Technological Worlds:
Ayoung Kim at MoMA PS1
Three acclaimed video installations are being shown together for the first time in New York, using video game engines to hold up a mirror to the gig economy.
Three acclaimed video installations are being shown together for the first time in New York, using video game engines to hold up a mirror to the gig economy.
We’re excited to release the first film in the MPB: The Next Shot series. Filmmaker Andi Hampton shares the story of how cameras shape his practice.
Artist Rayvenn D’Clark creates sculptural works that reframe the Black body, reclaim agency over representation and push against colonial narratives
Spotlighting five contemporary creatives, previously featured in Aesthetica, who are using microscopes, mirrors, paper and more to reimagine photography.
Joy Gregory: Catching Flies with Honey is a landmark show that brings together 250 works encompassing photography, film, installation and textile works.
Today we’re announcing the four filmmakers who are part of MPB: The Next Shot, a project which sees creatives share the stories behind their cameras.
The artistic duo Rob and Nick Carter, exhibiting at Connaught Village Art Month, share a singular aim: to use technology to reimagine the canon.
The Zofia Rydet show at The Photographers’ Gallery in London offers a documentary portrait of domestic life in Poland, unparalleled in ambition or scale.
Somerset House presents the biggest exhibition of Baptiste’s work to date, rightfully placing her within the canon of pioneering 20th century photography.
Peiyan Xu investigates the relationship between information systems and human perception, exploring the impact of the digital age on cognition.
Contemporary artist Stephen Johnston continues the rich tradition of memento mori, with paintings that focus on food and flowers decomposing in jars.
In His Own Image, presented as part of Connaught Village Art Month, considers the representation of Black masculinity in dominant cultural narratives.
These shows – spanning New York to Kyoto, Lisbon to London – invite viewers to step inside immersive worlds where light and sound take on physical form.
We spotlight five photographers whose work is on show at PAN Amsterdam, the leading art fair which is returning to the Dutch capital from 2-9 November.
M+ in Hong Kong foregrounds the contribution of women to the history of installation art, featuring 20th century works alongside new commissions.
Poulomi Basu is a compelling voice in contemporary visual culture, interrogating structures of power, exclusion and gender-based violence.
In London, Connaught Village Art Month presents work by three artists exploring concepts of nostalgia and memory, through sculpture and installation.
Ellie Davies has been photographing wild places since 2007. Her shortlisted series captures volumes of water that roll, roar and tumble downstream.
Amak Mahmoodian, Jane Evelyn Atwood, Rene Matić and Weronika Gęsicka have been recognised for their significant contributions to the medium.
Discover five contemporary artists who experiment with colour, light and physical interventions to offer fresh photographic perspectives on wild places.
ICP’s exhibition confirms Iturbide as one of the most significant photographers of her generation, with 200 images that navigate culture, ritual and ideation.
A new show highlights Jeff Wall’s monumental approach, which imbues photography with a feeling most commonly associated with painting and cinema.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art stages the first major exhibition dedicated to one of Man Ray’s most significant contributions to his field: the rayograph.
The Listening Pitch has funded and commissioned 10 remarkable films. Each one asks the important question: what happens when we truly listen?
British Textile Biennial takes place in venues right across Lancashire, celebrating the region’s rich textile history and looking to the future of design.
Paris Photo returns this November for its 28th edition with a diverse and dynamic programme, featuring 220 exhibitors from 33 countries.
The Stedelijk Museum honours a landmark artist, whose visually perfect images simultaneously confronted difficult and uncomfortable realities.
The retrospective at Berlin’s Gropius Bau presents images that resonate – confirming Arbus’ enduring power and legacy in the photographic canon.
Gregory Crewdson’s eerie and elaborately staged photographs of suburban American are part of an extensive new retrospective at Kunstmuseum.
Tate Britain’s new retrospective offers the most comprehensive survey of her work ever staged in the UK, presenting 230 prints – many never before seen.
The Photography Biennial of Industry and Work marks its seventh edition, exploring the intersections of capitalism, labour, technology and visual culture.
The annual fair opens in Regent’s Park. 2025’s edition is a testament to the its enduring influence, featuring more than 280 galleries from 45 countries,
Award-winning graphic designer and creative director Qichao An creates intricate artworks that seamlessly blend Eastern and Western aesthetics.
Antonia Luxem’s film and multidisciplinary work explores dreams, considering how our sleeping moments can help us see reality from a new angle.
David Benjamin Sherry’s saturated, monochrome photographs of Antarctica highlight the devastating impact of climate change on the region’s ice.
William Kentridge’s monumental sculptures take over Yorkshire Sculpture Park, which presents over 40 works in bronze, steel, paper and plaster.
Marina Abramović reframes desire, ritual and spirituality in a new exhibition at Aviva Studios, combining traditions and folklore from the Balkans.
This October, a dynamic art programme offers a new perspective on the London district – best-known for its tree-lined streets and pastel-coloured houses.
Green, blue, yellow and pink tubes run the length of Lenbachhaus Munich’s ceiling, bathing the entire space – including its visitors – in mesmerising colour.
Discover 10 key exhibitions showcasing powerful works that explore identity, history and culture through the lens of Black artists and photographers.
Get a first glimpse of the 300 short, feature and VR films screening at this year’s Aesthetica Film Festival, which returns to York for five days this November.
Fotostiftung Schweiz presents the work of Roger Humbert, whose 70-year career ranged from analogue experiments to digital light compositions.
Aesthetica Film Festival launches the UK’s first national New Music Stage, featuring 10 talented artists, each with fresh energy and a bold new sound.
Eleanor Antin is known for multidisciplinary art, in which she took on a range of personas, each one questioning gender, class, identity and history.
PHOTOCLIMAT has a distinct focus on grassroots action, focusing on the charities and organisations working for justice, progress and responsibility.
In September, one of Rome’s iconic architectural marvels was temporarily transformed by a monumental sculpture: a twisting crown of thorns.
Carnegie Museum of Art presents the work of 60 Black photojournalists, who captured both iconic figures and everyday life between 1945 and 1984.
LagosPhoto Biennial 2025 explores the theme of ‘incarceration,’ asking how images can expose, resist and reimagine modern systems of confinement.
Staged scenes from Margeaux Walter are built on location, taking everyday household objects out of their usual context to create an uncanny effect.
A year in the Sonoran Desert is charted through billions of captured data points, illuminating the beauty and fragility of a well-known landscape.