Tel-Aviv based Israeli architect Yael Steinwurzel creates beautiful illustrations that try to capture the unexpected mystery in the everyday built surrounding with detailed, digital architectural illustrations. Read
One of the city’s most significant art events of the year, KAWS: WHAT PARTY at the Brooklyn Museum is a fun and interactive exhibition on view until September 5, 2021. Read
Yayoi Kusama's is now on view with monumental floral sculptures in the New York Botanical Garden (NYBG) until October 2021. The artist’s lifelong fascination with the natural world is ... Read
Supermarkets are essential. Museums and galleries? Not so much. This line of lockdown reasoning was the starting point for the Design Museum's new installation Supermarket, which sees the London museum's gift shop transformed into a cornucopia of essential delights. Read
Almine Rech presents ALEXANDRIA, an exhibition of new works by artist Alejandro Cardenas, currently on display at the gallery's New York location. Read
For his latest installation: Our glacial perspective, the Studio Olafur Eliasson creates a permanent installation on the top of the Hochjochferner glacier in the Italian Alps. The artwork begins with a path leading along the mountain’s glacial-carved ridge for ... Read
The NFTs are digital assets that are unique, creating digital scarcity. They contain identifying information recorded in smart contracts (Blockchain) and can't be duplicated or divided. They have many use cases, including for digital collectibles, artwork, music and in-game tokens amongst many other possibilities. Read
Byron-Bay-based artist Jai Vasicek imbues his work with femininity of a mystical quality. The abstract tribal women in his paintings have soul. The colors, fluid lines, and whimsical shapes that create them project a spirit so alluring you can’t help but feel compelled to ask “Who is she? What power does she possess?” Read
We love the printed silk installations ‘Equilibrium’ by French artist Justin Morin at his fourth solo the Last Resort Gallery exhibition in Copenhagen. Read
Berlin-based artist Jenny Brosinski describes her work as a ‘fleeting encounter’ with something incomplete, or a meeting of the ‘superficial with spontaneity’. Her art presents concepts deconstructed into fragments, gestures in oil, charcoal, ash and pencil united on canvas. ... Read