계정
With the Menil Drawing Institute opening on the eve of the US midterm elections, what Houston says about the future of the country
At LABOR, Mexico City, the artist has dug a four-metre manhole to raise questions about the future of his hometown
The second oldest exhibition in the world, held at Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Museum of Art, makes the case for ‘museum joy’
Handing authorship of the biennial to a diverse group of artists is a democratic gesture but conveniently deflects and disperses blame
‘This retrospective portrays an inveterate outsider, a champion of the different and disempowered, as a fixture of a canon he reviled’
The artist discusses the objects, ideas and artworks that have shaped her practice
Even as right-wing politics increasingly tries to enforce them, remembering that nature and art know no borders
At the crux of this ambitious show lies the question: who is this triennial really for?
At Lehmann Maupin, New York, the artist's immersive installation and paintings from the 1970s commemorate forgotten indigenous histories
With work in the Liverpool Biennial and ICA Philadelphia, the Seoul-based artist reanimates an ancient Korean musical system
The central thrust of the exhibition positions Sicily as the fulcrum of geopolitical conflicts over migration, trade, security and surveillance
A surprising show of silhouettes at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. sheds light on obscure chapters of US history
At Museo Tamayo, artists respond to the myth of the French playwright and theorist’s drug-fuelled collapse in the mountains of rural Mexico
With his fourth plinth commission unveiled in London, the artist talks archaeological magic tricks and Saddam Hussein’s obsession with Star Wars
The Triforium – Los Angeles’s weirdest and most reviled public artwork – awakes from a long slumber
What the artist’s newly-unveiled chapel in Austin, Texas, tells us about the origins of his practice
Various venues, New Orleans, USA
Robin Campillo’s portrait of ACT UP Paris puts militancy before mourning
How Bethany Collins, Steffani Jemison, Adam Pendleton and Kameelah Janan Rasheed are using the tradition of black radical poetry to examine questions of subjectivity and race
Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, Los Angeles, USA