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Hubert Maga (perruque MAVA-musée d'art de la vie active)
© » KADIST

Meschac Gaba

Sculpture (Sculpture)

The headdresses, woven from artificial hair braids, symbolize historical icons including Martin Luther King, Kwame Nkrumah, Fela Kuti and King Guézo of Dahomey. The wigs portraying these grand figures also unambiguously recall Africa to mind. By declaring Cotonou, one of Benin’s cities, the Art Museum of Real Life, and by having thirty white-clad figures wearing Gaba’s latest series of tresses cross through it, he draws attention to the urban space and its inhabitants’ strategies of survival and improvisation.

Two videos, three photographs, several related masterpieces, and American Art
© » KADIST

Yan Xing

Photography (Photography)

The title of this series – Two videos, three photographs, several related masterpieces and American art – is paradoxical, suggesting the work is conceived in relation to its medium and a situation in art history and the region of the world in which it was made. Paradoxical but in the end, often true of the way in which art history is written. The presence of black men and the term “American Art” brings us back to Robert Mapplethorpe’s Black Book .

Awaiting Enacted
© » KADIST

Roman Ondak

Performance (Performance)

This work needs to be considered in relation to one of his performances during which people were made to queue in front of the Kunsthalle of Frankfurt in 2003 (Tate Collection). In this instance Ondak collected images of people queuing in front of all sorts of buildings in various newspapers. He then inserted these in a Slovakian newspaper without trying to give any coherence with the information in the text on the same page.

Slowed-down Journey
© » KADIST

Roman Ondak

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

As the caption purposely admits, these drawings were made by friends of Ondák’s at home in Slovakia asked to interpret places he has journeyed to. The description of the blond artist wearing the same outfit and bag in places of transit like airports, stations or streets are faithful in straightforward (verging on naïve) styles. His own skill as artist is displaced and delegated to others with no particular gift in draftsmanship.

The Stray Man
© » KADIST

Roman Ondak

Film & Video (Film & Video)

“A man wanders near the windows of a gallery, situated adjacent to the street. He occasionally gazes through windows into the gallery but never enters.” Passersby are numerous since these windows are by a tram stop on a busy street. It is surprising to note how few of them take any notice of this man peering repeatedly through the slightly tinted glass into an empty meeting room with no distinctive signs to be seen.

Sal Sem Carne
© » KADIST

Cildo Meireles

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Meireles, whose work often involves sound, refers to Sal Sem Carne (Salt Without Meat) as a “sound sculpture.” The printed images and sounds recorded on this vinyl record and it’s lithographed sleeve describe the massacre of the Krahó people of Brazil. The piece draws on Meireles’s first-hand contact with many indigenous groups through his father’s work with the Indian Protection Service. The recordings on the LP contain narrative accounts of massacres of native peoples, as well as indigenous music and rituals.

quadroquadro (círculo)
© » KADIST

Renata Lucas

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Lucas’s quadroquadro (círculo) employs familiar materials for the artist: wood, paper, and glass. A simple composition—a black circle inscribed on white paper, encased in a rectangular frame—is interrupted in Lucas’s work, the continuous geometry of the nested forms segmented into four broken shards. Pieced back together, these fragments comprise a whole, but it is a unity shattered, unsteadied.

Sexy
© » KADIST

Yan Xing

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Sexy shows Yan Xing unsuccessfully trying to reach orgasm in freezing temperatures among the falling rocks and howling winds of a precarious canyon. His erotic failure leaves the voyeur-viewer unfulfilled and disappointed. The work explores notions of identity, masculinity, sexuality, voyeurism, and cultural taboos.

I Want You
© » KADIST

Tony Labat

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Commissioned by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and riffing on the “I Want You” army recruitment campaigns of the 1930s and 1940s, Labat asked Bay Area residents to interpret the slogan and make their own demands of the public in a series of live performance auditions. Given one minute to seize the voice of authority, contestants were asked to be the finger-pointing Uncle Sam, and their performances—as on the TV program American Idol —were voted on by a live audience. Five winners were chosen and their image and slogans appeared on posters throughout San Francisco to coincide with the presidential elections.

Swimming in Rivers of Glue
© » KADIST

Julieta Aranda

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The video Swimming in rivers of Glue is composed of various images of nature, exploring the themes of exploration of space and its colonization. The images show the diversity of forms of life on earth. These forms are associated with texts that relay a form of propaganda.

Tribute to Inside Looking Out - For the male artists along my way
© » KADIST

Wong Wai Yin

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In this work the artist stages a humorously violent “intervention” against male-dominated cultures of art production in present-day China. For this video, Wong accompanied six male friends from art school to a group show of their work titled “Inside Looking Out” at Osage Gallery in Beijing. Throughout her visit, she was rarely acknowledged for her own creative accomplishments and was more frequently introduced as an artist’s girlfriend, and often without name.

One Must
© » KADIST

John Baldessari

In One Must , an image of a pair of scissors, accompanied by the words of work’s title, poses an ominous question about the relationship between the image and the text. The otherwise banal scissors become suggestively violent in relation to the text, which was originally the title of a print in Francisco de Goya’s Disasters of War series. However, Baldessari is less interested in the logical relationships between text and image than he is with the conceptual leaps that the viewer makes with the limited information provided.

Extrastellar Evaluations
© » KADIST

Yin-Ju Chen

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Through a semi-fictional approach, Extrastellar Evaluations envisions a version of history in which alien inhabitants, the Lemurians, lived among humans under the guise of various renowned conceptual and minimal artists in the 1960s (Carl Andre, Mel Bochner, and James Turrell to name a few). If humans interpreted and appropriated the geometric-shaped works they created as conceptual and minimalist artworks, the objects were in fact transmission devices the Lemurians used to report back on human actions to their mother planet. The video takes the form of a channeled message from Adama, High Priest and spiritual leader of the Lemurians.

Arms & Legs (Specif. Elbows & Knees), etc.: Arm (with Bottle)
© » KADIST

John Baldessari

Photography (Photography)

Arms & Legs (Specif. Elbows & Knees), etc. : Arm (with Bottle) belongs to Baldessari’s most recent series of paintings in which the artist brings together photographic, painted, and three-dimensional elements, to juxtapose unlikely body fragments such as noses and ears, elbows and knees, or eyebrows and foreheads.

Person with Pillow: Desire, Lust, Fate
© » KADIST

John Baldessari

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

The voids in Baldessari’s painted photographs are simultaneously positive and negative spaces, both additive and subtractive. In Person with Pillow: Desire, Lust, Fate , a woman’s facial expression is obscured by such void, leaving only her posture to suggest her emotional state. The two images stacked above the woman can be read as comic-style thought bubbles, intimating that she has lust, desire, and fate on her mind.

Board
© » KADIST

John Wood & Paul Harrison

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Board has a deadpan quality worthy of Buster Keaton. With this work, Wood and Harrison create an intimate, formally structured mise-en-scène in which they use their own bodies in interaction with a wooden board. The artists elaborate an orchestration of the comic consequences of inertia, gravity, and the law of falling bodies in this low-tech physics experiment.

Until It Makes Sense
© » KADIST

Mario Garcia Torres

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Mario Garcia Torres imagines cinematic devices to replay stories occasionally forgotten by Conceptual art. For him, this is a way of rethinking the tradition in a more personal way, to have a grip on events of recent history and examine them with a curiosity, both critical and sensual. The artist emphasizes the fact that new ideas and meanings may arise from these archaeological narratives.

Hands Around In Yangon
© » KADIST

Moe Satt

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Hands Around in Yangon is both a secular and religious exploration of the meaning of hands in Myanmar. Moe Satt’s father is Muslim, while his mother is Buddhist. In the Buddhist context, hand gestures or mudras are often important in signifying the identity of deities.

The White Album
© » KADIST

Mungo Thomson

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

The White Album (2008) presents a compilation of one hundred issues of Artforum magazine released between 1970 and 1979. As with Will Rogan’s MUM series, also included in the Kadist Collection, vital information is now missing: All of all the articles and features have been removed, leaving only ten years of advertisements. In an unusual way, The White Album reminds us that this important New York-focused magazine was originally founded in 1962 in San Francisco to promote Bay Area artists before it moved to Los Angeles in the mid-1960s in search of a wider advertising base.

Maiko #1, #2, #3
© » KADIST

Ron Terada

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

The three Maiko s were included in Ron Terada’s 2008 exhibition, Voight–Kampf , at Catriona Jeffries gallery. More ambitious in size and subject matter, this show with its complex video installation marked a new path for Terada’s work. Voight-Kampf is based on a scene from Ridley Scott’s 1982 movie Blade Runner in which a giant advertising billboard in the midst of a dystopian city of Los Angeles in the future displays a geisha eating candy.

Extrastellar Evaluations III: Entropy: 25800
© » KADIST

Yin-Ju Chen

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Extrastellar Evaluations is a multimedia installation produced during Yin-Ju Chen’s residency at Kadist San Francisco in the spring of 2016. Chen’s project departs from a 19th century theory popular within Western biogeography that posited the existence of a “lost land” or ancient continent called Lemuria that had sunk beneath the Indian and Pacific Ocean due to cataclysmic geological change. As a result, its inhabitants, the Lemurians, found refuge in Mount Shasta, California.

This One, That One
© » KADIST

Micah Lexier

Film & Video (Film & Video)

This One, That One by Micah Lexier does not have one ultimate version, but instead consists of a source body of 51 separate chapters that are edited to make up different versions. These different versions are edited depending on the context in which the work is being shown. For instance, the version that was shown at the Power Plant consisted of 20 chapters and was edited specifically for that venue, keeping in mind its length and the other works exhibited in the other rooms.

100 Boots
© » KADIST

Eleanor Antin

Photography (Photography)

Comprised of fifty-one photographic postcards, Antin’s 100 Boots is an epic visual narrative in which 100 black rubber boots stand in for a fictional “hero” making a “trip” from California to New York City. Over two-and-a-half years, Antin photographed the boots against different backdrops across the U. S., and then turned the pictures into postcards, which she then mailed to approximately 1,000 people around the world. In conjunction with the boots’ “arrival” in New York City, the postcards were exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art.

Dr.N Song
© » KADIST

Ozawa Tsuyoshi

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Dr. N Song belongs Ozawa’s body of work The Return of Dr. N in which he follows a humorous fictional character based upon the historical figure Dr. Hideyo Noguchi who researched yellow fever in Ghana in 1927. Though Dr. Noguchi was known for his unruly temper and behavior and many of his discoveries were erroneous, he was widely revered in Japanese society. Ozawa’s Dr. N story explores links between Japan and Africa, past and present, fact and fiction, through the commissioned work of Ghanaian painters and musicians working in popular African styles.

History of Chemistry I
© » KADIST

Lu Chunsheng

Film & Video (Film & Video)

A mesmerizing experience of a vaguely familiar yet remote world, History of Chemistry I follows a group of men as they wander from somewhere beyond the edge of the sea through a vast landscape to an abandoned steel factory. Using long shots and atypical settings, Lu Chunsheng enigmatically refers to a distant history while conveying the sense of dislocation wrought by successive stages of modernization. The combination of elaborate landscape shots from the suburbs of Shanghai and Lu’s signature style of spare and minimally crafted acting offers a surreal view of human behavior in spaces marked by the hulking remnants of China’s extraordinary development.

F n' F (Face and Fingers)
© » KADIST

Moe Satt

Photography (Photography)

These photographs document the hand and facial gestures in Moe Satt’s performance F n’ F (Face & Fingers) . Whistling and wearing minimal clothing within a bare gallery space, Moe Satt performed a choreographed sequence of gestures based upon those he observed on the streets of Yangon, Myanmar. Each photograph is simple, showing only the artist’s face and hands with a title and caption that describes the meaning of the documented gesture.

Anti-Happening
© » KADIST

Julius Koller

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Anti-Happening refers to Koller’s 1965 manifesto, ‘Anti-Happening (System of Subjective Objectivity)’. In opposition to the notion of a ‘happening’ as a way of actualising group identity, in his manifesto, Koller stated that his concept of the ‘anti-happening’ aimed at a ‘cultural reshaping of the subject, at awareness, at the surroundings and the real world’ [i] . Unlike happenings, these actions do not involve the staging of psychologically expressive performances.

Spaceship sketches of The Lemurian
© » KADIST

Yin-Ju Chen

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

This work includes sketches for Extrastellar Evaluations , the project she produced at Kadist. Extrastellar Evaluations introduces Plato’s mythical state of Atlantis as the theoretical birthplace of conceptual art. Well-known and obscure epistemological notions from the annals of cosmology and mysticism guided and informed her research in the Bay Area during the Kadist residency at the beginning of 2016.

10 / Febrero / 2019
© » KADIST

Teresa Burga

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

In her new series titled Ninas Peruanas Cusquenas , Teresa Burga depicts young indigenous women from Peru’s Andean region, dressed in traditional garments. Sourcing imagery from the internet, the drawings recall an untitled series of drawings from 1974, in which Burga selected images of women at random from various print media, and then rendered the images on paper. Those drawings, like the newer ones, suggest the perils of images without context––how assumptions are made, stereotypes are formed, and knowledge is gathered.

Mungo Thomson

John Baldessari

Yin-Ju Chen

Roman Ondak

Ian Wallace

Camel Collective

Camel Collective comprises the artists Carla Herrera-Prats (Mexican, photographer and conceptual artist) and Anthony Graves (American, painter), who began working together in 2005 during a fellowship at the Whitney Independent Program...

Haegue Yang

Heman Chong

Mario Garcia Torres

Lu Chunsheng

Yan Xing

Walead Beshty

Tony Labat

Since the early 1980s, Cuban-born Tony Labat has been an important participant in the California performance and video scene...

Lynn Hershman Leeson

Carla Zaccagnini

Rodney Graham

Fernanda Laguna

Fernanda Laguna has mobilized and influenced a whole generation of artists through her various projects since the mid-1990s...

Moe Satt

Moe Satt is a Burmese visual and performance artist who uses his own body as a symbolic field for exploring self, identity, embodiment, and political resistance...

Hernan Bas

Hernan Bas creates expressionistic, yet highly detailed figurative paintings of young men...

Duto Hardono

Duto Hardono is a conceptual artist and educator...

Olivia Erlanger

Olivia Erlanger is a New York based artist that works between sculpture and conceptual art...

Tuan Andrew Nguyen

Tuan Andrew Nguyen is an artist and filmmaker, one of the three founders of The Propeller Group created in 2006...

Wimo Ambala Bayang

Working in photography and video, the Indonesian artist Wimo Ambala Bayang embraces the conceptual possibilities of digital image manipulation...

Steffani Jemison

Steffani Jemison is an interdisciplinary artist whose work considers issues that arise when conceptual practices are inflected by black history and vernacular culture...

General Idea

The Canadian artist collective General Idea (Felix Partz, Jorge Zontal and AA Bronson), active from 1967-1993, was an instrumental source of early conceptual art through their multidisciplinary practice...

John Wood & Paul Harrison

John Wood and Paul Harrison have been working collaboratively since 1993 producing single screen and installation based video works.Their work investigates the relationship between the human figure and architecture, developed through short form video with particular emphasis on actions being formulated and resolved within a given duration...

Julieta Aranda

Wong Wai Yin

Wong Wai Yin is an interdisciplinary artist who experiments with a variety of media ranging from painting, sculpture, collage, performance, video, installations and photography...

Mike Cloud

Artist Mike Cloud builds irregularly shaped canvases and frames into unique sculptural objects...

Sara Cwynar

Cwyner is both related to a photo conceptual tradition of photography from Vancouver as well as to a new school of photography working with digital manipulation, scanners, stock photography and the notion of photography after image making, both of which are represented in the Kadist collection via artists such as Arabella Campbell, Ron Terada, Tim Lee, Rodney Graham, Ian Wallace from Vancouver and artists such as Chris Wiley, Lucas Blalock, Erin Shirreff or John Houck, who recently have explored the idea of photography beyond image making....

© » ANOTHER

about 3 months ago (02/12/2024)

Inside the Exhibition Spotlighting Britain’s Artists of Tomorrow | AnOther February 05, 2024 Text Violet Conroy Lead Image Sang Woo Kim, You’re looking at me, 2023 Courtesy the artist...

© » TATE EXHIBITIONS

about 3 months ago (02/12/2024)

Beatriz Milhazes: Maresias | Tate St Ives Discover the vibrant works of one of the leading abstract artists working today Tate St Ives presents a retrospective of the work of artist Beatriz Milhazes , who is known for intensely colourful, large-scale abstract canvases...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 3 months ago (02/06/2024)

New book sees ‘outsider artists’ as part of a creative spectrum rather than a world apart Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Books review New book sees ‘outsider artists’ as part of a creative spectrum rather than a world apart The publication also explores how artists on the periphery might interact with the art market Claudia Barbieri Childs 6 February 2024 Share Portuguese-born, UK-based artist Manuel Bonifacio’s Motorbike and Man (2012) Courtesy the Outside In Collection The book Outside In: Exploring the margins of art presents works by a group of mostly contemporary “outsider” artists and argues a case for critiquing them on merit—and the outsider art category in general—within the mainstream of the art canon...

© » ARTSY

about 3 months ago (02/01/2024)

29 Emerging Black Artists to Discover This Black History Month, Part 1 | Artsy Skip to Main Content Art 29 Emerging Black Artists to Discover This Black History Month, Part 1 Isis Davis-Marks Feb 1, 2024 4:57PM To recognize Black History Month, Artsy is spotlighting 29 emerging Black artists—one for each day of this important month...

© » ARTSY

about 3 months ago (01/26/2024)

Whitney Biennial announces artist list for 2024 edition...

© » ART AND CAKE

about 3 months ago (01/25/2024)

Artists Collecting Artists – Art and Cake January 25, 2024 January 25, 2024 Author Artists Collecting Artists Check out our new photo essay “Artists Collecting Artists.” As artists we are probably the most lucky collectors of all...

© » ARTLYST

about 3 months ago (01/21/2024)

The intersection of art and artificial intelligence has recently taken a contentious turn, with thousands of British artists......

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 4 months ago (12/18/2023)

ARTnews speaks with Mato Perić, who has obtained a reputation for buying what he calls “popular conceptual art” by the likes of Alex Da Corte, Cosima von Bonin, Heji Shin, Alvaro Barrington, Christ…...

© » HYPERALLERGIC

about 5 months ago (12/13/2023)

Rules & Repetition: Conceptual Art at the Wadsworth Atheneum Skip to content “The Maze and Snares of Minimalism” (1993) by Carl Andre in front of Alfred Jensen’s “The World As It Really Is” (1977), on view in Rules & Repetition: Conceptual Art at the Wadsworth Atheneum The Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art presents works by groundbreaking conceptual artists of the 1960s and ‘70s alongside more recent acquisitions in Rules & Repetition: Conceptual Art at the Wadsworth Atheneum ...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 5 months ago (12/11/2023)

An acerbic but highly readable view of the British art world Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Books review An acerbic but highly readable view of the British art world The critic and former curator Julian Spalding holds forth on his dislike of conceptual art and his love for Beryl Cook Georgina Adam 11 December 2023 Share True to form, Spalding makes no secret of his vehement dislike of conceptual art...

Hernan Bas
© » ARTOBSERVED

about 5 months ago (12/09/2023)

Hernan Bas’s recent works, particularly his series “The Conceptualists,” showcase his continued exploration into the realms of queerness, desire, the occult, and the absurd...

© » ARTNEWS REVIEWS

about 5 months ago (12/08/2023)

Private Collections Around Miami Delight as Museum Shows Disappoint – ARTnews.com Skip to main content By Maximilíano Durón Plus Icon Maximilíano Durón Senior Editor, ARTnews View All December 8, 2023 8:00am "Utility," at the Bunker Artspace, featured works from Beth Rudin DeWoody's collection...

© » ARTSY

about 5 months ago (11/29/2023)

William Anastasi, a prominent Conceptual artist, has died at 90...

© » ART AND CAKE

about 8 months ago (08/24/2023)

Artists reflect on Success – Art and Cake August 24, 2023 August 24, 2023 Author Artists reflect on Success Connie Rohman A 2018 study found that 60% of artists make less than $30,000 a year...

© » ART AND CAKE

about 8 months ago (08/24/2023)

Artists reflect on Success – Art and Cake August 24, 2023 August 24, 2023 Author Artists reflect on Success Connie Rohman A 2018 study found that 60% of artists make less than $30,000 a year...

© » ART AND CAKE

about 8 months ago (08/24/2023)

Artists reflect on Success – Art and Cake August 24, 2023 August 24, 2023 Author Artists reflect on Success Connie Rohman A 2018 study found that 60% of artists make less than $30,000 a year...

© » ART AND CAKE

about 10 months ago (07/04/2023)

Artists reflect on Success – Art and Cake July 4, 2023 July 4, 2023 Author Artists reflect on Success Amanda Maciel Antunes POLAROID Mount Wilson I’VE GOT TO TELL YOU SOMETHING self portrait I define success by the ability to contribute to the visualization of the invisible, to communicate the incommunicable and define the elusive...

© » ART AND CAKE

about 10 months ago (07/04/2023)

Artists reflect on Success – Art and Cake July 4, 2023 July 4, 2023 Author Artists reflect on Success Amanda Maciel Antunes POLAROID Mount Wilson I’VE GOT TO TELL YOU SOMETHING self portrait I define success by the ability to contribute to the visualization of the invisible, to communicate the incommunicable and define the elusive...

© » ART AND CAKE

about 10 months ago (07/04/2023)

Artists reflect on Success – Art and Cake July 4, 2023 July 4, 2023 Author Artists reflect on Success Amanda Maciel Antunes POLAROID Mount Wilson I’VE GOT TO TELL YOU SOMETHING self portrait I define success by the ability to contribute to the visualization of the invisible, to communicate the incommunicable and define the elusive...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 14 months ago (03/01/2023)

With his wife Barbara, he made a major donation to the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in 2018....

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 16 months ago (01/18/2023)

artn’t: Thailand’s Rebel Artists | ArtsEquator Skip to content Nutcha Tantivitayapitak and Sudarat Musikawong travel to Chiang Mai, Thailand to shine a light on the artn’t Collective, who are currently facing numerous legal charges for works that are viewed as critiquing the state...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Herman Daled, Conceptual Art Collector Whose Holdings Were Acquired by MoMA, Has Died - via ARTnews...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

In 2016, Philippe Méaille signed a 25-year lease on a 15th-century Loire Valley château, where he is showcasing his collection of Conceptual art....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Among the artists he collected were John Baldessari, Marcel Broodthaers, stanley brouwn, Donald Judd, On Kawara, and Joseph Kosuth....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Collect Like an Expert: How to Find Great Emerging Artists | Art & Object Skip to main content Subscribe to our free e-letter! Webform Your Email Address Your Role Art Collector/Enthusiast Artist Art World Professional Academic Country USA Afghanistan Albania Algeria American Samoa Andorra Angola Anguilla Antarctica Antigua & Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba Ascension Island Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia & Herzegovina Botswana Bouvet Island Brazil British Indian Ocean Territory British Virgin Islands Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Canary Islands Cape Verde Caribbean Netherlands Cayman Islands Central African Republic Ceuta & Melilla Chad Chile China Christmas Island Clipperton Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia Comoros Congo - Brazzaville Congo - Kinshasa Cook Islands Costa Rica Croatia Cuba Curaçao Cyprus Czechia Côte d’Ivoire Denmark Diego Garcia Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Eswatini Ethiopia Falkland Islands Faroe Islands Fiji Finland France French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Gibraltar Greece Greenland Grenada Guadeloupe Guam Guatemala Guernsey Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti Heard & McDonald Islands Honduras Hong Kong SAR China Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Isle of Man Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jersey Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Kosovo Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macao SAR China Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania Mauritius Mayotte Mexico Micronesia Moldova Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Myanmar (Burma) Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands Netherlands Antilles New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue Norfolk Island Northern Mariana Islands North Korea North Macedonia Norway Oman Outlying Oceania Pakistan Palau Palestinian Territories Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Pitcairn Islands Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Romania Russia Rwanda Réunion Samoa San Marino Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Sint Maarten Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Georgia & South Sandwich Islands South Korea South Sudan Spain Sri Lanka St...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Shaun Kardinal has a budget and a home filled with original works...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

CryptoPunks are prime examples of the wave of popular “profile pic” (or “PFP”) NFTs at the forefront of the medium and its market...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

DUBAI: Following the success of its “Sense of Women” exhibition in Dubai last year, the MIA Art Collection is returning to the UAE with another female-empowering display...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 68 months ago (09/18/2018)

Biennale seen posing challenges for artists (via The Nation) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles September 18, 2018 The Bangkok Art Biennale beginning on October 19 will have as its theme “Beyond Bliss”...

© » KADIST

about 76 months ago (01/18/2018)

© » KADIST

about 79 months ago (10/25/2017)

© » KADIST

about 79 months ago (10/25/2017)

© » KADIST

about 105 months ago (09/18/2015)

© » KADIST

about 126 months ago (01/06/2014)

© » KADIST

about 133 months ago (05/16/2013)

© » KADIST

about 133 months ago (05/16/2013)

© » KADIST

about 136 months ago (03/06/2013)

© » KADIST

about 139 months ago (12/01/2012)

© » KADIST

about 157 months ago (06/01/2011)

© » KADIST

about 171 months ago (03/30/2010)

© » KADIST

about 171 months ago (03/30/2010)

© » KADIST

about 178 months ago (09/01/2009)

© » KADIST

about 197 months ago (03/03/2008)

© » KADIST

about 210 months ago (01/25/2007)