It Was a Different Time
SUPERFLEX’s rescue ark is not intended for humans alone. Yet it is laden with human products and critiques of capitalism – all dressed up as capitalism.
SUPERFLEX’s rescue ark is not intended for humans alone. Yet it is laden with human products and critiques of capitalism – all dressed up as capitalism.
Vibeke Tandberg is not one of those artists who stopped experimenting with age.
Moderna Museet’s painting bonanza glitters, but leaves little room for sustained looking.
The main exhibition at the 61st Venice Biennale is a spiritualist séance with no spirits present.
Many of the pavilions at the 61st Venice Biennale manage to transcend the outdated structure of national representation.
Transgressive creatures in the Nordic Pavilion.
At the Danish Pavilion in Venice, the fertility crisis is displaced by an avalanche of sleek Scandinavian smut.
The Antwerp Six exhibition reveals fashion as a system and presents the dilemmas that all creatives face today.
The inaugural exhibition of the New Museum’s expansion is undone by an inability to leave anything out.
What does it mean to be important in the art world? Marie Karlberg’s Stockholm show answers the question, one oversized business card at a time.
The feminist exhibition No Master Territories at Kunstnernes Hus unfolds as an open research project that can be extended and reconfigured through new voices.
Synnøve Persen’s landscapes imagine the Arctic beyond the tourist sublime.
A public event in Vilnius launching next year’s Baltic Triennial underscored the radical difference between being claimed by war and claiming detachment from it.
SUPERFLEX’s rescue ark is not intended for humans alone. Yet it is laden with human products and critiques of capitalism – all dressed up as capitalism.
‘I take my position of power very seriously’.
Vibeke Tandberg is not one of those artists who stopped experimenting with age.