As we move through February, the spring art season gets ever-closer. This year, the centralizing event of the city's spring art season, EXPO CHICAGO, will take place a little later in April than usual, April 24-27, 2025.
Expo Chicago has revealed the full list of those taking part in this year’s edition, set to take place April 24–27 at the Navy Pier’s Festival Hall.
Expo Chicago has named the 170-plus exhibitors that will take part in the fair’s upcoming 2025 edition, slated to run April 24–27 at the Navy Pier.
Art galleries have always felt like sanctuaries to me — a place to lose yourself in someone else’s imagination while discovering something new about your own.
Acclaimed South African visual artist Bambo Sibiya explores socio-economic challenges and resilience in the face of adversity in his latest exhibition titled Ngemva Kokuqubuka (After Precarity).
Expo Chicago has revealed the full list of those taking part in this year’s iteration, to take place April 11–14 at the Navy Pier’s Festival Hall.
Expo Chicago has named the 170 galleries set to take part in the fair’s 2024 edition, its first held under the leadership of Frieze, which acquired the event alongside the Armory Show last year.
In Bitches Brew, local artists Lady Skollie, Sanell Aggenbach and Lucinda Mudge parley with the bubbling anxieties experienced by women in South Africa.
A couple of years ago, I was working as an assistant at a gallery. We were hosting a group show in which one of the works was to be a giant bird’s nest, sewn together out of hay from the artist’s farm, complete with several dozen handmade ceramic eggs.
The Bible says that when Moses led the Israelites out of Egypt and into the land of milk and honey, he had been told to do so by the Lord, who appeared to him in a burning bush.
Caught in a liminal loop of a drowned death. Tendrils of wisteria hang suspended overhead, dangling in a faint spring breeze. A peacefully still enclosed courtyard echoes with the sounds of chirping birds and disconcerting murmur.
A Note from Error marks Blessing Ngobeni’s second show at Everard Read Gallery — though he has had many more exhibitions elsewhere since bursting on to the art scene in 2012.