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Symbiosis: Art in the Age of AI
Lev Manovich. Drawing Rooms, 2023. Digital images created with Generative AI and edited in Lightroom Print. L85 cm (33.5 in). © the artist.
The exhibition presents a gamut of international artists who work with artificial intelligence in various ways, exploring a wide range of possibilities offered by this latest technological development
Duccio, Duccio Maestà - Panels, The Temptation of Christ on the Mountain, about 1308-11. Tempera on poplar, 43.2 x 46 cm. The Frick Collection, New York. Purchase 1927 (1927.1.35). © Copyright The Frick Collection / Photo: Michael Bodycomb.
The National Gallery’s meticulously researched exhibition of medieval Sienese masterpieces is an amassing of wonders that’s worth its weight in gold.
Somaya Critchlow, The Chamber II, 2024. Oil on linen, 115 x 90 cm. © Somaya Critchlow. Courtesy the artist and Maximillian William, London. Photo: Prudence Cuming Associates Ltd.
Critchlow’s six sombrely sexy paintings respond to European painting from the 17th and 18th centuries, asking us to look and look again.
A group of hand-built ceramic vessels with coloured slips by Elizabeth Fritsch. © The Artist. Image courtesy Adrian Sassoon, London. Photo: Sylvain Deleu.
With many objects drawn from Fritsch’s private collection, this first retrospective of the ceramicist in 15 years presents a rare opportunity to see her works.
Portia Zvavahera. Photo: Neil Hanna.
In her only in-person interview for her latest UK show, now at Fruitmarket, Edinburgh, the artist discusses the role of dreams and her spirituality in the narratives and atmospheres vividly evoked in her transcendental paintings.
Eddie Worth. An anti-fascist demonstrator is taken away under arrest after a mounted baton charge during the Battle of Cable Street, London, 4 October 1936. © Alamy.
Conceived and co-curated by Steve McQueen, this exhibition explores how a century of protest from 1903 to 2003 shaped Britain, and the vital part photography played.
Mary Cassatt between Paris & New York: The Making of a Transatlantic Legacy, published by University of California Press.
This beautifully illustrated book considers the importance of the American painter and printmaker Mary Cassatt, who moved to Paris, spending time in the company of impressionists and influencing tastes in her native US.
Sagarika Sundaram. Photo: Anita Goes.
At her studio in the World Trade Center, as she prepares for a solo show at Alison Jacques Gallery in London later this year, the artist talks about using space, surface and colour in her sculptures.
Vanessa Bell, Self-Portrait, c1958. Oil on canvas, 45 x 37 cm. Charleston Trust. © Estate of Vanessa Bell. All rights reserved, DACS 2024. Photo: Charleston Trust.
To accompany its exhibition Vanessa Bell: A World of Form and Colour, organised in partnership with Charleston, the MK Gallery held a one-day conference at which experts and enthusiasts discussed the pioneering painter and founder member of the Bloomsbury Group.
Shu Lea Cheang and Dondon Hounwn speaking to Studio International during rehearsals for Hagay Dreaming at Tate Modern, London. Photo: Martin Kennedy.
Speaking during rehearsals, Cheang and Hounwn reflect on the sources of inspiration for the project, on the developmental curve from its inception to its first full theatrical performance at Tate, what audiences might expect and what messages are being transmitted.
Alison Watt speaking to Studio International at the opening of her exhibition From Light at Pitzhanger Manor & Gallery, London, 2025. Photo: Martin Kennedy.
The Scottish artist’s astounding trompe l’oeil still lifes of artefacts inspired by the life and times of Sir John Soane integrate into the architecture of Pitzhanger Manor & Gallery, creating an engaging 18th-century Gesamtkunstwerk.
Akseli Gallen-Kallela, Lemminkäinen's Mother, 1897. © Finnish National Gallery/Ateneum, Antell Collection. Photo: Finnish National Gallery/Hannu Pakarinen.
With work from 1875 to 1925 alongside medieval works, this exhibition considers how modern Nordic and northern European artists such as Käthe Kollwitz and Edvard Munch were influenced by the gothic aesthetic.
Vanessa da Silva: Roda Viva, installation view, Mostyn, Llandudno, 2025. Photo: Rob Battersby.
Her subject matter may be serious – nationality, identity, migration and displacement – but the exuberance and joy in her sculptures and textile works shine through.
Mohammed Z. Rahman, Remember to Live, installation view, Peer, London, 2025. Commissioned and produced by Peer. Courtesy of the artist and Phillida Reid. Photo: Andy Keate.
Rahman’s comfort zone is in the miniature, but with a vision that is hopeful not hellish, evoking the small and intimate moments of everyday lives, the people and houses bathed in deep, saturated colours.
Alex Israel, Movie Theatres, 2024, acrylic on canvas, 137.2 x 354.3 cm at Gagosian, Los Angeles, 2025. Photo: Jill Spalding.
A much-needed tonic after the fires laid us low, Frieze art week did take place, the city’s art community showed up and visitors poured in from across the globe. Although one of the four participating fairs (Spring Break) chose not to open, the unexpectedly charming Post-Fair, staged in a post office, did.
Installation view, Tarot: Origins & Afterlives at The Warburg Institute, 31 January – 30 April 2025. Photo: Stephen White & Co. Courtesy The Warburg Institute.
Foreteller of fate, conduit for common sense or magic? Tarot has been used as a tool for decision-making since the 15th century. A new show explores its Renaissance origins, its evolutions and adaptations and its enduring appeal for artists and acolytes.
Anselm Kiefer. Wege der Weltweisheit - die Hermannsschlacht (Ways of Worldly Wisdom - The Battle of Hermann), 1977. Woodcuts on paper with acrylic and shellac mounted on synthetic fabric, 305 x 321 cm. Hall Collection. Courtesy of the Hall Art Foundation. © Anselm Kiefer. Photo: Roman März.
Challenging and shocking, the German artist fearlessly confronts his country’s Nazi past with grand political statements.
Louisa Gagliardi. Courtesy the artist and Galerie Eva. Photo: Gertraud Presenhuber.
At the opening of her show at MASI Lugano, Gagliardi says she draws from Renaissance art and surrealism, film and TV as much as social media, to create digitally manipulated images and printed portraits and landscapes that express the isolation and seduction of our online lives.
Henri Michaux, Untitled, 1966 (detail). Black and coloured inks, and graphite, on paper, 19.1 x 12.2 cm. Private collection. © ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2025.
A fascinating exhibition gathers the juddering, gyrating drawings of this Franco-Belgian poet, which capture the nauseating reality of psychedelic drugs.
McArthur Binion, Visual:Ear, 2023. Ink, paper and paintstick on board, 182.9 x 121.9 x 5.5 cm (72 1/8 x 48 x 2 1/4 in). Courtesy the artist and Xavier Hufkens.
Three series of paintings by the American artist are brought together for the first time in this exhibition in Belgium.
Mickalene Thomas, Afro Goddess Looking Forward, 2015. Rhinestones, acrylic, and oil on wood panel, 60 x 96 in (152.4 x 243.8 cm). © Mickalene Thomas.
Glittering, shimmering, dazzling: Thomas’s eye-catching works have more to them than meets the eye, speaking of Otherness and institutional racism, but also offering a complex and empowering vision of Black womanhood.
Citra Sasmita: Into Eternal Land, installation view, Barbican Curve, London 2025. Photo © Jo Underhill and Barbican.
The Indonesian artist’s Barbican project plunges visitors into a mesmerising Dante-esque world of flames, blood, snakes and dismembered bodies.
Ithell Colquhoun, Self-Portrait, 1929, The Ruth Borchard Collection, courtesy of Piano Nobile, London. © Spire Healthcare, © Noise Abatement Society, © Samaritans.
With many works exhibited for the first time, this comprehensive show also includes preparatory sketches and her tarot deck, reflecting her spiritual beliefs and radical, occult-influenced art.
Hélène de Beauvoir. Courtesy Amar Gallery, © APP, Ute Achhammer.
The lesser-known of two successful sisters is given her rightful place in 20th-century history thanks to an assiduous gallerist and loyal friend.
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