Damaged Romanticism: A Mirror of Modern Emotion
The highly idyllic nature of the Romantic tradition in philosophy, art, music, literature and theatr...
Interview: Independent curator and author Kohle Yohannan on 'the legend of...
From artfully obscured beginnings in Russia, to her full-blown commercial success by the end of the ...
Book review: Modernist Malta: The Architectural Legacy
As the tide of Postmodernism in architecture recedes now and is lapped by...
Rewinding personalities: Van Dyck at Tate Britain
The short journey from the British Museum down to Tate Britain is currently a rewarding trip. The Br...
Book review: Young Chinese Artists: The Next Generation
The survey and coverage of the post-1975 generation of Chinese artists has long been a specific glob...
V&A at Dundee: Making it Happen
The mood was upbeat for the conference to explore the feasibility of building a V&A in the Scottish ...
Carlo Cardazzo – a new vision for art
A must-see exhibition at The Peggy Guggenheim Museum in Venice. Carlo Cardazzo, is now being honoure...
Book review: Projects in China: Architects Von Gerkan Marg and Partners
The Hamburg originated architectural practice von Gerkan Marg and Partners are long established in G...
Review: Andrea Palladio: His Life and Legacy
It is significant that this exhibition at the Royal Academy in London originated in Vicenza (Palazzo...
Book review: The Truth about Babylon: Babylon Myth and Reality
The exhibition Babylon: Myth and Reality rightly seeks to demonstrate and display the truth about th...
Book review: New Orleans 1867. Photographs by Theodore Lilienthal
The publication covers the New Orleans photographs by Theodore Lilienthal mostly made in 1867. The w...
Richard Serra’s 2008 Exhibition at Gagosian gallery, which closed just before Christmas, showed th...
Book review: California Video: Artists and Histories
This sumptuous volume from the Getty Research Institute forms a landmark event in the history and do...
Mark Rothko: The Retrospective
Although 2008 does not mark a centennial birth date or major anniversary in the career of one of the...
Gerhard Richter: Paintings from private collections – book review
Reviewing the catalogue is to appreciate a valuable tool to understanding the more salient tendencie...
Francis Bacon at Tate Britain heralds the artist’s centenary in 2009. It is the first retrospectiv...
The House Of Books Has No Windows
Canadian artists Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller like telling stories. The narrative impetus p...
A Creative Transatlantic Tango Shapes the Modern World: Paris/New York, 19...
The Museum of the City of New York is highlighting one of the most fascinating instances of artistic...
A maturing craft becomes art: Japan Society's Joe Earle discusses the new ...
The first bamboo basket maker known to have signed his work, Hayakawa Shôkosai, was born in 1815. F...
Harper Road is an unremarkable south London street, flanked by the blocks of large post-war housing ...
In an exhibition at the Haunch of Venison, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer explores the way the viewer is able ...
The paintings of Gerhard Richter were first exhibited in Britain as part of the official 1970 Edinbu...
Xiangshan Campus, China Academy of Art, Hangzhou, China
Established in 1928, the China Academy of Art is the first comprehensive art academy in China commit...
Aboriginal Women as Ambassadors of Art and Culture
The story of the Australian Aboriginal batik projects in five distinct desert communities in the 197...
Robin Rhode. Who Saw Who and Through the Gate
Robin Rhode is charting new ground as a talented, mixed-race South African artist, who pushes the bo...
It seems incredible that the battle to win people's hearts and minds during the cold war that divide...
Mark Rothko: the 'end of philosophy, the beginning of art'
The current exhibition at the Tate Modern enables Studio International to focus on the critical and ...
Book review: The Diary of Charles Holme's 1889 Visit to Japan and North Am...
In December 1888, a small group of British travellers set out for Japan via the Middle East. The par...