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Frieze Week London 2024 - Frieze Magazine
Frieze Week London 2024 - Frieze Magazine
As we welcome you to London this October, I am especially excited for everyone to discover a refreshed Frieze London. With a reimagined layout over a year in the making, it is a delight to see this new geography materialize and I can’t wait for you to explore it.
·frieze.com·
Frieze Week London 2024 - Frieze Magazine
Sculpted textile wonders – TextileArtist
Sculpted textile wonders – TextileArtist
Textile artists have long forged their own way, but they can be especially rebellious when it comes to three-dimensional art.
·textileartist.org·
Sculpted textile wonders – TextileArtist
The Simplest Form of Entertainment
The Simplest Form of Entertainment
Norman McLaren’s ‘Begone Dull Care’ (1949) brings a wild piece of jazz to life with abstract expressionist animation.
·open.substack.com·
The Simplest Form of Entertainment
I'm Going Through Something
I'm Going Through Something
Graphic design student Martin Flores did his MFA thesis on liminality - in the form of an installation! Definitely thinking outside the box.
·martinfloresdesign.com·
I'm Going Through Something
Artist Insights: Shanti Panchal - Jackson's Art Blog
Artist Insights: Shanti Panchal - Jackson's Art Blog
In this Artist Insights film, Shanti Panchal shares his story, what inspires his work today, and how he developed his unique method of watercolour painting.
·jacksonsart.com·
Artist Insights: Shanti Panchal - Jackson's Art Blog
Lonnie Holley review – America’s wreckage made into magical art
Lonnie Holley review – America’s wreckage made into magical art
The artist and musician reclaims beauty and meaning from rubbish, decay and death, using materials from rusted padlocks to old organ pipes. It’s raw, inspiring and absolutely joyous
·theguardian.com·
Lonnie Holley review – America’s wreckage made into magical art
Béatrice Coron- World's Worthy Words
Béatrice Coron- World's Worthy Words
Béatrice Coron's cut stories: Béatrice Coron is an artist specialized in papercutting used in artist books, illustrations, and public art. Her cut designs are made of paper, glass or metal from small to monumental. Her works are in numerous collections such as The Metropolitan Museum NY, The Getty, and The Walker Art Center.
·beatricecoron.com·
Béatrice Coron- World's Worthy Words
Now You See Us | Tate Britain
Now You See Us | Tate Britain
Women Artists in Britain 1520-1920
Women Artists in Britain 1520-1920
·tate.org.uk·
Now You See Us | Tate Britain
Where the Leaves Fall on Instagram: "Photographer Tamary Kudita’s powerful portraits aim to retell and recentre the often-obscured histories of Zimbabweans and other African cultures. Drawing from fabrics and mixing African and European histories, she uses fantastical imagination to explore identities. Tamary Kudita was born in Zimbabwe while her ancestry can be traced back to the Orange Free State, historical Boer state in Southern Africa. She studied fine art at the University of Cape Town and subsequently established herself in fine art photography. She maintains an active studio practice and has exhibited in Zimbabwe and outside the country. Her work attempts to convey a truthful narrative and demonstrate how she engages with issues of invisibility, re-contextualisation, appropriation, and subversion to preconceived ideas of Black personhood. Through portraiture, she merges her contemporary aesthetic with a historical aesthetic as a way of showing how the old informs the new. @a...
Where the Leaves Fall on Instagram: "Photographer Tamary Kudita’s powerful portraits aim to retell and recentre the often-obscured histories of Zimbabweans and other African cultures. Drawing from fabrics and mixing African and European histories, she uses fantastical imagination to explore identities. Tamary Kudita was born in Zimbabwe while her ancestry can be traced back to the Orange Free State, historical Boer state in Southern Africa. She studied fine art at the University of Cape Town and subsequently established herself in fine art photography. She maintains an active studio practice and has exhibited in Zimbabwe and outside the country. Her work attempts to convey a truthful narrative and demonstrate how she engages with issues of invisibility, re-contextualisation, appropriation, and subversion to preconceived ideas of Black personhood. Through portraiture, she merges her contemporary aesthetic with a historical aesthetic as a way of showing how the old informs the new. @a...
257 likes, 18 comments - wtlfmag on May 3, 2024: "Photographer Tamary Kudita’s powerful portraits aim to retell and recentre the often-obscured histories of Zimbabweans and other African...".
·instagram.com·
Where the Leaves Fall on Instagram: "Photographer Tamary Kudita’s powerful portraits aim to retell and recentre the often-obscured histories of Zimbabweans and other African cultures. Drawing from fabrics and mixing African and European histories, she uses fantastical imagination to explore identities. Tamary Kudita was born in Zimbabwe while her ancestry can be traced back to the Orange Free State, historical Boer state in Southern Africa. She studied fine art at the University of Cape Town and subsequently established herself in fine art photography. She maintains an active studio practice and has exhibited in Zimbabwe and outside the country. Her work attempts to convey a truthful narrative and demonstrate how she engages with issues of invisibility, re-contextualisation, appropriation, and subversion to preconceived ideas of Black personhood. Through portraiture, she merges her contemporary aesthetic with a historical aesthetic as a way of showing how the old informs the new. @a...
Who killed Caravaggio and why? His final paintings may hold the key
Who killed Caravaggio and why? His final paintings may hold the key
A killer himself, Caravaggio died at 38 – desperate, disfigured and on the run from the Knights of St John. His greatest works – with which he bargained for his life – cast light on one of art’s darkest mysteries
·theguardian.com·
Who killed Caravaggio and why? His final paintings may hold the key
Richard Serra in "Place" - Season 1 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21
Richard Serra in "Place" - Season 1 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21
Art21 proudly presents an artist segment, featuring Richard Serra, from the "Place" episode in Season 1 of the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" series."Place" premiered in September 2001 on PBS.The segment follows Richard Serra as he guides the viewer through several massive installations he has done in New York, San Francisco, and Bilbao, Spain. Having worked with metal for the past forty years, Serra creates sculptures shape and stretch steel like rubber, carving intimate moments out of public spaces.Richard Serra was born in San Francisco in 1938. Learn more about the artist at: https://art21.org/artist/richard-serraCREDITSCreated by: Susan Sollins & Susan Dowling. Executive Producer & Curator: Susan Sollins. Executive Producer: Susan Dowling. Series Producer: Eve-Laure Moros Ortega. Associate Producer: Migs Wright. Production Coordinator: Laura Recht. Researcher: Quinn Latimer & Wesley Miller. Director: Catherine Tatge. Editor: Donna Marino. Director of Photography: Bob Elfstrom & Joel Shapiro. Additional Photography: John Chater, Ken Kobland, & Don Lenzer. Sound: Gautam K. Choudhury, Ray Day, Doug Dunderdale, Aldo Ferraris Hierro, Chris Kellett, Ramon Larrabaster, Juan A. Torres, Bill Wander. Assistant Camera: Matthew Gordon, Brian Hwang, Paul Marbury, Glen Piegari, Enrique Puig, & Kipjaz Savoie. Gaffer/Grip: Ned Hallick, Paco Mayo, & Pedro Villalon. Location Manager: Asier Bilbao; Michelle Fernandez Echebarre; & Hilda Frontanes-Suarez, Tropical Visions. Production Assistant: Steve Carrillo, Graham Gangi, Brent Hamilton, Gabriel Monts, Eric Pfriender, Orlando A. Rivera, & Scott Stevens. Animation Stand Photographer: Marcos Levy & City Lights. Assistant Avid Editor: Heather Burak & Matt Prinzig. Assistant to the Director: Rachel Connolly.Full credits available at https://art21.org/watch/art-in-the-twenty-first-century/s1/placeMajor underwriting for Season 1 of Art in the Twenty-First Century is provided by Robert Lehman Foundation, PBS, National Endowment for the Arts, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro, The Allen Foundation for the Arts, The Broad Art Foundation, The Jon and Mary Shirley Foundation, Bagley Wright Fund, The Rockefeller Foundation, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, and The Foundation-to-Life.#RichardSerra #Place #Art21
·youtu.be·
Richard Serra in "Place" - Season 1 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21