Second Life
Monograph
British artist Brian Griffiths’ eclectic installations and sculptures are always on the move, dragging their historical baggage towards an imaginary future by Jonathan Griffin
5th Berlin Biennial
Various venues, Berlin, Germany
A wasteland sculpture park, regularly rotating displays, and a 63-night programme of performances, screenings and workshops; Martin Herbert reviews ‘When things cast no shadow’.
Looking Out
Monograph
London-based artist Rosalind Nashashibi’s films and photographs observe the nuances of everyday life around the world by Martin Herbert. Shot in and around New York, watch Nashashibi's film Eyeballing (2005) here.
Ways of Seeing
Monograph
French artist Marine Hugonnier’s films explore what the artist describes as an ‘anthropology of images’ by Lars Bang Larsen
In the Hands of God
Monograph
Belgian artist Kris Martin’s explorations of faith and time employ myriad materials – from departure boards and novels to classical sculptures and watches by Jens Hoffmann
Current Issue May 2008 
Some Rules
Thirty-five forms of contemporary creation, or how to identify an art work
Mark Leckey
In an ongoing series, frieze asks artists and filmmakers to list the movies that have influenced their practice.
Edible Estates
Fritz Haeg (Metropolis Books, New York, 2008)
The Rest is Noise
Alex Ross (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, 2007)
The Intangibilities of Form
John Roberts (Verso, London, 2007)
The Mandé Variations
Toumani Diabaté (World Circuit, 2008)
Vampire Weekend
Vampire Weekend (XL Recordings, 2008)
Nigeria Special
Part 2: Modern Highlife, Afro-Sounds & Nigerian Blues: 1970–6 (Soundway, 2008)
Li Dafang
Abandoned factories and sad machinery; fantasy, reality and ambiguity
Tatiana Trouvé
Something from nothing: decorated offices, reclaimed land, hope and anticipation
Looking Out
Rosalind Nashashibi’s films and photographs observe the nuances of everyday life around the world
Melbourne
From frontier town to multicultural metropolis, the second-largest Australian city embraces a grass-roots approach to culture that weaves the experience of contemporary art into everyday life
Manon de Boer
Manon de Boer is an artist based in Brussels. For the occasion of her recent solo exhibition ‘The Time that is Left’ at the Frankfurter Kunstverein and a solo exhibition at Witte de With, Rotterdam, a catalogue on her work, titled The Time that is Left, will be published in June 2008. Her work is currently on display as part of the Berlin Biennial 2008.
Chicago Cultural Center
Slightly Unbalanced
Battersea Arts Centre
Punchdrunk
Tecnológico de Monterrey
Antonio O’Connell
Mills College Art Museum
We Interrupt Your Program
BaliceHertling
Falke Pisano
Talbot Rice Gallery, University of Edinburgh
Alan Michael
Mary Boone Gallery
Aleksandra Mir
Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst Antwerpen
Santhal Family
Kerlin Gallery
Stefan Brüggemann
Broadway 1602
Matthew Chambers
ZKM / Museum für Neue Kunst
Paul Thek
The Showroom
Bianca Hester
Chung King Project
Dan Bayles
Haus am Waldsee
Beate Gütschow
James Hockey and Foyer Galleries
Is That All There Is?
International Center of Photography
Barbara Bloom
Konrad Fischer Galerie
Wolfgang Plöger
Deitch Projects
Michel Gondry
Current Shows 
Peres Projects
Dan Attoe by Jörn Ebner
Elizabeth Dee
Josephine Meckseper by Kristin M. Jones
Museum of Modern Art
Sigalit Landau by Katie Kitamura
Johnen Galerie
Tim Lee by Sarah-Neel Smith
ABC
The Rodney Graham Band by Mick Peter
Arnolfini
Saskia Holmkvist by Colin Perry
Kadist Foundation
Pablo Pijnappel by Chris Sharp
Galerie Jocelyn Wolff
Christoph Weber by Vivian Rehberg
Istituto Polacco di Roma
Transfert by Emily Verla Bovino
Sadie Coles HQ
John Currin by Natasha Degen
White Cube
Gregory Crewdson by Katie Kitamura
Comment 
2008 Turner Prize Shortlist Announced
by Sam Thorne
Three women are in the running for this year's prize, which will be awarded in December to a British-based artist under 50
Angus Fairhurst
by Matthew Slotover
Angus Fairhurst's 'Gallery Connections' project
Different Thinking
by Jennifer Kabat
An interview with Rob Janoff, designer of the Apple logo
Frieze Writer’s Prize 2008 Announced
by Jennifer Higgie

frieze writer's prize is an annual international award to discover and promote new art critics.
How Japanese is it?
by Nick Currie
A round-up of the current art market and goings on about town in Tokyo
Face Off
by Mark Fisher
From Britney Spears to the Open University; a new book on album design questions the life-expectancy of contemporary cover art
From the Archives
From November 2006
Inside Out
From issue 103 of frieze, first published in November 2006: Jörg Heiser interviews Maria Lassnig. An exhibition of the Viennese painter's work is on show at the Serpentine Gallery now.

















