Art
Soft Scenes of a Rough Life of Labor
Daisuke Fukunaga depicts Japanese workers as tired but happy. Are they, really?
Art
Daisuke Fukunaga depicts Japanese workers as tired but happy. Are they, really?
Art
Jean Lowe’s work parodies our most banal behaviors by inviting us to consume images of our own consumption.
Art
When the news gets appalling enough, Valley will show you the grotesquerie, and make you feel it.
Art
A new exhibition at the Mexic-Arte Museum reveals the crucial but under-recognized role that the Chicano art movement played in Austin’s history and culture.
Art
In an age when everything is called into doubt, Squeak Carnwath’s concern with seeing carries a deep urgency.
Art
This week, reactions to the leaked Supreme Court draft to overturn abortion rights, La Malinche gets an exhibition, Eric Adams brings his "swagger" to the Met Gala, and what did Leonardo get wrong about trees?
Art
In attempting to convey atrocities that confound language, artist Phyllida Barlow comes up against a paradox with no easy resolution.
Art
For her first museum exhibition, Grace Rosario Perkins invited four other artists to ponder the definition of data, centering questions about how it's collected, authenticated, documented, and distributed — and by whom.
Art
Lok's paintings reveal seemingly straightforward objects and events to be strange, slippery, and utterly beguiling.
Art
Two artists replaced the game’s iconic locations with a politically charged set of properties and events highlighting the impact of gentrification on Black communities.
Art
The artists in Mesh collectively delve into connections to land and to community, pushing back against colonizing forces, and reclaiming their own narratives and power.
Art
Young Sun Han's art explores sometimes painful, sometimes revelatory aspects of his family’s narrative and Korean history more generally.