Kari Steihaug’s studio can be found in a large, old brick building on an island five minutes by ferry from Oslo’s busy city centre, and is a place of creative refuge for local artists…[read on]
Argentinian artist Tomás Saraceno’s Berlin studio is a space for experimentation and testing out intricate ideas. His working process is interdisciplinary, Saraceno uses…[read on]
Heba Y. Amin is a creator, but also a recycler, reaching into the depths of history to extract snippets—images and moments—and repurposing them…[read on]
Although Jonas Burgert’s work is not firmly identified with a particular culture or time, the genesis of his painted stages, the creation of his enigmatic figures…[read on]
It’s hotter inside than outside at this time of year, especially in artist Christa Joo Hyun D’Angelo’s sunny third-floor Kreuzberg studio. Floating through the window from…[read on]
Helga Fanderl’s ‘Raum für Film’ can be found behind an inconspicuous frosted glass window-front in Charlottenburg. The three words are visible on the…[read on]
When I visited Christine Sun Kim’s studio, there was a large charcoal drawing on the wall that read “Why my Hearing Parents Sign”, above a pie chart she…[read on]
Berlin Art Link visits artist aaajiao (Xu Wenkai) – one of China’s foremost digital artists, bloggers and free culture developers – in his Berlin studio…[read on]
Layers of painted brick unfurl along the façade of the industrial building that houses Tschabalala Self’s studio in New Haven, Connecticut. Inside, the…[read on]
For Hulda Rós Guðnadóttir the world is a community of people, including their surroundings and movements through time and space. She observes the patterns of…[read on]
The future arrived in a taxi. ‘Eva & Adele.’ Always written with the ampersand uniting the two names. Ambassadors from another world, the self-declared…[read on]