A show at the Pulitzer Arts Foundation highlights the artist’s subtly executed, hard-to-categorize abstract works, which exist as paintings, sculptures and an installation all at once.
Art Review
In New York, exhibitions at Field Projects and SLAG&RX, with tapestries about the labor movement and soft sculptures that focus on rebirth, reveal the invigorating state of textile arts.
An exhibition at Sprüth Magers in New York offers a glimpse of the painstaking planning that went into the land artist’s masterpiece.
The Musée Granet in Aix-en-Provence, France, gathers more than 130 works by the painter, highlighting the innovative proto-modernist style he developed in a studio at his rural family home.
The best work at the annual New York art fair finds artists drawing from the past to engage with the present.
Two exhibitions highlight the medium in its initial decades as photographers such as Mathew Brady experimented with different processes to capture citizens of the 19th century.
Featuring 71 artists and sprawling across more than a dozen venues, the New Mexico city’s latest art extravaganza, ‘Once Within a Time,’ is overwhelming and overstuffed, but it has a wealth of works worth seeing.
Bard College’s Hessel Museum of Art devotes an exhibition to the 20th-century group and, more rewardingly, the artists it inspired.
At the Museum of Arts and Design, the artist’s immersive midcareer retrospective presents a diverse, colorful body of work that tells the story of a future utopian society and its contact with present-day humans.
London’s National Gallery highlights the 19th-century French artist, who painted unidealized, often sympathetic scenes of rural labor in an increasingly industrial age.
An exhibition of the modernist’s works, in materials like basalt, granite and aluminum, surveys his interest in subjects from youth and aging to death and war.
Read a collection of Masterpiece columns on some of the nation’s most evocative nature-themed artworks, which reflect a preoccupation with the land dating back to the founding of the Hudson River School two centuries ago.
An exhibition at the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris reveals how the artist turned to his daughter as a model and muse, creating portraits of her in a wide variety of materials and styles.
The Clark Art Institute highlights 25 women, most of them now little-known, who forged their own path in the art world through a time of discrimination, war and social upheaval.
An exhibition at the Saint Louis Art Museum explores the influential relationship between the automobile and the camera, offering over 100 prints from 20th-century photographers such as E.O. Hoppé and Dorothea Lange.
A collection of the artist’s photographs at Pace in New York uses an unusual subject—UFOs—to urge visitors to question the veracity of our day-to-day experiences.
After a four-year, $80 million renovation, this display of the arts of Africa, Oceania and the ancient Americas seems bigger, brighter and more closely linked to the Met’s other collections.
An exhibition at the Parrish Art Museum traces the continuing influence of place on the artist through more than 70 works, including paintings from a transformative 1982 residency.
This video montage on display at the Brooklyn Museum combines movie clips of various actors—from Bette Davis to Tom Cruise—opening and closing doors, demonstrating the mind’s desire to create a cohesive narrative.
Its Yu Kil-Chun Gallery of Korean Art and Culture is a reinstallation that uses the institution’s own pioneering collection devoted to the peninsula to commemorate a key period of cultural exchange.
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