Yoko Ono will stage her first solo museum exhibition in Southern California at the Broad museum this spring.
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Kiki Smith's Latest Exhibition: A Journey Through Time and Embodiment
Read More2025 has been a particularly strong year for the South African artist. His centrality to contemporary art is now taken for granted but a dual museum show as part of a celebration of his 70th birthday is a reminder of how innovative his work is.
Read MoreScribble, smudge, repeat: the passage of time and the emergence and dissipation of information conveys the difficult work of experiencing coherence and retaining memory.
Read MoreHe has painted everything from a candle to 9/11, walked his naked wife through photographic mist, and turned Titian into a sacred jumble. This thrilling show, boasting 270 works, reveals the German in all his contradictory brilliance
Read MoreThe team behind the Istanbul gallery reflect on the importance of cross‑cultural dialogue as they open their first international space.
Read MoreA retrospective in Paris makes for a surprisingly personal journey through history with this purportedly impersonal artist
Read MoreIt was 20 years ago today that Yoko Ono visited Coventry Cathedral to plant a new pair of oak tree saplings as a symbol of peace.
Read MoreAfter its blockbuster David Hockney show, the Fondation Louis Vuitton turns to another great living artist: Gerhard Richter (17 October–2 March 2026). This exhibition is ordered chronologically, taking us from Table (1962) – which Richter considers his first painting – to drawings made as recently as last year.
Read MoreTimothy Taylor is pleased to present an exhibition by Kiki Smith in London, the artist’s fifth solo presentation with the gallery. Spanning from 1997 to the present, the exhibition brings together sculptures and drawings that reflect Smith’s ongoing engagement with the natural world and its connection to mythology, spirituality, and the human condition.
Read MoreTeenage Rosemarie Trockel sits in a room plastered with pictures of celebrities—as teenagers are wont to do. It is 1960s West Germany, and she’s in her older sister’s bedroom. Behind her, cutouts of Brigitte Bardot appear half a dozen times in a sea of attractive faces. This all makes up a black-and-white snapshot; the collage on the wall flattens the space such that Trockel’s own head comes close to blending into the crowd, though she is evidently more uncomfortable in front of the camera than the various starlets.
Read MoreA deftly woven net of red string envelopes viewers at Chiharu Shiota’s first New York museum show, at the Japan Society. The site-specific installation, which is studded with sheets of loose papers replicating excerpts from the diaries of Japanese soldiers from World War II, is one of two pieces the institution commissioned for “Chiharu Shiota: Two Home Countries.”
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