The third London exhibition of Australian artist Cressida Campbell coincided with the London bombing...
The first major exhibition of Mexican artist, Frida Kahlo, showing this summer at Tate Modern, has b...
Finland: Modern Architectures in History – book review
The awakening of modernism in the 1880s in Finland, as in other European nations, was first felt thr...
Modes en Miroir: la France et la Hollande au temps des Lumieres
After the recent decision of the Musée Galliera to collaborate with other Eu...
Robert Mallet-Stevens (1886-1945) has, in many ways, been forgotten outside of Paris, and to those w...
Walking around Oxford today, it is remarkable how little the centre of the city has changed in the l...
Big Bang: Creation and Destruction in 20th Century Art
The Pompidou Centre does not usually present its art works thematically. But, as its latest exhibiti...
The Elegance of Silence: Contemporary Art from East Asia
This exhibition of 26 contemporary artists from Japan, Korea, China and Taiwan is an attempt, in the...
My first encounter with Tan Dun was through his multimedia concerto grosso 'The Map' last October in...
Coming Home! Self-Taught Artists, the Bible, and the American South
'Coming Home!' showcases 95 paintings, sculptures, wood carvings and assemblages by...
The World is a Stage: Stories Behind Pictures
As Shakespeare wrote, the world is a stage on which everyone is a player. At Mori Art Museum's curre...
Basquiat, Brooklyn Museum, New York
On 11 March 2005, the Brooklyn Museum in New York opened its 'Basquiat' exhibition. Located in the M...
A Century of Ceramics: A Selection of 20th Century Potters and Potteries i...
This is an exceptional example, in the realm of crafts, of a small island community ...
Matisse, His Art and His Textiles. The Fabric of Dreams
The premise of 'Matisse, His Art and His Textiles' is that textiles were 'the key to (Matisse's) vis...
On 11 May 2005, a celebration to mark the installation of 'Tulips', a painted aluminium sculpture by...
The International Asian Art Fair
Between April 1 and 6, the International Asian Art Fair celebrated its tenth season at the Seventh R...
From Kirchner to Kandinsky: German Expressionism in Dutch Museums 1919-1964
In summer 2005, the new art gallery in the Groninger Museum is showing an excellent exhibition deali...
The Triumph of Painting. Colour Power: Aboriginal art post 1984The Saatchi...
'The Triumph of Painting' is, in certain respects, the triumph of Charles Saatchi. For 20 years, he ...
An Architecture of Invitation: Colin St John Wilson – book review
Sarah Menin and her co-author Dr Stephen Kite have produced a remarkable piece of work. The book tra...
Mr Jeremy Moon experiments. Jeremy Moon: drawings and collages
In 1972, the year before artist Jeremy Moon's untimely death in a motorcycle accident, Peter Fuller ...
James Dyson's resignation as Chairman of the Board of Directors at the Design Museum in London is a ...
Barbara Kruger, American artist and political activist, is exhibiting in Scotland f...
MACO: Mexico Arte Contemporaneo
'MACO: Mexico Arte Contemporaneo' is considered to be the most important art fair ...
Erich Mendelsohn: Dynamics and Function - Realised Visions of a Cosmopolit...
What better venue could there be for an exhibition of the work of Erich Mendelsohn than the De La Wa...
Andy Warhol is best known for his iconic portraits of Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley and Jackie Kenne...
'The Chief' stares from posters advertising 'Africa Remix'. He sits on a cheetah skin upholstered ar...
This quasi-retrospective exhibition of the work of Jannis Kounellis at Modern Art Oxford is a remark...
The exhibition of the photographic work of Bill Henson is notable. He is one of Australia's leading ...
Joseph Beuys: Actions, Vitrines, Environments
Joseph Beuys tested the international art world to breaking point throughout his car...
'Childe Hassam chronicled New York City and New England during the turn of the 20th century. One of ...