Article by Alison Hugill // Oct. 29, 2019
Many of the typical art school tropes that we now take for granted – like boundary-pushing classroom critiques, unorthodox assignments and endless experimentation – were brand new 100 years ago when the Bauhaus…[read on]
Article by Denisa Tomkova // Oct. 25, 2019
The current exhibition at the Julia Stoschek Collection by a New York based-studio WangShui is part of Horizontal Vertigo, a year-long program curated by Lisa Long…[read on]
Article by Denisa Tomkova // Oct. 22, 2019
The exhibition ‘Walking Through Walls’ at Gropius Bau reflects on the 30th anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall. As a historical event, the Fall symbolized hope for a shared future together…[read on]
Article by Faye Campbell // Oct. 18, 2019
The idea of revolution feels pertinent, topical, very now. We see it in the news and perhaps our everyday life…[read on]
Interview by Kimberly Budd // Oct. 15, 2019
Descriptions such as “anointed saint of contemporary Australian art” or “Australia’s most acclaimed living artist” attest to the kind of public profile Ben Quilty holds within the nation…[read on]
Article by Alison Hugill // Oct. 08, 2019
Elvia Wilk’s debut novel ‘Oval’ presents its readers with a parallel world; the city of Berlin is almost imperceptibly different from its current state, but many of its quintessential qualities are ramped up to near-Sci-Fi effect…[read on]
Interview by Lucia Longhi // Oct. 04, 2019
Davide Quayola belongs to a generation that forged artistic production in the digital world, his works intersecting between a classical iconographic legacy and a contemporary digital language…[read on]
Article by Dagmara Genda // Sept. 27, 2019
From art occupations of empty apartment blocks to clandestine living room galleries, Berlin has a history of home exhibitions prompted by the city’s particular opportunities and hardships…[read on]
Article by Michelle Standley // Sept. 24, 2019
Zanzibar-born and London-bred, Turner-prize-winning painter and installation artist Lubaina Himid has an agenda. She wants to change the world…[read on]
Article by William Kherbek // Sept. 10, 2019
Transformation seems almost too quotidian a word to describe the processes explored in Bani Abidi’s works. The exhibition ‘They Died Laughing’ features works from Abidi’s student days until the present…[read on]
Article by Dehlia Hannah and Nadim Samman // Sep. 07, 2019
On July 22, 1958 Carl Andre sent a postcard to Nancy Holt and Robert Smithson. The photograph on the front depicted a verdant aerial view of…[read on]
Interview by Denisa Tomkova // Sep. 06, 2019
The upcoming exhibition ‘1989–2019: Politics of Space in New Berlin’ at Neuer Berliner Kunstverein (n.b.k.) reflects on the urban development of Berlin after 1989. In an interview with Anh-Linh Ngo…[read on]