Organised by the artist and philosopher Wassim Alsindi, a trained physicist and chemist, the 0x Salon has become a port of call for thinkers and creators across media and…[read on]
Through humor, Rachel Youn delivers to the public personal and collective feelings related to socio-political aspects such as queerness, failed social standards and a “cosmic…[read on]
We spoke to Lucy Beech about her ‘Passive Aggressive’ series, as well as her ongoing artistic research into waste and salvage as a form of survival…[read on]
We spoke to Mike Bourscheid about where his sense of humor originates, his interest in games as a methodology for his performance works and how his costume and prop design…[read on]
The artistic practice that Fudakowski reflects upon in ‘The Roll of the Artist’ belies the revered Beat poet’s dictum. Instead of “risking” absurdity, Fudakowski’s art often…[read on]
Sonya Lindfors and working group’s ‘camouflage’ (2021) contains props, gestures, dialogues and citations that make us laugh, but not always comfortably…[read on]
There is no monolithic “Black American experience” to be garnered here, but two stark artistic approaches that each point to an interest in reclaiming narratives…[read on]
These five artists—Melissa Guevara, Crack Rodríguez, Ernesto Bautista, Mauricio Kabistan and Mauricio Esquivel—got together and asked themselves how art can impact…[read on]
‘The Future of Cities. Not For Granted,’ presented at the Halle 14 Zentrum für zeitgenössische Kunst in Leipzig, assembles a survey of practices, which hybridize art, architecture, political…[read on]
Colossal, layered and rich in meaning, ‘Metoikos (in between paintings)’ marks the third solo exhibition of Mehretu in this space and is contrastingly paired with a suite of her etchings…[read on]
The work of the French-Algerian artist Kader Attia teaches us that time alone doesn’t heal traumas. Through visual metaphors, individual and collective histories and information…[read on]
For her latest installation, Henrike Naumann has recreated the layout of Hitler’s famous alpine residence, known as the Berghof in Obersalzburg, except the interior is scattered with…[read on]