Hu Jun Jun & Zhang Huan: In the Desert, Time Listens
Dunhuang is not a neutral landscape. It is one of the most charged territories in human history, a crossroads where trade, faith, power, and devotion converged for more than a Continue Reading
The Best Contemporary Artists and Art Collectors

Dunhuang is not a neutral landscape. It is one of the most charged territories in human history, a crossroads where trade, faith, power, and devotion converged for more than a Continue Reading

William Kentridge does not produce images in order to explain the world. He constructs situations in which thinking becomes visible. Drawing, film, theatre, sculpture, and shadow are not separate disciplines Continue Reading

Sean Scully has developed a language that carries the memory of time and experience. For more than six decades, his work has examined the relationship between structure and fragility, between Continue Reading

Everette Taylor speaks of his collection as one might speak of a shared life. It is not about accumulating, nor about chasing names that rise and fall in the market, Continue Reading

For over three decades, Rick Lowe has quietly revolutionized the role of the artist, redefining what art becomes when it’s inseparable from the lives, struggles, and aspirations of a community. Continue Reading

Silence is not absence—it is a higher form of presence. In the work of Jaume Plensa, every material—whether iron, alabaster, light, or word—becomes a way to touch the ineffable. From Continue Reading

By Carol Real Among the season’s exhibitions in New York, A Natural History of the Studio by William Kentridge stands out for its precision of thought and rare visual coherence. Continue Reading

Nick Cave is an artist in perpetual motion, a maker who never stops making, an artist whose practice is a call-and-response with the world around him. Born in 1959 in Continue Reading

By Carol Real Dakis Joannou is not merely a collector; he is a catalyst—a figure who transforms the role of art from the confines of possession to the expansiveness of Continue Reading

Anselm Kiefer has spent more than five decades working against the comfort of forgetting. Born in Germany in 1945, in the immediate aftermath of collapse, he belongs to a generation Continue Reading