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Art Project to Launch During UN General Assembly
Art Project to Launch During UN General Assembly

Olafur Eliasson, Simone Fattal, and Yinka Shonibare are among the 21 artists invited to share their vision of a sustainable future in New York.

Ocula · 22 Aug, 2024 @ 06:58

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Use your local museums or lose them
Use your local museums or lose them

Letters: Colin Montgomery offers firsthand insight into the demise of some of the institutions he used to work at in Edinburgh, and David Kennedy points out that regional museums are being forced to shut while London continues to rake in funding

Adéla Janskà at Rolando Anselmi
Adéla Janskà at Rolando Anselmi

Venue: Rolando Anselmi, Rome, Germany

In ‘Hold the Line’ at ArtsXchange, Black men speak on their own terms
In ‘Hold the Line’ at ArtsXchange, Black men speak on their own terms

The debates surrounding Black men have often been waged on the battleground of race, culture and politics.

curate.la
curate.la

Lita Albuquerques artistic evolution envelops the cosmos and the space between it and us.

With help from Lubaina Himid, Glenn Ligon and more, Frieze's Artist-to-Artist initiative is supporting new talent
With help from Lubaina Himid, Glenn Ligon and more, Frieze's Artist-to-Artist initiative is supporting new talent

Frieze has brought Artist-to-Artist back this year, inviting another six leading artists—Hurvin Anderson, Lubaina Himid, Rashid Johnson, Glenn Ligon, Zineb Sedira and Yinka Shonibare—to put forward their selections.

PINO PASCALI OR THE METAMORPHOSES OF SCULPTURE
PINO PASCALI OR THE METAMORPHOSES OF SCULPTURE

Since 2004, the year of the last major Pino Pascali (1935–1968) exhibition at Castel Sant’Elmo in Naples (curated by Angela Tecce), it has been nearly impossible to see a significant collection of works by the Italian artist, a major figure in 20th-century art.

A new History Colorado exhibit centers the past, present and future of Denver’s lost Chinatown
A new History Colorado exhibit centers the past, present and future of Denver’s lost Chinatown

In a new exhibit building on the work of local Asian American activists, History Colorado is taking a closer look at Denver’s lost Chinatown in Lower Downtown.