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Imran Qureshi “Vanishing Points” at Concrete, Alserkal Avenue

“Vanishing Points”, curated by Nada Raza, the centerpiece of this year’s Alserkal Art Week. Vanishing Points is an important exhibition in the way it brings audiences a fresh perspective on an artist who is a central figure in Lahore, not just as the head of the miniature department of the National College of Art, or
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Tate announces 2025 Turner Prize shortlist.

Tate has announced Nnena Kalu, Rene Matić, Mohammed Sami, and Zadie Xa as the four shortlisted artists for the 2025 Turner Prize. Their work will be exhibited at Cartwright Hall Art Gallery in Bradford, in the North of England, from September 27, 2025, through February 22, 2026. The winner of the £25,000 ($33,334) prize will be revealed at a ceremony in Bradford on December 9th. The three other shortlisted artists will each receive £10,000 ($13,338).

Now in its 41st edition, the Turner Prize is one of the most prestigious international art awards, awarded to an artist born or based in the U.K. for an outstanding exhibition. “Each of the artists offers a unique way of viewing the world through personal experience and expression,” said Alex Farquharson, director of Tate Britain and chair of the Turner Prize jury. “On J.M.W. Turner’s 250th birthday, I’m delighted to see his spirit of innovation is still alive and well in contemporary British art today.” This year’s exhibition is a major component of Bradford 2025, part of the city’s year as the U.K. City of Culture, developed in partnership with Tate, Bradford District Museums & Galleries, and Yorkshire Contemporary.

Scottish multimedia artist Nnena Kalu has been recognized for her installations presented at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, and Manifesta 15 in Barcelona. She creates brightly colored, bulbous hanging sculptures out of paper and textiles, wrapped in cellophane and tape, along with meditative works on paper. She has also previously exhibited at Studio Voltaire and Arcadia Missa, and has a studio at ActionSpace, a London-based organisation aiding artists with learning disabilities. The jury praised Kalu’s mastery of color and material, and her ability to respond to architectural space with gestural abstraction.

Rene Matić is nominated for their solo exhibition “AS OPPOSED TO THE TRUTH” at CCA Berlin. Their work features intimate photographs of friends and family, along with sound, banners, and installation to highlight moments of tenderness and community. In 2024, Matić also exhibited in a major touring show on British working class photography, shown at the Hayward Gallery among other institutions, and in a dual exhibition at the Kunsthalle Wien with Oscar Murillo.

Mohammed Sami is nominated for his solo exhibition “After the Storm” at Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire, England. Sami’s large-scale paintings depict evocative, depopulated spaces that allude to memory, war, and exile. The works are oblique references to his own experience as a refugee from Baghdad, depicting furniture, empty rooms, and partial depictions of military personnel. The jury commended his sensitive portrayal of trauma and absence.

Korean Canadian artist Zadie Xa, who is based in London, is recognized for her presentation at the 2025 Sharjah Biennial, created in collaboration with Benito Mayor Vallejo. Xa’s immersive installation, combining painting, sound, textile, and sculpture, drew on Korean shamanic traditions and maritime folklore. In this show, the walls were covered in paintings in eye-popping shades, made from textiles sewn together, their fraying seams exposed. Hanging in the centre of the room, sculptural mobiles made from shells emitted galactic electronic music as part of the installation. Xa is represented by Thaddaeus Ropac and had her first solo show with the gallery in Paris last year.

The 2024 Turner Prize winner, Jasleen Kaur, presented an installation of found objects exploring her upbringing in a Sikh community in Glasgow. Previous winners include Wolfgang Tillmans, Anish Kapoor, and Lubaina Himid.

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Maximilian Arnold “Freed from desire” at MATTA, Milan

Images always carry with them an intriguing ambiguity, something that feels familiar yet at the same time elusive: even before being worked on, the image exists as data, as a documentary trace of a reality already transformed into an archive. However, the archive is never neutral. Accumulating images already means preparing them for use, for
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Natural History Museum unveils immersive new experience with David Attenborough

Opening 19 June 2025, Our Story with David Attenborough invites visitors into a 360° immersive journey through the epic history of humankind, narrated by the beloved broadcaster and created in coll…
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Yuji Agematsu, Gilles Aillaud, Cecilia Bjartmar Hylta, Prunella Clough, Curtis Cuffie, Dominick Di Meo, Trisha Donnelly, Claudette Gacuti, Solomon Garçon, Alex Harsley, Henrik Olesen, Patrick Procktor, Katsuhiro Yamaguchi at Galerie Buchholz, Berlin

appetite Some time yesterday I took a short trip with Jae on the northbound M1, a few stops up Madison Avenue until we got near the park. The afternoon was too nippy for us to sit at the bus shelter so we stood in the window of a juicery until we saw our bus approaching.
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A taste of reality: Saatchi & Saatchi’s new campaign with The Hygiene Bank

In partnership with The Hygiene Bank, Saatchi & Saatchi has launched a campaign that’s as surreal as it is serious. ‘The Edible Soap’ is a provocative new symbol of hygiene poverty in the UK, h…
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Ann Craven: Painted Time (2020-2024) @ Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, Maine

Ann Craven: Painted Time (2020-2024) @ Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, Maine
Often regarded as a colorist, this exhibition repositions Ann Craven within a deeper language that moves beyond her traditional motifs–moons, flowers, and birds–to explore the mechanics of painting itself. It will highlight an often overlooked conceptual framework, where seriality, repetition, and shifts in scale function as both meditative and formal devices in her paintings. Her exhibition, Ann Craven: Painted Time (2020-2024), is on view at the Farnsworth Art Museum in Rockland, Maine from May 3, 2025—January 4, 2026.