Mark Croxford and Adeline Guy Interview
Monochrome stripes, pixels and retro hues trace the curved forms in The Arch Window at Southwark. 'Spring' combines the sense of colour, pattern and shape that is typical of Mark Croxford’s rhythmic sculptures. His interest in contemporary art and design seemed a perfect match with Adeline Guy...
Gabriel Orozco Review
Tate Modern’s latest exhibition reminded me of a personal truth. When I think back, Gabriel Orozco was the artist that sparked my interest in contemporary art. The first time I encountered that black and white chequered skull, White Kites 1997 was whilst researching for my final essay on an Art Foundation. The next...
Rory Buckley Interview
Rory Buckley’s installations combine sculpture, performance, movement and space, as well as, an explosive curiosity for the boundaries of sound. After exhibiting in Southbank’s Royal Festival Hall earlier this year, STYX Project presents his first solo show in London...
Wolfgang Tillmans Review
Enter Wolfgang Tillmans’s world with his latest findings of the ephemera and detritus of the everyday, sporadically trailing across the Serpentine Gallery’s walls. There is a giant photograph of athletes poised at the start line placed alongside an image of stacked egg-trays. We find a house plant on a window shelf next to a comical...
Koh Sang Woo Interview
Part fantasy, part biographical, Koh Sang Woo creates an alternative vision of the world...
Tate Britain
Tate Britain all started with a sugar cube. Sir Henry Tate made his millions as a sugar merchant and then generously donated his beloved art collection to establish the then called National Gallery of British Art; the first of its kind to celebrate purely home-grown artists.
