Sandy Skoglund at installation of Revenge of the Goldfish at McNay Art Museum. Photo by Jacklyn Velez.
SAN ANTONIO, TX.- Bright orange ceramic goldfish swimming in a turquoise bedroom, neon green cats swarming a mundane kitchen and plush dancing trees welcome visitors into artificial wonderlands in Sandy Skoglund: Enchanting Nature, open through Feb. 1, 2026 at the McNay Art Museum. Showcasing the breadth of Skoglunds artistic practice as a sculptor, installation artist and photographer, the exhibition merges visually striking photographic imagery and gallery architecture, offering an entirely new way to experience her art. Skoglund (American, b. 1946) creates tableaux constructed with unconventional materials that she then photographs, incorporating live models in scenes filled with fabricated objects or sculptured animals. The exhibition invites viewers to wander through the artists most famous installations. Intricate details often missed in traditional prints come into focus in the debut of mo ... More
Bettina Pousttchi, Horizons, 2025, acrylic on canvas, 138 (h) x 194 x 4 cm / 54¼ (h) x 76½ x 1½ in, photo: Joerg von Bruchhausen.
BERLIN.- The Buchmann Galerie is presenting the exhibition Horizons by Bettina Pousttchi. The presentation brings together new photographic works on canvas from the eponymous series Horizons, as well as new polychrome sculptures made of ceramic and steel. The point of departure for all three groups of works is, in different ways, the urban experience of Berlin. Coinciding with the exhibition at the gallery is the inauguration of the six-meter-high sculpture Vertical Highways V02 by Bettina Pousttchi in front of the Istanbul Modern as part of the museum collection. With her new series Horizons Bettina Pousttchi continues her conceptual approach to an expanded notion of photography, bringing together photographic methods with painterly means. The artist applied acrylic paint to identically sized canvases in a variety of monochrome colours ranging from vivid red to luminous mint green, carefully ... More
Norman Foster, Birdfeeder, 2025. Prototype. Photo by Michael Bodiam.
LONDON.- Christie's London will present Architects for the Birds, a project conceived by Norman Foster and the Tessa Jowell Foundation, which brings together ten of the world's leading architects to raise vital funds to improve treatment for brain cancer, which is the biggest cancer killer of children and adults under 40. The architects are Norman Foster, Renzo Piano, David Chipperfield, Grafton Architects, Sou Fujimoto, Lina Ghotmeh, Jacques Herzog, Frida Escobedo, Farshid Moussavi, and Kazuyo Sejima. Coinciding with Frieze Week in London, the exhibition will be open to the public at Christie's King Street from 8 to 14 October 2025, showcasing a collection of ten unique birdhouses, representing a rare and collectible design challenge by the most revered architects of our time. Architects for the Birds began with an invitation from Lord Foster to nine of the world's leading architects to take on a more intimate architectural challenge: interpreting themes of sanctuary, ... More
Jennie Goldstein; Courtesy of the Whitney Museum of American Art.
NEW YORK, NY.- The Whitney Museum of American Art has named Jennie Goldstein as the inaugural Marion Boulton Kippy Stroud Curator of the Collection. This position has been made possible by a generous endowment gift from the Marion Boulton Kippy Stroud Foundation in honor of the Museums longtime supporter and founding member of the Whitneys National Committee, who passed away in 2015. In this role, Goldstein will lead the strategic oversight of the Museums collection of over 26,000 works of twentieth- and twenty-first-century American art, managing its growth while developing opportunities for scholarship and display. She will promote the collection through special exhibitions and projects, like the recently announced High Wire: Calders Circus at 100, co-curated with Roxanne Smith, Jennifer Rubio Assistant Curator of the Collection, opening on October 18, and continue curating rigorous temporary exhibitions, such as Christine Sun Kim: All Day All Night, ... More
A Chinese Yellow-Ground Blue and White 'Dragon' Dish, Yongzheng mark and of the period
DALLAS, TX.- Imperial porcelain, jade and hardstone carvings from the Ming and Qing Dynasties and curated treasures from elite private collections will share the spotlight September 17 in Heritages Fine & Decorative Asian Art Signature® Auction. This auction is a celebration of artistry, legacy, and provenance, says Charlene Wang, Heritage's Consignment Director of Asian Art. From rare Qing imperial porcelain to private collections formed over generations, the breadth and quality of material were presenting on September 17 offers a remarkable opportunity for both seasoned collectors and new admirers of Asian decorative arts. Also known by his Japanese artist name, Shoji Kuroda, Crowder was a pioneering Nihon-ga artist and notable collector who developed his painting style in Japan during the Meiji period. His work, which includes 28 lots that will be in play in this auction, exhibits both Eastern and Western influences. The American-born artist visited Pyongyang ... More
Home with a Man, Alexandre da Cunha and Brian Griffiths, at Elizabeth Xi Bauer, Exmouth Market. Photograph: Richard Ivey. Courtesy of the Artists and Elizabeth Xi Bauer, London.
LONDON.- Home with a Man takes its title from a gouache by Alexandre da Cunha, from his prolific Exile series (2022 ongoing). Unlike most of his practice essentially sculptural, often monumental these works are painted over A4-ish surfaces, a format that is easily moved around. Having recently relocated his studio to São Paulo and being himself based between there and London, the artists very idea of home is embedded in layers of multiculturalism. Whereas in the realm of the gouache, the Man alludes to da Cunhas domestic world, in the context of the show, it addresses the dialogue that is being established between him and Brian Griffiths. Such dialogue was largely inspired by the transportability of the Exiles, to which Griffiths responded with sculptures that, in common, share a travel case. In his This is Not an Exit (2025) series, open briefcases appear on top of leatherette ... More
Howardena Pindell, Daytime rendering of Autobiography: Circles, 2026. Courtesy of McKinney York Architects. Commission, Landmarks, The University of Texas at Austin, 2026.
AUSTIN, TX.- Landmarks, the public art program of The University of Texas at Austin, announces Autobiography: Circles, a major new work by Howardena Pindell. For the artist, the large-scale composition is a legacy project, combining the major themes and visual motifs of her pioneering career. Commissioned for the College of Education, Autobiography: Circles will be permanently installed on the glass façade of the George I. Sánchez buildingthe main entry for the collegewhere it will be viewed by approximately 15,000 students, faculty, staff, and visitors each day. Autobiography: Circles represents Pindells first exterior public work and first public art commission in Texas. Landmarks will celebrate its unveiling with a free public lecture on April 23, led by Valerie Cassel Oliver, curator of modern and contemporary art at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and curatorial ... More
Thomas Zipp, Profondeville, Galerie Barbara Thumm 2025, Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Barbara Thumm, Photo: Roman März.
BERLIN.- On the occasion of Berlin Art Week, Galerie Barbara Thumm is presenting Profondeville, the first solo exhibition by Berlin- based artist Thomas Zipp ( 1966, Heppenheim, Germany) at the gallery. This exhibition marks a milestone in our ongoing collaboration with the artist and follows his participation in the group exhibition Anti- Pop II, which we co- curated and through which we first introduced Zipps work to our program. Thomas Zipp, widely known for his intellectually demanding, multidisciplinary approach, has been a central figure in contemporary art in Germany and beyond since the late 1990 s. His oeuvre encompasses drawing, painting, sculpture, installation, and performance, consistently engaging with complex historical narratives, speculative knowledge systems, and psychological architectures. In Profondeville, Zipp unveils an impressive ensemble of works that deepens his engagement ... More
Lee Kang So, Painting (Event 77-2), 1977. Digital chromogenic print. 35 × 29.5 cm (13.78 × 11.61 in)
PARIS.- On the 50-year anniversary of the happening that propelled Korean artist Lee Kang So to international renown at the 9th Paris Biennale in 1975, the work returns to the city for the first time since this presentation in an exhibition at Thaddaeus Ropac Paris Marais. The avant-garde performance, in which Lee Kang So casts a live chicken as artist, is accompanied by works in hemp cloth executed the same year, as well as photographic, video and sculptural works that retrace his wider practice during the 1970s. Also on view is a selection of paintings testifying to the development of Lee Kang Sos art-making in the decades that followed this decisive period. In the 1970s, through avant-garde performances and installations, Lee Kang So developed a highly experimental practice that profoundly shaped the evolution of Korean contemporary art. His international reputation was cemented at the 1975 Paris Biennale with his presentation at the Musée dArt moderne de ... More
ZURICH.- Galerie Eva Presenhuber is presenting the tenth solo exhibition by US artist Sam Falls. As a young man, Sam Falls became eager to leave behind the farm in a small Vermont town where he had grown up with his mother. With a population of 3,000, the pre-Internet rural setting felt limiting, and he longed for the intellectual buzz of a big city. Eventually moving to New York, he set out to pursue his artistic ambitions. Given his desire to escape that pastoral life, its even more striking that nature would later become central to his work. After years immersed in universities, libraries, and the urban landscape, Falls began returning to the natural world. Sleeping in a tent, he spent extended periods outdoors and discovered that he felt more at home under a starry sky than inside a city studio. What initially seemed like a departure from his roots turned out to be a return: the forests and deserts of his childhood, experienced as an only child, ... More
ISTANBUL.- As Istanbul Modern approaches its twenty-first anniversary in its award-winning building designed by Renzo Piano Building Workshop, the museums advisory committees and collection policies are restructured by the museums Artistic Director Çelenk Bafra with the contribution of international art authorities. For the first time, the International Advisory Boardshaping the museums global programs and strategieswelcomes curators and museum directors from Asia. Joining the board are Hoor Al-Qasimi, President and Director of Sharjah Art Foundation; Suhanya Raffel, Museum Director of M+ Hong Kong and President of CIMAM; and Laurent Le Bon, President of Centre Pompidou, alongside long-standing members Glenn D. Lowry, Director of MoMA, and Sheena Wagstaff, Creative Advisor of Frieze Masters. Istanbul Moderns Photography Advisory Board, aiming to expand the museums lens-based programs, now includes curators and directors of international institutions. Este ... More
Quan Wenfei, Tetris Remix 1 - Silver, 2023-2025. Acrylic on shaped canvases, wood, metal. 47 1/4 x 53 1/8 x 1 1/4 inches (120 x 135 x 3 cm). Unique work (variation in color)
NEW YORK, NY.- Eli Klein Gallery is presenting Ǫuan Wenfei: Internet Archaeology, the artists first solo exhibition at the gallery. The exhibition showcases Ǫuans explorations of time and imagery visible on the internet, featuring 10 works using multimedia from her series CAPTCHA, Click and Win!, Tetris, and a selection of installations. Ǫuan Wenfei, who considers herself to be an internet archaeologist, grounds her practice in personal experiences drawn from the online world. Revisiting her interactions with the internet, from childhood summer vacations to her present-day encounters, she deconstructs visual information gathered from digital screens and incorporates it into her creative palette. Working across multiple media, she transforms these fragments into conceptual works. Through her refined skills, the boundaries between ... More
Miao Miao, Travel Destination, 2025. Acrylic on canvas, 160 × 240 cm The artist and Galerie Urs Meile.
ZURICH.- Galerie Urs Meile is presenting A Pre-Arranged Life, the first solo exhibition in Zurich by the emerging Chinese artist Miao Miao (*1986, China). As a leading voice among the young generation of Chinese artists, Miao Miaos practice moves fluidly between painting, sculpture, and installation. The exhibition introduces a new body of paintings, a sculptural ensemble alongside the artists signature paravents, a format currently receiving renewed attention in the contemporary art discourse. With A Pre-Arranged Life, Miao Miao investigates how everyday life, urban environments, and invisible forms of labour intersect with imagination and memory. Her works are marked by an acute sensitivity to colour, material, and the overlooked details of daily existence, transforming familiar motifs into allegorical and sensorial worlds. Miao Miaos practice addresses the accelerated transformations of twenty-first ... More
Quote The reason for my painting large canvases is that I want to be intimate and human. Mark Rothko
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Stay Connected: Navigating the Cloud at Tai Kwun Contemporary HONG KONG.- The two-part exhibition Stay Connected: Art and China Since 2008 presents twenty-first century art that addresses changes in social realities in China and their impacts on the world. Framed through the dual lenses of digital technology and the manufacturing supply chain, the two chapters, Stay Connected: Navigating the Cloud (September 26, 2025, to January 4, 2026) and the forthcoming Stay Connected: Supplying the Globe (February 27 to May 31, 2026), trace a constellation of innovative and alternative artistic practices as well as cultural transformations during this period. Navigating the Cloud showcases 35 artists and groups active in China and internationally whose innovative and alternative practices reflect the integration of the internet, social media platforms, and digital technologies into all aspects of daily life. More than 50 artworks, including ... More
Commemorative exhibition for the 80th anniversary of liberation at MMCA Deoksugung SEOUL.- In celebration of the 80th anniversary of Koreas liberation, the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea (MMCA; Director Kim Sunghee), presents A Commemorative Exhibition for the 80th Anniversary of Liberation: Landscapes of Homeland and Longing from Thursday, August 14 to Sunday, November 9, 2025, at MMCA Deoksugung. Through modern and contemporary Korean landscape paintings, poetry, and Manchurian exile Gasa poetry, this exhibition explores the sentiment of hometown that has remained deeply rooted in Korean consciousness throughout the turbulent tides of Japanese colonial rule and liberation, division and war, and the subsequent waves of industrialization and urbanization. In reflecting on the 80-year history since liberation, the concept of hometown serves as a key link between this land and its people. In Korean ... More
Brazilian artist Macaparana makes New York solo debut at Sous les Etoiles Gallery NEW YORK, NY.- Sous les Etoiles Gallery presents "A Playful Geometry", a selection of works from the Brazilian artist Macaparana (Brazil, b. in 1952) in its gallery space. It is the first exhibition of the artist with the gallery and his first solo show in New York, from September 13th to December 19th, 2025. In "A Playful Geometry", Brazilian artist Macaparana invites us into a realm where geometry sings. His work is rooted in the Brazilian concrete and neo-concrete art, movements that challenged traditional boundaries between form, perception, and emotion. His compositions unfold like visual scoreseach line, plane, and interval charged with quiet tension and lyrical grace. Enchantment arises not from illusion, but from the precision of balance and the poetics of restraint. My process of working is always very spontaneous, and I prefer starting some work in a freeway, ... More
New exhibition explores light, perception, and the absent image GRAZ.- Photography has a lot to do with orientation. To obtain a good picture, one should position oneself at a suitable angle to the desired motif. The rays of light must also be oriented by lenses when they enter the camera. They set the direction by means of the light passing through them, and redirect the pencils of light in such a way that they make pictures emerge. The camera itself provides orientation as well. As a gravitational point, it ensures that all the objects photographed refer to and are put in relation to it. A similarly strong force of attraction can radiate from a light- house as well. As a marker of landas a landmarkit is able to align everything toward or repel everything from itself, even if it is currently not within the range of vision. Cyclic Indirec tions (2022) by Luzie Meyer is a video with a twofold, perhaps even threefold or fourfold, circular movement, at whose ... More
Secession exhibition elevates the "common" in a retrospective of artist John Smith VIENNA.- What does it mean to be common or overlooked in a neoliberal society that preaches the extraordinary? In the English-speaking world, John Smith is the generic name par excellence. In the UK alone, around 30,000 people bear this name an awkward reality for anyone called John Smith who might wish to underscore his individuality. This conundrum is the point of departure for Being John Smith (2024), the most recent film by John Smith, a British artist renowned for elevating the unspectacular. The work spans Smiths life story: from school failures to his emergence as an avant-garde filmmaker, from his cancer treatment to reflections on global politics today. Image, voice, and text are intertwined in an autobiographical meditation on nothing less than the meaning of art and existence itself. Despite its thematic weight, the film is devoid of pathos; in fact, ... More
Becoming B at Künstlerhaus Bethanien BERLIN.- In 2024, Künstlerhaus Bethanien celebrated its 50th anniversarymarking five decades of artistic experimentation, international exchange, and cultural impact. As one of the worlds oldest and well respected residency programs, it offers artists from across the globe a temporary home, studio, and platform for public presentation. With the appointment of Antje Weitzel as artistic director last year, Künstlerhaus Bethanien embarks on a long-term transformation process. Building on its legacy, she seeks to reimagine the institution as a dynamic space for exchange, creation, and presentation, while addressing what a residency can and should mean today. This vision takes shape in Becoming B, a year-long exhibition series unfolding in five chapters. The series revisits the institutions name, identity, and mission, asking what a residency might look like in the 21st century. ... More
Adam Mickiewicz Institute presents The Clothed Home, Korea-Poland textile crafts exhibition SEOUL.- The Clothed Home exhibition, organized by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute and the Seoul Museum of Craft Art, recalls the historical role of textiles in home interiors that helped humans adapt to seasonal transitions. This exhibition echoes the Polish exhibition The Clothed Home: Tuning in to the Seasonal Imagination, which explored how textiles used indoors once played an active role in mediating between the interior and the external world. Composed of Polish and Korean sections that share a common philosophical foundationa reappraisal of discomfortthe exhibition seeks to illuminate ways of living that are finely attuned to the rhythms of nature. It also aims to reveal how textilesfar from mere decorative elementshave long served as sensory mediators, bringing together people, space, and the environment. Emerging from opposite ends of the Eurasian continent, ... More
M+ announces new Facade commission 'Ayoung Kim: Dancer in the Mirror Field' HONG KONG.- M+, Asias global museum of contemporary visual culture in the West Kowloon Cultural District (WestK) in Hong Kong, announces a new M+ Facade commission, Dancer in the Mirror Field (2025), by artist Ayoung Kim (South Korean, born 1979). Set in a futuristic city, this visually striking animated film explores societys obsession with optimisation and efficiency through a mysterious annual competition. Commissioned by M+ and Powerhouse, Sydney, Dancer in the Mirror Field will be shown on the M+ Facade every night from Friday, 3 October to Sunday, 28 December 2025. The Hong Kong presentation is supported by Presenting Sponsor Julius Baer, a leading Swiss wealth management group. The work will be presented next year at Powerhouse, Sydney in a major exhibition that reflects on mall culture. Dancer in the Mirror Field is a speculative ... More
The Sky's the Limit: Amelia Earhart and the National Woman's Party
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Flashback
On a day like today, Japanese architect Tadao Ando was born
September 13, 1941. Tadao Ando (born September 13, 1941, in Minato-ku, Osaka, Japan and raised in Asahi-ku in the city) is a Japanese architect whose approach to architecture was categorized by Francesco Dal Co as critical regionalism. Ando has led a storied life, working as a truck driver and boxer prior to settling on the profession of architecture, despite never having taken formal training in the field. He visited buildings designed by renowned architects like Le Corbusier, Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe, Frank Lloyd Wright and Louis Kahn before returning to Osaka in 1968 and established his own design studio, Tadao Ando Architect and Associates.