is now known, when it opened in 1897. Tate Britain lent the work to Guildhall in Plymouth, and it is believed to have been destroyed during World War II in the 1941 Plymouth Blitz. Achilles discovered among the Daughters of Lycomedes depicts a Greek...
by ArtForum - thursday at 23:55
"This is a box befitting our times"
by ArtForum - thursday at 23:51
New York’s Lyles & King, known for its championship of emerging artists and its keen eye for talent, has shuttered. The gallery had opened in a restaurant basement on the city’s Lower East Side in 2015 before moving to Chinatown in 2020, becoming one of the first of a wave of galleries to open there. […]
by ArtNews - thursday at 22:40
The discovery of lead during renovation work at Paris’s historic Palais Garnier—opened in 1875 and summoned as inspiration for Gaston Leroux’s 1910 novel The Phantom of the Opera (and even more famously for Andrew Lloyd Weber’s musical adaptation)—has “throw[n] a tight schedule of venue closures and the projected budget into disarray,” according to a report in Le Figaro. Planned restoration work that was supposed to take two years is now projected for five, with evaluation for the best method to extract the lead to be undertaken this summer. “Depending on the method chosen, the duration of the Palais Garnier stage’s closure will be determined this fall,” Le Figaro reports. “Barring any...
by ArtForum - thursday at 22:22
New York City’s Department of Cultural Affairs is set to receive its highest ever allocation of $323.8 million in this year’s city budget. The announcement came after New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, City Council Speaker Julie Menin, and other council members reached a “handshake agreement” on a balanced $125.8 billion Fiscal Year 2027 budget […]
by ArtForum - thursday at 22:21
DORYUN CHONG is the artistic director and chief curator of M+, Hong Kong, overseeing all curatorial activities and programs across the museum’s three main disciplinary areas of design and architecture, moving image, and visual art. If you could have attended any show in art history, which one would it be? The legendary “Magiciens de la […]
by hifructose - thursday at 22:16
Memory may not be a tape-recorder, but in Sasha Gordon’s work, it serves as a device for the initial transportation. Characters wander this fluxing landscape—be it a drive-through window, a master bedroom, or white suburbia—shifting through the dynamic background of her dream-like haze. As a viewer of Gordon’s narrative paintings, you are intruding on intimate […]
The post Shadow Work: How Sasha Gordon Processes Trauma With Colorful, Yet Intimate Art Works first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by ArtNews - thursday at 21:32
An artist has demanded the organizers of Manifesta 16 remove an installation from the exhibition in Essen, Germany, alleging that a piece in the show plagiarizes one of her earlier works.  The piece, titled Elevation and made by the Turkish sculptor Nasan Tur, consists of reclaimed church pews installed on their side inside St. Gertud Church and engraved with anonymous musings submitted by the public. Bochum-based artist Dorothee Bielfeld told the German outlet Waz that the Elevation’s central visual motif—meter-high upright pews, transformed by their reorientation into oblique towers—closely resembles her 2010 work Aufrichten (Raising Up), created for Ruhr.2010, a cultural campaign in Germany’s Ruhr...
by hifructose - thursday at 20:56
Will Sweeney is a commercial artist based in the UK. With a big reach and an enormous imagination, his illustrations adorn album sleeves, shirts for big fashion brands, toys in Japan, and almost any other sort of wearable or product one could imagine. Recently, we asked Sweeney to describe a bit of the machinations that […]
The post Welcome to the Will Sweeney-verse first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by ArtNews - thursday at 20:24
A word to the wise: no matter how frazzled you are while preparing to leave town for a family vacation, make sure you don’t forget anything on the sidewalk when you drive away. Especially if you are the type of family that takes valuable, framed artwork on road trips. Andrés Hurtado, a 57-year-old man from Murcia, was visiting Seville with his family when an artwork leaning against a garage door caught his eye while on a walk around the city center. He picked it up, particularly taken by the wide gold frame. Unbeknownst to Hurtado, the painting belonged to a local family and had been reported missing on Saturday, June 27. The owners, accustomed to taking a beloved artwork with them on vacation, had...
by archaeology - thursday at 20:00
Face cream ad (left), face cream jar (center), and corset stays (right) BAKER CITY, OREGON—Jefferson Public Radio reports that researchers including Katie Johnson of the Southern Oregon University Laboratory of Anthropology investigated the site of the Baker White Pine Lumber Company, which was established in northeastern Oregon in 1910. When the mill closed less than 10 years later, much of the infrastructure was removed from the site. The workforce had been made up entirely of men when the mill opened, but management soon switched to a company town model made up of workers and their families. The more than 8,000 recovered artifacts—including washboard fragments, enamelware basins, shoe polish bottles,...
by archaeology - thursday at 19:30
Gold earrings PHETCHABURI, THAILAND—The Bangkok Post reports that a ninth set of human remains has been unearthed at Don Yai Thong, a burial site in central Thailand dated to between 1,500 and 2,000 years ago. Earlier this year, archaeologists uncovered eight skeletons with bronze vessels placed over the heads and chins of the deceased; glass and stone beads; and gold earrings and bracelets. Bronze vessels were found near the feet of the dead. Six bronze drums have also been uncovered at the site. Phnombootra Chandrajoti of the Fine Arts Department said that the newly found remains belong to a child under the age of 12 at the time of death. The teeth and jaw of either a cow or a buffalo were found near the...
by archaeology - thursday at 19:00
Nameplate from the tomb of Grand Duke Francesco de Medici NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT—According to a statement released by Yale University, researchers from Yale University and the University of Pisa identified an unknown strain of Plasmodium falciparum in the bones of Cardinal Giovanni de Medici, who died of malaria in 1562. His brother, Grand Duke Francesco de Medici, died of the same disease in 1587. Traces of P. falciparum and P. malariae were detected in his bones. “At the time, both were diagnosed with symptoms, such as intermittent fevers, consistent with malaria,” said Valentina Giuffra of the University of Pisa. “This genetic analysis confirms the historical accounts as well as prior research." The...
by Thisiscolossal - thursday at 15:14
The last few mornings, as I’ve walked with my dog up the ravine behind my house, two fawns seem to bound of thin air, racing in unison through the trees until far enough way that they stop, stare, and wait for us to pass. It’s not uncommon to see several does grazing in the same woods, and I’ve always wondered where they sleep. Photographer Katherine Wolkoff followed a similar curiosity as she traversed the grassy meadows of Block Island, which sits a few miles off the coast of Rhode Island, for her series Deer Beds. Flattened by lean cervid bodies, tall grasses reveal the areas where deer bed down. They don’t typically sleep in the same place every single night, but a home range area may have several...
by Parterre - thursday at 15:00
Ahead of his new production of Die Frau ohne Schatten, Barrie Kosky chats with Kevin Ng in Aix about pretty much everything — except the details of his new Frau.
by Parterre - thursday at 15:00
The Bayerische Staatsoper’s Ring cycle scores another triumph with Tobias Kratzer’s take on Die Walküre.
by Juliet - thursday at 6:32
In occasione del terzo ciclo annuale del progetto di residenza d’artista Artist in Officina, la sensibile congiunzione tra pratiche performative e scultoree di Ekaterina Shcherbakova ha rintracciato gli echi della storiografia composita di Montefollonico, nel territorio senese, rendendoli nuovamente manifesti. Ideata da Paul Gregory e Tessa Singleton, con la collaborazione di Margareth Dorigatti ed Emanuele Fasciani, l’iniziativa prende vita nello storico laboratorio del fabbro del paese, riconvertito per accogliere i percorsi di ricerca di artisti di provenienza internazionale.
Ekaterina Shcherbakova, “FUSA”, 2026, installation view at Cappella Santa Caterina, ph. credit 6PM STUDIO, courtesy of the...
by archaeology - wednesday at 20:00
ADELAIDE, SOUTH AUSTRALIA—Stone quarrying at Sugarloaf Hill in southeastern Australia’s Riverland dates back some 7,000 years, according to a statement released by Flinders University. Researchers from Flinders University and the River Murray and Mallee Aboriginal Corporation said that chert and silcrete were extracted from the quarry to make tools and weapons that were likely redistributed beyond the Riverland. “The key outcome from our research has been establishing a plausible timeline for the mining of these materials at Sugarloaf Hill,” said Craig Westell of Flinders University. This timeline will help researchers to understand Aboriginal networks in the southwestern region of the Murray-Darling...
by archaeology - wednesday at 19:30
Mummified remains of female dog from Rio Muerto, Peru GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA—Phys.org reports that Susan deFrance of the University of Florida and her colleagues analyzed the remains of two dogs whose burials were excavated in southern Peru's Moquegua Valley. The remains of the dogs, buried some 1,100 years ago by people of the Tiwanaku culture, were naturally mummified. The first dog, a female with brown and white fur, was less than one year old at the time of death. She had been placed on a woven mat, perhaps wrapped in twine, and buried in a small pit at the village site of Rio Muerto. The second dog was a puppy no more than three months old at the time of death that had been buried in Omo, a ceremonial...
by Thisiscolossal - wednesday at 18:00
Whether it’s the atmosphere casting a haze or the fuzziness of memories and dreams, Guimi You’s lush paintings have an aura of wistfulness and quietude. The Seoul-based artist creates dreamy oil compositions that tap into personal experience, passing time, and how one gains perspective and reevaluates their needs or desires as they go through life. You’s canvases are infused with elements of still life and landscape traditions, where anonymous protagonists reflect quietly in a garden, pause in a golden meadow, or stroll through a park in the rain. Cerulean shadows complement the magenta jacket of a woman strolling with her dog along a stream in “Spring Walk,” and a woman sits down at an easel in an...
by Thisiscolossal - wednesday at 15:18
Stand in any forest and look up, and it’s hard not to be mesmerized by the swaying of tall trees and their elegant canopies casting shade onto the woodland floor. But imagine being an ant or beetle and peering up at the stems of wild geraniums, garlic, or buttercups and experiencing the same sensation. For photographer Theo Bosboom, this ground-level view of flowers and plants gave rise to a series that captures them in the way we might photograph a grove of towering, ancient sequoias. Traversing local landscapes around his home in the Netherlands and sometimes venturing across the border into Germany or Belgium, Bosboom explores forests, dunes, public parks, roadside verges, and virtually any place that...
by Shutterhub - wednesday at 8:00
It is credited with ‘democratising photography’ on a global level – and now Shutter Hub is making its most democratic move yet. As of this month, the organisation will pass into the control of the community it was built for, in what founder Karen Harvey MBE describes as ‘a logical next step: to make things more equitable we need multiple perspectives.’ The announcement follows Karen’s decision to remove paid memberships last year, making Shutter Hub ‘fully open-access and available at no cost to all’. It’s a typically altruistic move from the social entrepreneur: also the founder of Toiletries Amnesty, the award-winning NGO. She was made an MBE in 2024 for services to people living in hygiene...