What happens when the body falls apart? Goldin+Senneby are known for their brainy conceptualism. Now they have created their most personal exhibition yet.
Subversive fashion design, Romanticism revisited, and new alternative exhibition venues offer glimmers of light as Sweden moves towards gloomier times.
We should preface the title of our article with the possessive determiner; our, as in our, and not an abstract group of somebodies' most anticipated exhibitions of this upcoming spring, in Stockholm (more precisely).
Slicing through subterranean exhibition halls that were previously university laboratories for research in accelerator physics, Lisa Tan鈥檚 first institutional show in Sweden tenders its own spatial logic through the metaphor of neurological disorders.
On a flight to the U.S last week, I picked up Joan Didion鈥檚 Blue Nights to read it again. Once I finish the book, a bland-looking Danish man in a newlywed couple seated next to me ask me about the book.
Bodies - whether inhabited by humans or representations of the human seated in sculpture - suspended in air and relating to each other as members and units of a whole - runs as the common denominator between the two new solos opening at Accelerator.