For Sung Hwa Kim, a traditional Korean white porcelain jar serves as a starting point for an ongoing series of still lifes.
More than 8,000 photos capture San Francisco's counter culture and pivotal moments in history. But who was behind the camera?
Forthcoming from GOST Books, Mandy Barker's 'Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Imperfections' surveys synthetic specimens.
Formed of polymer clay and finished with embroidery, Heather Rios pairs each sweet with a vintage plate in playful trompe ...
Having received commissions for the projects since 2019, Chien creates unique pieces for a wide range of communal areas, such ...
In its 45th year, the 2025 festival welcomes artist Kadek Armika, who’s known for incorporating Balinese kite-making ...
“The anonymous, liminal spaces in my paintings echo the feeling of never fully belonging,” Morimoto says in a statement. “I’m ...
Co-organized by the Toledo Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Alte Pinakothek, Munich, the first major U ...
Melissa Calderón immortalizes imagery from the Bronx and Puerto Rico, translating familiar landscapes into vivid embroideries ...
Vasilisa Romanenko paints common birds amid clusters of fruits and flowers, exploring the power of opulence in times of ...
Both exaggerating and reducing features, Jose Lerma paints portraits in wide swaths of acrylic applied with brooms and ...
Simone Saunders' hand-tufted portraits merge cultural narratives and history with mythology, nostalgia, identity, and ...
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