News

The Museum Angerlehner shows impressive works from the Hilger Collection. In the foreground of the presented selection are visionary, mythological, but also political-social themes in art that reach beyond national and cultural, as well as media and formal assignments.

Doug Hall Wittgenstwein's Garden is now a permanent installation at the Oliver Ranch in Sonoma County, CA. 

Rey Parla is featured in this week's Collector Daily.

Matthew Albanese's dioramas are featured in the Style section of The New York Times.

Richard Renali's Manhattan Sunday is on view at Transformer Station in Cleveland, OH from April 27 - June 17, 2018.
 
 

Donald Kuspit reviews "Depois" exhibited in early 2018 for Artforum. 

Jacqueline Hassink’s exhibition Unwired, currently on view at the Nederlands Fotomuseum, takes this notion of digital abandonment a step further, by documenting so-called ‘white spots’, areas in the world without cell phone reception or Wi-Fi connection, places that allow one to really physically be offline. Hassink asks the question: “What does it feel like to live without telephone and Wi-Fi connections – to be ‘unwired’?”

Jaqueline Hassink’s ‘Unwired’ – presented as both book and exhibition – looks at the asphyxiating relationship between the human and digital worlds, confronting our addiction to mobile devices.

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