Use quotes for an exact search. For example, "Edvard Munch".
Forget Rilke
At Mint in Stockholm, an international group show offers a mind-expanding mix of erotics and poetry.
Use quotes for an exact search. For example, "Edvard Munch".
At Mint in Stockholm, an international group show offers a mind-expanding mix of erotics and poetry.
In Germany, the large-scale commemoration of Michel Majerus’s untimely death provides an opportunity to revisit the 90s as a decade of both lost optimism and sinister beginnings.
Olof Olsson’s info comedy remains well-written, toe-curling, and entertaining, but leaves little room for doubt and vulnerability.
As Europe arms itself for war, Paris is preparing for the 2024 Olympics. Cyprien Gaillard captures the stupid and the sublime in our increasingly bewildering world.
The Niki de Saint Phalle retrospective at Henie Onstad Kunstsenter gives an overview of her extremely varied practice. But what is the message?
An international cast of anonymous protagonists populates Francis Alÿs’s Children’s Games. But from what vantage point can the artist and today’s viewers connect across time, space, and cultures?
At Moderna Museet, Nan Goldin’s unyielding world of images is given a luminous setting.
Lee Lozano’s caustic cultural critique depicts the violent perversions on which American culture is founded.
In Apichaya Wanthiang’s solo show at Munch Museum, intimacy is accompanied by a yearning for closeness.
Alexander Basil’s self-portraits at Nevven in Gothenburg are a bit banal, almost kitschy. At the same time, they harbour something deeply dark.
How is love complicit in the creation of racial hierarchies? The Swedish author and scholar offers a valuable lesson.
Two Jon Rafman shows in Berlin suggest a return of post-internet amorality. Or that young people are tired of identity politics.
In Nikita Teryoshin’s exhibition in Oslo, a coffee mug encounters high-tech missiles on a trade fair table.
The Arts and Culture Magazine Publishers Forum announces an open call for a writer to join a research trip to Oslo.
Cecilie Norgaard at O-Overgaden is painting about painting in the best possible sense.
Nikolaj Kunsthal tries to turn Lars von Trier’s films into visual art, but ends up advertising for the genius.