Alpha Vulnerability
Digital textures are punctured by lived experience in Ed Atkins’s retrospective at Tate Britain.
Digital textures are punctured by lived experience in Ed Atkins’s retrospective at Tate Britain.
Hannah Ryggen remains the most compelling part of the Hannah Ryggen Triennial.
Carola Grahn brings a pitch-perfect wit to Sámi feminism at Liljevalchs in Stockholm.
In Nikita Teryoshin’s exhibition in Oslo, a coffee mug encounters high-tech missiles on a trade fair table.
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.
Goldin+Senneby are known for their brainy conceptualism. At Accelerator in Stockholm they have created their most personal exhibition yet.
Irony gives way to sincerity in Anne Imhof’s spectacular performance at Park Avenue Armory in New York.
Eliyah Mesayer’s fictional state has pitched its black tents in Aarhus. For those already familiar with Illiyeen, the project appears to be stagnating. Perhaps that is the point.
Nora Adwan meets an ongoing moral crisis with beauty and dogged optimism.
Everything you need to dream as Valeria Montti Colque’s recreates the Chilean Pavilion in Stockholm.
A show in Malmö reminds us that megalomaniacal ideas are best regarded as mind games.
Digital textures are punctured by lived experience in Ed Atkins’s retrospective at Tate Britain.
Inuit must learn from tradition and living memory in order to look ahead, was the message at a recent seminar on Greenlandic performance traditions.
Hannah Ryggen remains the most compelling part of the Hannah Ryggen Triennial.
Carola Grahn brings a pitch-perfect wit to Sámi feminism at Liljevalchs in Stockholm.