Barbara Hepworth Color Sculpture Reframed

Barbara Hepworth color sculpture is having one of those rare cultural moments where an artist people thought they already understood suddenly feels new again. For decades, Hepworth has been filed in the public imagination as a sculptor of clean forms, pierced ovals, smooth curves, and modernist calm. That image is not wrong, but it is […]
M.C. Escher Exhibition Turns London Upside Down

London has never been short on spectacle, but the arrival of the M.C. Escher exhibition at Somerset House feels like a different kind of visual event. It is not just another summer art show built around famous prints, familiar posters, and museum-shop nostalgia. It is a full collision between old-school graphic precision and the way […]
June Art Exhibitions Heat Up Global Design

June art exhibitions are turning the global creative calendar into something bigger than a neat list of museum openings. This month feels like a pressure point, the kind of moment when galleries, museums, architecture spaces, design festivals, and experimental art platforms all start talking at once. From Los Angeles to London, from European museum districts […]
Elizabeth Blackadder Exhibition Returns Quietly

The reopening conversation around the Elizabeth Blackadder exhibition feels unusually quiet in the best possible way, especially in a visual culture that often rewards spectacle over stillness. Blackadder’s work does not shout for attention, yet it keeps pulling viewers closer through flowers, cats, windows, interiors, travel fragments, and carefully held silence. For a new generation […]
Rothko in Florence Redraws Renaissance Light

Rothko in Florence feels less like a traditional museum event and more like a visual collision between two eras that were never supposed to stand this close. On one side, there is Florence, the city that turned sacred walls, measured architecture, and Renaissance light into a language of human emotion. On the other, there is […]
Betye Saar Wearable Art Finds New Visual Power

Betye Saar wearable art is getting a fresh spotlight at the exact moment contemporary visual culture is rethinking what an artwork can be, how it can move, and who gets to wear meaning on the body. The new attention around Saar’s costume sketches, theatrical garments, jewelry, and archival design work feels less like a side […]
AI Art Criticism Reshapes Digital Creativity

AI art criticism has moved from niche studio debates into the center of mainstream visual culture, and the conversation is getting louder because artists are no longer treating generative tools as a harmless novelty. What once looked like a futuristic shortcut for mood boards, posters, concept visuals, and experimental images is now being questioned as […]
Old Photo Archives Become a New Visual Language

Every generation thinks it invented the image, until an old photograph walks back into the room and quietly proves otherwise. In today’s digital culture, where feeds move fast and visuals disappear almost as soon as they trend, old photo archives are becoming a powerful new creative language. They are no longer treated only as dusty […]
Amoako Boafo Venice 2026 Redefines Portraiture

The arrival of Amoako Boafo Venice 2026 feels less like another art-world calendar moment and more like a visual conversation stepping into a room full of history. Venice has always been a city where images seem to float between water, stone, memory, and performance, but Boafo’s portraits bring a different kind of gravity into that […]
London Homelessness Exhibition Reframes the City

A new London homelessness exhibition is turning one of the city’s most overlooked realities into a visual conversation about power, memory, and public space. Instead of treating homelessness as a background issue that appears only in policy debates or passing street encounters, the exhibition frames it as a long story written into the city’s land, […]