Adam Pendleton Holds Our Attention
The artist discusses his work routine, selling paintings as a teenager and the first piece that made him cry.
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The artist discusses his work routine, selling paintings as a teenager and the first piece that made him cry.
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A group of experts met to discuss the images that have best captured — and changed — the world since 1955.
By M.H. MillerBrendan EmbserEmmanuel Iduma and
The artist on his new work at the Freedom Monument Sculpture Park in Alabama, the development of his practice and taking drum lessons from Jimmie Smith.
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Plus: silk lounge sets, a San Francisco film festival and more recommendations from T Magazine.
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An Artist’s Collection of Eerie Spiritual Ephemera
Over the past half-century, Tony Oursler has amassed thousands of esoteric pieces, from polaroids of apparitions to paintings of Satan.
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A Mural That Honors Black Performers at Rest
In Los Angeles, Thenjiwe Niki Nkosi has taken over the Hammer Museum’s lobby with paintings of larger-than-life gymnasts who refuse to pose.
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Why We’re All Living in Matthew Barney’s Sticky, Slimy World
Five trends the artist has spawned, from men baring it all to waterfalls of ooze.
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An Artist Whose Knits Are an Antidote to Loneliness
Patrick Carroll began making textiles during lockdown. Last year, several of them appeared at a JW Anderson runway show.
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The Black Female Artists Redefining Minimalism
A new generation of painters and sculptors is finding creative freedom by making rigorously pared-down work.
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An Artist Who’s Been Making Work About Life and Death Since Childhood
Sarah Sze discusses her practice, pet adoption and winning second prize in a painting contest.
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Betye Saar Remains Guided by the Spirit
The 97-year-old artist’s newest works reflect her decades-long interest in cultural artifacts and self-emancipation.
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Ellen Gallagher’s Futuristic Archives
The artist discusses marine life and African American myth from her studio in the Netherlands.
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The painter discusses her latest work, her previous career in the New York City welfare department and why she tries to make a brushstroke every day.
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An-My Lê Seeks Herself in the Landscape
The artist reflects on witnessing war up close — and then photographing it at a distance.
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An Artist Who Turned Her Bedroom Closet Into a Safe Haven
At 52 Walker in New York, Diamond Stingily’s site-specific installations tell a story of desire, shame and coming-of-age.
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A Modern, Tragic Portrait of the Sea
At Fraenkel Gallery in San Francisco, Wardell Milan’s works — which blend drawing, painting and collage — depict scenes of both comfort and chaos.
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A Painter Inspired by Islamic Art and Rural New York Life
Uman’s vibrant abstract works, currently at Hauser & Wirth in London, are shaped by her childhood memories.
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An Artist Who Uses Plants as Camouflage
At the Guggenheim in New York, Joiri Minaya's digital collages reveal the power of concealment.
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On View: A Photographer Visits With Her Younger Self
In her first gallery show, Carla Williams shares an intimate trove of images she made nearly four decades ago.
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The Sentiero dell’Arte e dell’Anima, or Path of Art and Soul, in Pienza, is lined with 28 benches created by well-known artists where visitors can take in the countryside of the Val d’Orcia.
By Ondine Cohane
At 77, the famous performance artist is determined to endure past 100. She recently introduced some products she hopes will help.
By Jessica Testa
Plus: new French hotels, eel bento boxes in Long Island City and more recommendations from T Magazine.
By Devorah Lev-Tov
Plus: a Miami riverfront restaurant, cashmere blankets and more recommendations from T Magazine.
By Zoe Ruffner
By car or train, there’s no better time to get out of the city than now, during the fifth edition of this sprawling festival north of New York City.
By Will Heinrich
Inheritors of a world shaped by big tech and precarious careers, these New York artists are searching for answers in good faith.
By Travis Diehl
Born into slavery, Guillaume Lethière became one of France’s most decorated painters. For the first time, a major exhibition gives us the full view of his scenes of love and war.
By Jason Farago
Plus: a palace-inspired hotel in Jaipur, colorful French hand fans and more recommendations from T Magazine.
By Caitie Kelly
In New York’s art show of the summer, paint and prose meet in “The Swimmer,” a psychoanalysis of John Cheever’s suburban nightmare of 1964.
By Walker Mimms
Plus: a sporty bag collaboration, a Louise Bourgeois show and more recommendations from T Magazine.
By Jinnie Lee
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