Announcement
Uncommon Denominator: Nina Katchadourian at the Morgan
At the Morgan Library & Museum, Katchadourian stages a conversation between her own work, family history, and the institution’s vaults. On view in NYC.
Announcement
At the Morgan Library & Museum, Katchadourian stages a conversation between her own work, family history, and the institution’s vaults. On view in NYC.
Announcement
This experimental and multidisciplinary solo exhibition in New York City exploring “the sweetness of doing nothing” closes on March 12.
Announcement
Seventeen contemporary artists of the African Diaspora explore how movement and migration shape their artistic practices and lives. On view in NYC.
Announcement
Two solo photography exhibitions at Colgate University in Hamilton, New York, expose the obscured, silenced, and unacknowledged histories of the slave trade.
Announcement
Six visual arts organizations across Europe are collaborating on a new project addressing togetherness, fairness, responsibility, and kindness.
Announcement
The exhibition celebrates Linda McCartney’s 30-year, barrier-breaking career and her connection to Tucson.
Announcement
The large-scale installation in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, explores motherhood, the legacy and trauma of slavery, and Black temporality.
Announcement
New works by the inaugural Whitney Artist-in-Residence and the Georgette and Richard Koopman Distinguished Chair in the Visual Arts will be on view at the University of Hartford’s Galleries.
Announcement
The Mexican artist confronts gun violence and nuclear power through sculpture, print, performance, and video work.
Announcement
The media artworks in this show at Toronto’s OCAD University tell a tale of symbiosis, intersections, and more-than-human relationality.
Announcement
Presented by Northwestern’s Block Museum and McCormick School of Engineering, this new exhibition seeks empathy at the boundaries of life. On view in Evanston, Illinois.
Announcement
Nine performance works transform the Neuberger Museum of Art in Purchase, NY. Co-curated by artist Kate Gilmore and art historian Jonah Westerman.