Human Scale: The Case for Public Art That Actually Cares
Public space has always carried an implicit promise—that the city belongs, in some meaningful way, to the people who move through it. Too often, the art and infrastructure placed within…
Public space has always carried an implicit promise—that the city belongs, in some meaningful way, to the people who move through it. Too often, the art and infrastructure placed within…
Spring arrives less like a revelation and more like a quiet reorganization. Something that was still is beginning to move again, and the movement is subtle enough to miss if…
Peru’s pottery traditions stretch back millennia, creating a material record of cultures that understood clay as both utility and ceremony. The Vicús culture, which flourished in northern Peru’s Piura region…
At Centro per l’Arte Contemporanea Luigi Pecci in Prato, Italy’s first exhibition confronting HIV-AIDS stands as testament to what happens when a culture refuses to remember. VIVONO: Art and Feelings,…
At the Giza Plateau, where mystery settles into stone and sand, Turkish artist Mert Ege Köse has inserted something that shouldn’t exist—yet somehow entirely belongs. The Shen, a monumental aluminum…
Darrell Thorne appears like a vision from another realm—mirrored, horned, crowned, moving through space on prosthetic stilts. His presence defies classification: not quite male or female, not entirely human or…
In the world of contemporary collectible design, Erika Cross brings together intellectual rigor and sensorial delight. Based in Michigan, her practice balances technical invention, material exploration, and poetic form with…