Arcin Sagdic is A Big Deal.
All in art
Arcin Sagdic is A Big Deal.
Italian artist Enzo Cucci explores existentialist composure inside his worlds of good and evil.
American artist Spencer Chalk-Levy, and his seas of people.
Reza Hood and His Graphic Playground(s).
Dennis Buck and his world of letters.
A talk about contemporary realities, as both an artist and human.
In a World Ruled by Ducks, Human Pool Floats Make a Lot of Sense.
Guillermo Lopez: Talented Illustrator or low key Virtual Reality Arsonist? You Decide.
Meet the Paris based photographer who's in the market for two tickets to a Celine Dion lookalike contest.
African American artist Ellen Gallagher’s multilayered works are underwhelmingly shocking; the canon of advertising is transformed as the façade of the equality and diversity promised lingers unsettlingly, the uniformity of racial stereotypes continuing to burden the black body.
Challenging the everyday, meet Japanese artist Yuki Nakajo.
Danish artist Christiane Spangsberg speaks about the struggle of being a woman and artist, and how to break the need for perfectionism.
Haitian painter Philomé Obin’s works possess considerable depth, the illusion of unsophisticated figurative drawings simultaneously dictates a pain and an endurance; a joyous revolt, a hallelujah to the Haitian independence, an unvarnished disclosure of unchanging politics and poverty.
Patrik Mollwing: Drippy, Trippy, Fun and Fluid.
Tel Aviv-based photographer Tal Ben-Avi is interested in exploring the things that are usually overlooked by the masses.
An ode to life is perhaps the best way to describe performer and choreographer Pina Bausch’s influential body of work.
Milan-based artist speaks about the the circumstances of humanity.
Nigerian visual artist and photographer, Fatimah Tuggar’s works present a collaged reality of West African and Western motifs, a world where African is not a homogenous identity, where tropes of class, race and religion may differ without colliding.
Vicente Mollestad, on identity and violence and the possible beauty of it all.
Diana Chire, performance artist and curator is one of the modern day icons shattering the art world’s misogynistic glass ceiling.