101.6 x 76.2 cm
On January 7th, 2020, artist D’Angelo Lovell Williams was diagnosed with HIV. Only a handful of chosen family members knew up until the public announcement that coincided with the release of this body of work. According to the artist, “discovery” is key to this group of large photographs. Drawing from moments of love, intimacy and kinship. They use their body in the home and the landscape to reconcile with shared history. “In the images,” they write, “I aim to puncture the realm of self-awareness, creating a space where the spirits of black bodies can live freely in their encounters with one another.” At such a large scale, Elysian is much more than a photograph, it is a portal into another world. The artist describes the work, “the earth engulfs me as I pull the love of my life into the unknown.” This image is a metaphor for being seen, for hiding, for coming out, for intimacy and privacy. Indeed, these are significant motifs, still, for the gender queer community. This image shows the artist partially submerged in a wall of palm fronds, used in architecture in much of Latin America, but here they appear natural, a veil of sun-greyed jungle. The photographs in this series, most showing figures in various degrees of undress, are both tender and seductive. “Confident, tender hands cradle loved ones… gestures of both defiance and care.”
D’Angelo Lovell Williams is a photographer whose work depicts queer black intimacy, seeking to expand the narratives that surround this issue with their images. The artist stages themself alongside family members and lovers, in one image their head lays in their mother’s lap. Challenging the dominant modes of depiction in art history, which the artist diagnoses as straight, white and male, their images reclaim the narrative over the depiction of blackness and of queerness and are at once vulnerable and strong.
50 Questions With Juergen Teller | AnOther December 13, 2023 Text Ted Stansfield Lead Image Self-Portrait with pink shorts and balloons, Paris, 2017 © Juergen Teller, All rights Reserved It’s not an overstatement to say that Juergen Teller is one of the most influential photographers working today...
Over 400 Pyramids in Abu Dhabi Form Incredible Piece of Land Art Home / Art / Installation 448 Hand-Formed Pyramids Form Mesmerizing Mandala in Abu Dhabi By Jessica Stewart on December 10, 2023 American artist Jim Denevan has created one of his most ambitious installations to date as part of Abu Dhabi's public art initiative, Manar Abu Dhabi ...
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...
The work La Loge Harlem focuses on the history of Harlem and its development over the last 200 years...
Historically, blondeness has been a signifier for desirability and beauty, speaking to “purity” — the purity of whiteness — like no other bodily attribute except, perhaps, blue eyes...
MervEspina and the Green Papaya Art Projects (via The Myanmar Times) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles September 22, 2018 With the support of Japan Foundation and collaboration of Myanm/Art, MervEspina, artist and researcher from Philippines talked about Green Papaya Art Projects whose essence can be rendered as ‘never ripe, never rotten’...
For his project Book of Veles artist Jonas Bendiksen travelled to the small city of Veles in North Macedonia, inspired by a series of press reports starting in 2016, that revealed Veles as a major source of the fake news stories flooding Facebook and other social media sites celebrating Donald Trump and denigrating Hillary Clinton...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Book Review: "The State and The Arts in Singapore: Policies and Institutions" | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Images courtesy of Institute of Policy Studies, Singapore April 9, 2019 By Chin Ailin (734 words, four-minute read) Commissioned by the Institute of Policy Studies of Singapore (IPS) to trace the course of cultural policy in Singapore from the 1950s to the present, The State and the Arts in Singapore: Policies and Institutions is a comprehensive tome that should serve as an essential text in time to come for any student’s introduction to Singapore’s arts and cultural policies...
Palabrarma (obreros palabreando) by Cecilia Vicuña is a series of works in which the artist blends poetry, political commentary and graphic design...
In 2019, Ayoung Kim traveled to Mongolia to research its widespread animistic belief system towards land, mother rock, stones, and sacred caves that purify human guilt...