ART BASEL 2025 – Global Creativity
From June 17 to 22 – with public days from June 19 to 22 – the Swiss city of Basel once again turns into a busy hub for the global art world. Art Basel returns with its full spectrum of…
Emma Webster
“That Thought Might Think” is a new series of panoramic paintings by Los Angeles-based artist Emma Webster. She comes up with expansive, revelatory vistas of genesis and apocalypse. Painted amid the Los Angeles fires, her paintings offer a front row seat into…
Luca Sára Rózsa – The circle of life05
Luca Sára Rózsa analyses the complex relationship between mankind and his environment. Her figures, taken from the Bible and mythology, are often shown in a natural setting in line with the representational portraiture of the Renaissance and the baroque. Rózsa…
MERETE RASMUSSEN – CURVE AND FORM
Known for her signature abstract forms brought to life with colour, Merete Rasmussen continues to surprise and to impress with her sculptural ceramics – both as free standing and wall hung objects. The artist’s sculptures combine beautiful organic forms with…
“TANGLED UP IN BLUE” NIGEL HALL SCULPTURES
Known primarily for sculptures in wood, steel and bronze, Nigel Hall's work is concerned with ..
COLORFUL SPHERES & EMOTIVE INTUITION – PAINTINGS BY ZHANG ENLI
Zhang Enli emerged onto the art scene in the 1990s when he was most associated with symbolic, figurative paintings. Following this, he embarked on a series of quotidian objects treated sensitively and beautifully – whether containers, wires or hoses –…
Adam Pendleton – A Microhistory of Marks and Impressions
The Hirshhorn Museum currently presents Adam Pendleton: Love, Queen, a landmark exhibition of new and recent paintings as well as a single-channel video work in the Museum’s second-floor inner-ring galleries from April 4, 2025, to January 3, 2027. For his…
“A KINDER TIME”CLARE WOODS AT STEPHEN FRIEDMAN GALLERY
In this exhibition, painter Clare Woods deploys still life to meditate on the fragile threshold between life and death. As art critic Charlotte Mullins writes, “while still life has historically been belittled by academic institutions for depicting inanimate objects, it is this…