Lewis Hammond is a Berlin-based, British artist who depicts a small and highly symbolic world in his paintings, reduced to hideaways where bodies surrender to one another…[read on]
Examining data, the causes and effects of its collection and classification, Mimi Ọnụọha reveals what is absent and why these blank spots matter. Her work on missing data sets…[read on]
Diamond Stingily spoke to us about works that explore the nature, performance and frequent repositioning of what is and is not considered private…[read on]
Berlin-based, Greek photographer Spyros Rennt has garnered substantial recognition in recent years for his evocative photographs that beautifully chronicle the queer youth…[read on]
Through animation, painting, drawing and sculpture, British artist Emma Talbot’s practice explores the inner landscapes of private thoughts. As part of Berlin Art Week,…[read on]
With this topic, we hope to expose the many different ways that privacy is understood in the context of art-making, including but also beyond the proliferation of AI…[read on]
Monika Czyżyk was born in Poland and is now based in Helsinki, Finland, with a working studio on the island of Vartiosaari—one of the biggest islands on the Eastern Helsinki archipelago…[read on]
Alice Morey is an artist who works with painting, sculpture and textile to build delicate installations. Within the often chaotic space of wilderness, as a concept, she brings to the fore…[read on]
Through her multidisciplinary practice, Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg explores a wide array of topics—artificial intelligence, synthetic biology and evolution, to name a few…[read on]
Arijit Bhattacharyya’s exhibition, ‘Sea of Forests’, questions the respective roles of nature and civilisation. Can we dissolve the boundaries between, and relearn from the…[read on]
We spoke to Monster Chetwynd about what drew her to the moths, and why she wants to highlight the role of local conservationists in this work…[read on]
‘Pole der Unzugänglichkeit’ (Poles of Inaccessibility) is the continuation of the exhibition series ‘Schwindel’ (Vertigo), which initiated a critical analysis of humanity’s…[read on]