105 items, 51ms

» Refine your search

color likeness: (SteelBlue)



Classification

Object Sub Type

Artist Name

Genres

Object Type

Mentions Per Year

Artist Traits

Region

Organization

Decade Work Created

Collections

Nationality

In the State of Amnesia
© » KADIST

Meiro Koizumi

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Words by Meiro Koizumi: “The video installation work In the State of Amnesia is made with Mr. Nobuhiro Tanaka, who damaged his brain when he had an accident when he was 21. Since then he has been living with a memory disorder. I asked Mr. Tanaka to memorize a testimony of a Japanese soldier who served in the war in China during WWII.

OM Rider
© » KADIST

Takeshi Murata

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Takeshi Murata developed an interest in space inspired by his architect parents. OM Rider features the artist’s characteristic absurdist humor and aesthetics–a mélange of highly attuned lighting and composition (in homage to Ken Price), with retro modeling and minimalist, almost antiseptic spaces.

Tree on the Former Site of Camera Obscura
© » KADIST

Rodney Graham

Photography (Photography)

Tree on the Former Site of Camera Obscura (1996) belongs to a series of large-scale photographs of trees taken by Graham and depicts a particular species that lives in Northern California. The photograph is framed upside down; these “inverted trees” follow Graham’s early experiments with the camera lucida, a room-size pinhole camera that dates back to ancient times. Through these works Graham looks back at the history of photography while making the viewer aware of his or her own retinal experience.

The Pudic Relation between Machine and Plant
© » KADIST

Isadora Neves Marques

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The Pudic Relation between Machine and Plant shows a looped scene where a robotic hand touches a “sensitive plant” — Mimosa Pudica, a species characteristic for closing on itself when touched. The name of the plant was derived from Carl Linnaeus sexual taxonomy of plants: pudica referring both to the external sexual organs, shyness and modesty. In a poem written by Erasmus Darwin (Charles Darwin’s grandfather) titled The Loves of the Plants (1789), this plant is associated, jokingly, with British Botanist Joseph Banks’s famous sexual adventures during his botanical expedition to the tropics.

RMB City: A Second Life City Planning 04
© » KADIST

Cao Fei

Photography (Photography)

Since 2007, Cao Fei has radically focused her work on Second Life, an online space that virtually mimics “the real world” and includes everything from the expression of ideas to economic investment. Referring to China’s modernization and its capitalist and utopic visions, RMB City explores the ways in which global communication impacts imagination, values, and ways of life. By appropriating virtual reality, Cao Fei opens up a new frontier in the field of art production that surpasses conventional materiality and invites collaboration and exchanges with her public and clients.

Bite Work
© » KADIST

Eamon Ore-Giron

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Eamon Ore-Giron’s new commissioned video project Bite Work, is an experimental genre breaking video that is part-performance, part-conceptual and part-comical addressing issues of mediation, surveillance and trust. The main characters in the video wear traditional dance masks of “La Chonguinada” rituals from Peru and attempt to dance while being bitten by trained attacked dogs. Through this act, the dogs simultaneously become sculptural obstacles and dancers.

May 19, 2021
© » KADIST

Matt Kane

Advanced Technology (Advanced Technology)

Matt Kane initiated the project Right Place & Right Time – Bitcoin Volatility Art in 2019. Estimated to run for the next 10 years, the series of NFT artworks speaks to the volatility of the bitcoin market and the political, social, and financial events that led to it. Every day, a new composition is generated autonomously using a data feed of Bitcoin’s last 24 hours of price action.

Poco se gana hilando, pero menos mirando
© » KADIST

Claudia Gutiérrez

Textile (Textile)

The title for this body of work, Poco se gana hilando, pero menos mirando , is based on a Spanish saying that underestimates feminized crafts or tasks, implying that it is better for a woman to be doing ‘something’, no matter how useless it is, instead of just doing nothing. This series of works by Claudia Gutiérrez Marfull features embroideries that represent the peripheral and marginalized landscapes of Puente Alto commune in Santiago, the city’s biggest district and its most southern outskirts. In 2015, when this work was produced, there was not a single health service provider, police station, pharmacy, daycare or school in the whole area of Puente Alto.

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.

Study for my Heroes in the Street (Stan)
© » KADIST

Ian Wallace

Wallace says of his Heroes in the Street series, “The street is the site, metaphorically as well as in actuality, of all the forces of society and economics imploded upon the individual, who, moving within the dense forest of symbols of the modern city, can achieve the status of the heroic.” The hero in Study for my Heroes in the Street (Stan) is the photoconceptual artist Stan Douglas, who is depicted here (and also included in the Kadist Collection) as an archetypal figure restlessly drifting the streets of the modern world. Patches of canvas cover parts of this otherwise representational photograph and ask the viewer to consider the role that editing and play in our perception of the urban landscape and modernity.

Jet Folder & Data Tree
© » KADIST

Lin Ke

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Jet Folder & Data Tree (2013) offers a humorous take on how computer and screen-based technologies affect our relationship to the natural world. In a statement through his gallery, Gallery Yang, Lin remarks that “one day in 2010, I discovered that the folders in my computer began talking to me. So I created lots of empty folders with no content but name.” Lin’s print, by extension, functions as a collage in which screen-based media becomes part of the natural world, and vice versa.

escenario chacana
© » KADIST

Claudia Martínez Garay

Sculpture (Sculpture)

escenario chacana by Claudia Martínez Garay is a sculptural work composed of a frame-like structure that contains a series of ceramic pieces. It references the Chakana, an Andean cross that encompasses the different levels of existence (known as Pachas) and sacred elements contained in the Indigenous cosmologies of the region. It often appears in the geometrical motifs of textiles and ceramics.

Silencer #16 & #17
© » KADIST

Will Rogan

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

MUM , the acronym used to title a series of Rogan’s small interventions on found magazines, stands for “Magic Unity Might,” the name of a vintage trade magic publication. In the series, Rogan alters the magazine’s pages by erasing the image of the magicians doing their tricks, leaving only the background of their performances on view. These contexts range from the more overtly staged scenario in Silencer #16 —the erased magician is about to perform a trick on his assistant trapped on an odd, almost dada looking box—to the more “colloquial” Silencer #17 in which the absent magician’s silhouette appears in what seems to be a children’s hospital.

The Moon Also Rises
© » KADIST

Yuyan Wang

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The Moon Also Rises by Yuyan Wang comprises a one-channel video and light installation. The work is based on a 2018 initiative in China to launch three artificial moons into orbit above major cities to provide continuous daylight. Set in an oppressively illuminated environment, the images depict lethargic crowds in megacities, surrounded by glowing neon lights, and workers in LED factories performing repetitive tasks on an assembly line in a kind of trance state.

The Planets, Chapter 32
© » KADIST

Jackie Karuti

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The Planets, Chapter 32 (2017) is a short video that depicts the world at a time of great anxiety. However, it is done with a sharp sense of humor. It starts with a voice explaining that Africa will be partially inundated in the coming year, ending with the impossible relationship between the artist and a chatbot (primitive form of artificial intelligence).

Sometimes It Was Beautiful
© » KADIST

Christian Nyampeta

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The film Sometimes It Was Beautiful by Christian Nyampeta poetically addresses the systemic conditions leading and emerging from the 1994 Rwandan genocide, which had lasting and profound effects on Rwanda and neighbouring countries like Congo. The divergent opinions of the characters, as well as suggestive gestures, settings, and marks inscribed in the landscape highlight the different approaches in addressing the slow violence linked to the enduring impact of colonialism and imperialism, the pursuit of knowledge, and the conservation of heritage, culture, and object repatriation. Structured into six chapters, the film imagines a meeting between improbable friends and interlaces dialogues, with choreography of dancers, places and objects.

Reborn
© » KADIST

Desiree Holman

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Reborn, 2010 is a three-channel video by Desiree Holman that questions ideas of motherhood and the maternal instinct. The video features a group of women as they tenderly cradle lifelike baby dolls atop their rocking chairs. Although at first, the video might appear as a celebration of the maternal bond, the scene soon becomes eerie and unsettling as we see milk spilling out of the mothers’ mouths.

Apartment on Cardboard
© » KADIST

Chris Johanson

Painting (Painting)

Apartment on Cardboard (2000) is an exterior view of an abstracted apartment building. Viewers unwittingly become voyeurs, peering through the rectangles that stand for windows and observing the residents therein, who ponder questions both mundane and existential: “Where is Ron now?” and “What have I become?” The queries and characters are treated democratically—not judged, praised, or subjected to hierarchy. While their thoughts are specific, the painting captures a universal urban activity: looking across to the building next door and wondering about its residents, all the while knowing that they have probably looked over and wondered about us, as well.

Why do you call me when you know i can’t answer the phone
© » KADIST

Dineo Seshee Bopape

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Interested in the collection of object and their potential to evoke various emotional reactions in the audience, Bopape’s “Why do you call me when you know I can’t answer the phone” is an invitation into the limitless netherworld of the unsaid and unspoken. Exploring the metaphysical landscape of secrets, lies and psychosexual ambivalence, this work is an attempt to create a site for contemplation. The video ventures to provoke a rhythmic trance through transporting the mind into a distant illusionary world constructed by vignettes of fractured spaces.

Unhealed
© » KADIST

Tenzing Rigdol

Photography (Photography)

Unhealed by Tenzing Rigdol is a photograph of the artist’s back tattooed with a map of Tibet with the dates of important political events. Each date and region is marked with a needle, a reference to the traditional Chinese medicine method for treating ailments, used to mark the regions and dates of major uprisings and mass protests as a means of encouraging dialogue and to start the recovery process. Millions of Tibetans have died in those protests.

Sea, Kep Province, Wrapped Future II Series
© » KADIST

Lim Sokchanlina

Photography (Photography)

The photographic series Wrapped Future II by Lim Sokchanlina brings fences used on construction sites to enclose the surrounding areas, to different locations, lakes, valleys and forests; and places them at the center of works to obscure the beautiful Cambodian landscape. The inharmonious landscape is gradually captivated by the exquisite balance between inorganic material and mystical background. The photos were taken in places that in recent years have become targets of large-scale exploitation under a massive globalization of capital and other political interests.

AIDS Ring
© » KADIST

General Idea

Sculpture (Sculpture)

AIDS Ring by General Idea is a cast metal ring, which takes as its basis Robert Indiana’s iconic “LOVE” design, appropriating its pop aesthetic, and totalizing, simplistic universal messaging to instead emphasize the severity of the AIDS epidemic that occurred in the 1970s. This visual detournement of Indiana’s sculpture into the form of a ring is an indictment of pop art’s apolitical nature, as well as of its increasingly commodified status. General Idea instead proposes that art’s expansive platform for messaging be used to spread awareness and create accountability for political negligence of the AIDS epidemic.

11
© » KADIST

Chris Wiley

Photography (Photography)

Architectural details become abstracted renderings in Chris Wiley’s inkjet prints 11 and 20 (both 2012). In photographing seemingly mundane images of doorways and walls, Wiley collapses the viewer’s experience of inhabiting space by foregrounding features that we all too often miss in our built environment: the peeling white paint on a Corinthian column or the rusty studs on a blue door.

Vallegrande 1967
© » KADIST

Claudia Joskowicz

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The primary interest in the trilogy is Joskowicz’s use of cinematic space, with long tracking shots that portray resistance to habitual viewing experiences of film and television. Video plays a role in the relation between the use of her locations and the stories of actual figures depicted as central in the frame. The meaning behind these historical icons such as Che and Cassidy, speak to their stories as itinerant figures whom traveled in a preglobalized era through borders and cultures in order to escape the law or overthrow it.

In the Soldier’s Head
© » KADIST

Christine Rebet

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In the Soldier’s Head evokes the traumas of war through the prism of the hallucinations of a soldier. Inspired by the artist’s father,a soldier in Algeria who then suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder,the video depicts the delusions flowing from a mind ravaged by violence: a vision grown from the inside out. Like a mirage amidst a blank, desert expanse, specters are conjured as the inanimate comes to life.

The Book Cover series
© » KADIST

Heman Chong

Painting (Painting)

With a habit of reading eight to ten books at the same time, Chong paints his two-foot tall novel covers through referencing an extensive reading list (accessible on Facebook) he has kept since 2006. Entitled “Bibliography (1): The Lonely Ones,” the list outlines representations of solitude that has been imposed on individuals or communities. Chong divides these archetypes into three over-arching notions: the Hide-away, the Castaway and the Prisoner.

Untitled (Painting of a Man Leaving in Boat)
© » KADIST

Chris Johanson

Painting (Painting)

Chris Johanson’s Untitled (Painting of a Man Leaving in Boat) (2010) pictures a canoe drifting toward an off-kilter horizon line, which demarcates the cobalt sea from the cerulean sky. An orange-haired figure, oar positioned in mid-stroke, looks ahead—whether toward an edge or an infinite expanse, it is impossible to tell. Echoing a trope that recurs in Greek epic poetry, transcendental painting, and current-day reality television, the character is alone with nature.

Mungo Thomson

Chris Johanson

Desiree Holman

Meiro Koizumi

Meiro Koizumi is a Japanese video and performing artist, born in 1976...

Will Rogan

Isadora Neves Marques

The work of writer, visual artist and filmmaker Isadora Neves Marques focuses on the politics of nature, in specific relation to ecology; economics; cultural production; and social and ontological segregation...

Christian Nyampeta

Christian Nyampeta’s works investigate how individuals and communities negotiate forms of socially-organized violence...

Ian Wallace

Dineo Seshee Bopape

Dineo Seshee Bopape is known for her playful and experimental video works and installations of found objects...

Matt Kane

Trained as a visual artist, Matt Kane left the art world for a decade to work as a web developer in the United States’s Pacific Northwest...

John Baldessari

Rodney Graham

Christine Rebet

Taking formal cues from the optical illusions and landscapes drawn in pre-cinematic entertainment, French artist Christine Rebet seeks to unveil the way these kinds of devices are mirrored in contemporary politics and media...

Tenzing Rigdol

Tenzing Rigdol is a contemporary Tibetan artist whose work ranges from painting, sculpture, drawing and collage, to digital, video installation, performance art and site-specific pieces...

Claudia Joskowicz

Claudia Joskowicz is a video and installation artist working at the intersection of landscape, history, and memory...

Heman Chong

Chris Wiley

Eamon Ore-Giron

Eamon Ore-Giron’s paintings, works on paper and installations blend contemporary graphic design, folk and tourist art, and surrealism in a hybridity of Mexican, South American, Native-American, and other American cultures...

Lim Sokchanlina

Lim Sokchanlina, nicknamed ‘Lina’, works across documentary and conceptual practices with photography, video, installation, and performance; particularly drawn to the use and function of space where urban communities meet rural attitudes...

Jackie Karuti

Jackie Karuti is an artist based in Nairobi, Kenya...

Yuyan Wang

Yuyan Wang is a filmmaker and multidisciplinary artist whose work examines images at the point of production and the atmosphere cultivated by media regimes within the attention economy...

Takeshi Murata

Underlining the temporality of nostalgia, memory, and narratives crafted through cinematic pop culture, the American artist Takeshi Murata has constructed a body of animated works that explore the lifespan of moving images and their role in the shaping of shared cultural histories...

Lin Ke

Lin Ke’s video and media-based installations explore how perceptual experiences of our surrounding environments are mediated and altered by various technologies...

Cao Fei

Mateo Lopez

© » MODERN MET PHOTOGRAPHY

this quarter (02/08/2024)

Polar Bear Napping on an Iceberg Wins People's Choice Award Home / Photography / Photo Contest Charming Photo of Polar Bear Napping on an Iceberg Wins Wildlife Photographer of the Year People’s Choice Award By Jessica Stewart on February 8, 2024 “Ice Bed” by Nima Sarikhani, UK...

© » SLASH PARIS

about 3 months ago (01/16/2024)

Des lignes de désir — Exposition félicités 2023 — Beaux-Arts de Paris Palais des Beaux-Arts — Exhibition — Slash Paris Login Newsletter Twitter Facebook Des lignes de désir — Exposition félicités 2023 — Beaux-Arts de Paris Palais des Beaux-Arts — Exhibition — Slash Paris English Français Home Events Artists Venues Magazine Videos Back Previous Next Des lignes de désir — Exposition félicités 2023 Exhibition Mixed media Affiche de l’exposition des félicités 2023 des Beaux-Arts de Paris © Beaux-Arts de Paris Des lignes de désir Exposition félicités 2023 Ends in about 1 month: January 24 → March 17, 2024 Des lignes de désir presents the twenty-eight artists who graduated from the Beaux-Arts de Paris with a Diplôme National Supérieur d’Arts Plastiques and a Congratulations from the Jury in 2023...

© » ARTSY

about 4 months ago (12/18/2023)

10 Galleries That Had a Breakout Year in 2023 | Artsy Skip to Main Content Advertisement Art Market 10 Galleries That Had a Breakout Year in 2023 Maxwell Rabb Dec 18, 2023 1:00PM Igi Lola Ayedun, installation view of “Eclosão de um Sonho, Uma Fantasia” at HOA, 2023...

© » ART & OBJECT

about 4 months ago (12/12/2023)

The 15 Best Art Schools in the U...

© » ARTSJOURNAL

about 4 months ago (12/11/2023)

“Silent Night” is the all-time most covered song - The Washington Post Do you like ‘Silent Night’? There are more than 3,700 covers for you By Luis Melgar December 8, 2023 at 1:23 p.m...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 4 months ago (12/08/2023)

Nevada lithium mine threatens cultural sites Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Heritage news Nevada lithium mine threatens cultural sites The US federal government’s manoeuvres to boost domestic lithium extraction are raising fears from tribal communities about archaeological and environmental impacts Gabriella Angeleti 8 December 2023 Share Members of the Fort McDermitt Paiute-Shoshone tribe gather to oppose the Thacker Pass lithium mine Photo: Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images The construction of an open-pit lithium mine in northern Nevada, which is scheduled to begin full-fledged operation in 2026, will have irreversible effects on the environment and cultural heritage sites in the region, according to archaeologists, environmentalists and Native American communities who oppose the project...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 4 months ago (12/08/2023)

Art Basel serves up a croc of gold with its reptile-themed art Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Art Basel in Miami Beach 2023 news Art Basel serves up a croc of gold with its reptile-themed art Mind your step: in true Floridian style, a number of works at this year’s fair take crocodiles or alligators as their subjects Alexander Morrison 8 December 2023 Share Florian Krewer, winding (2023) © Liliana Mora Florian Krewer, winding (2023), Michael Werner Gallery The New York-based artist Florian Krewer uses animal motifs to “convey emotions he could not physically put into people”, says Michael Werner Gallery’s Birte Kleemann...

© » ARTFORUM

about 5 months ago (12/07/2023)

The Whitney’s Jane Panetta Decamps for the Met – Artforum Read Next: DETAILS FOR FIRST-EVER MALTA BIENNALE ANNOUNCED Subscribe Search Icon Search Icon Search for: Search Icon Search for: Follow Us facebook twitter instagram youtube Alerts & Newsletters Email address to subscribe to newsletter...

© » ARTNEWS MARKET

about 5 months ago (12/06/2023)

Art Basel Arrives in Miami with a New Structure and Hints about Future – ARTnews.com Skip to main content By Daniel Cassady Plus Icon Daniel Cassady Senior Writer, ARTnews View All December 6, 2023 9:29am MIAMI, FLORIDA - NOVEMBER 30: An exterior view of Miami Beach Convention Center during Art Basel Miami Beach on November 30, 2021 in Miami, Florida...

© » MODERN MET PHOTOGRAPHY

about 5 months ago (12/01/2023)

Photographer Nick Brandt Discusses His Latest Underwater Series Home / Photography / Underwater Photography Haunting Underwater Photos Show How Climate Change Impacts the South Pacific [Interview] By Jessica Stewart on December 1, 2023 Serafina and Keanan on a Bed For the third chapter of Nick Brandt ‘s long-term project addressing climate change, the photographer traveled to the South Pacific to address the urgent issues surrounding rising sea levels...

© » SLASH PARIS

about 5 months ago (11/29/2023)

Paul Lepetit — Not so Blue — Les Bains-Douches d'Alençon — Exposition — Slash Paris Connexion Newsletter Twitter Facebook Paul Lepetit — Not so Blue — Les Bains-Douches d'Alençon — Exposition — Slash Paris Français English Accueil Événements Artistes Lieux Magazine Vidéos Retour Paul Lepetit — Not so Blue Exposition Techniques mixtes Paul Lepetit Courtesy de l’artiste Paul Lepetit Not so Blue Encore 12 jours : 24 novembre → 23 décembre 2023 L’exposition Not so Blue de Paul Lepetit aux Bains-Douches d’Alençon est présentée dans le cadre de « maintenant et demain 2023 » programme de résidence et exposition mis en place par le Conseil Départemental de l’Orne et Les Bains-Douches...

© » I-D VICE ART

about 5 months ago (11/24/2023)

Set in a lighthouse on the rugged Icelandic coast, the award-winning New York artist harnessed the wind for Sequences Festival....

© » SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

about 5 months ago (11/23/2023)

A conference in Shenzhen about Arnold Schoenberg saw the Chinese premiere of Tod Machover’s opera about the 20th century Austrian Jewish composer who pioneered atonal music and his exile in America....

© » HUFFINGTON POST

about 6 months ago (11/07/2023)

Once you learn something damning about a person attached to a movie, TV show or song you love, where does that love go?...

© » GALERIA FOKSAL

about 6 months ago (10/20/2023)

Karol Radziszewski, Nose up the Ass - Galeria Foksal Polski English GALERIA FOKSAL #Las Rzeczy Exhibitions Artists About gallery Contact Karol Radziszewski Karol Radziszewski, Nose up the Ass October 20, 2023 Opening: Friday, October 20th, at 6:00 till 10:00 pm The exhibition runs: October 20th — December 2nd curated by: Maria Rubersz Working with objects from the past, the archivist opens them up to the future...

© » BOMB

about 7 months ago (09/28/2023)

BOMB Magazine | Jenny Xie Interviewed Necessary (Required) Cookies that the site cannot function properly without...

© » TATE EXHIBITIONS

about 7 months ago (09/28/2023)

Turner Prize 2023 | Towner Eastbourne Towner Eastbourne will host one of the best-known prizes for contemporary visual art The 2023 Turner Prize will be hosted by Towner Eastbourne as the centrepiece of the gallery’s centenary programme...

© » SOCIETY

about 8 months ago (08/16/2023)

Cet article est à lire dans Society #212, disponible en kiosque du 17 au 30 aoÛt....

© » AMERICANSFORTHEARTS

about 14 months ago (02/16/2023)

Update on Americans for the Arts Events in 2023 | Americans for the Arts Jump to Main Content Americans for the Arts Arts Action Fund National Arts Marketing Project pARTnership Movement Animating Democracy Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Instagram YouTube Load Picture Home News Room Update on Americans for the Arts Events in 2023 Hello Guest | Login Update on Americans for the Arts Events in 2023 Thursday, February 16, 2023 It is an exciting time at Americans for the Arts, full of change and new energy...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Art Collector Sara Hildén's New Art Museum with Elegant Finnish Design - via designboom...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

The entire NFT ecosystem has thrummed recently with the same message: this is the moment to separate the speculators from the true believers....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Opening in March 2020, Shunde’s He Art Museum hopes that it has what it takes to attract an audience....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

A Soon-to-Open Private Museum in China’s Shunde District Could Offer a New Model for Arts Spaces in the Country - via ARTnews...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Su-Yen Wong and Fermin Diez’s collection of paintings by pioneering Singapore artists is their way of safeguarding a piece of the little red dot’s history....

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 44 months ago (09/11/2020)

Which Type of Online Arts Audience Are You? | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints HAFI September 11, 2020 We all miss being able to attend shows physically in theatres, but we’re also quick to adapt...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 50 months ago (03/01/2020)

Hades Fading: Modern-day Ancients | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Courtesy of artist March 1, 2020 The following review is made possible through a Critical Residency programme supported by By Nabilah Said (708 words, 5-minute read) In Hades Fading , Eurydice has a memory problem...

© » HIGH FRUCTOSE

about 53 months ago (12/21/2019)

Christian Vincent’s paintings carry whimsy and melancholy, the artist playing with light and perspective in scenes from the everyday...

© » HIGH FRUCTOSE

about 53 months ago (12/17/2019)

Zhiyong Jing says he paints "dreams, bodies and absurd realities." The Beijing-based artist takes a surprising approach to scale in his work, often rendering distant figures on small canvases...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 62 months ago (03/18/2019)

Weekly Picks: Indonesia (18 - 24 March 2019) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Weekly To Do March 18, 2019 Top Picks of Indonesia art events in Bandung and Jakarta from 18-24 March 2019 In Bandung, catch the last couple days of the Bandung Contemporary Art Award (BaCAA) exhibition: Assemblage ...