Beyond the Metaphysical
Hayward Gallery presents speculative futures where fantasy is at the forefront, and both creative and cultural liberation are brought into effect.
Hayward Gallery presents speculative futures where fantasy is at the forefront, and both creative and cultural liberation are brought into effect.
The notion of 鈥渟eeing oneself鈥 has become integral to Sharon Walters, a London-based artist whose work centres around celebrating Black women.
Driven by research, Jasmina Cibic creates multimedia artworks that probe how nations have wielded 鈥渟oft power鈥 through cultural diplomacy.
This issue captures the current zeitgeist, and is a reminder of how much the past forms part of the present. Dive into our preview of the new issue.
The expansive new exhibition at National Gallery of Victoria, titled Who Are You, considers “portraiture in Australia across time and media.”
Ingrid Pollard unpicks complex notions of British identity whilst examining the relationship between human bodies, geology and deep time.
Artist and activist Poulomi Basu’s current exhibition discusses the need to speak up to create a world where women have true freedom and equal choice.
Serena Dzenis’s pastel-toned images question the idea of making humans multiplanetary, transforming everyday structures into otherworldly scenes.
Andreas M眉he is one of Germany鈥檚 best-known artists, recognised for his explorations of sociological, historical and political themes.
“I love the way an image can escape its original tether and move through time to become something else.鈥 Roy Mehta’s photographs are on view in London.
Gal Shahar is an Israeli photographer who looks at image-making as a form of literature 鈥 considering the stories which play out in our daily routines.
Visual artist. Stylist. Editor. Photographer. Trevor Stuurman is all these things and more 鈥 recognised as “the king of creativity” and “a cultural force.”
Afrofuturism is a movement combining science fiction, history and fantasy. Amongst today鈥檚 artists working with its legacy is Darryl DeAngelo Terrell.
At a moment of unprecedented creativity in fashion and reflection on gender, London鈥檚 V&A museum brings the history of “menswear” into focus.
鈥淲hy do we feel that we belong in some places and not in others?鈥 asks Lise Johansson, an award-winning photographer based in Copenhagen.
Namsa Leuba uses photography to question the western gaze and imagination, considering the complex ways cultural identity is recognised.
A new show in Denmark offers European audiences a chance to re-engage with Diane Arbus’ body of work 鈥 enduring for its emotional complexity.
“Photography is magic, and at night it can be even more so,” says Rankin, the renowned documenter of British culture. Now, he’s teamed up with Three.
John Edmonds鈥 solo exhibition as the winner of the Foam Paul Huf Award brings together intimate studio photographs and meticulous still lifes.