Holly Andres

Posted by Fabio 6 November 2012

Holly Andres uses photography to examine the complexities of childhood, the fleeting nature of memory, and female introspection. Typically her images rely on a tension between an apparently approachable subject matter and a darker, sometimes disturbing subtext. read more

Oscar Bony

Posted by Fabio 31 October 2012

Oscar Bony (Argentina 1941-2002) was an avant-garde artist known for his innovative and daring work. Born in Posadas, in the northern province of Misiones, he trained at Buenos Aires’s prestigious Instituto Torcuato di Tella in the 1960s. read more

Manuel Vason

Posted by Fabio 31 October 2012

Italian-born artist, based in London. Has collaborated with prominent international performance artists such as La Ribot, Franko B, Ernst Fischer, Guillermo Gómez Peña, Steven Cohen, Gilles Jobin, amongst many others. His work explores the relationship between photography and performance, between documentation and portrait and the the historical relationship of their development. read more

Ed Atkins

Posted by Fabio 31 October 2012

Ed Atkins works primarily with high definition video and writing, exploring ideas of corporeality and materiality through digital and immaterial means. read more

Vaka Valo – Esbat Stitches

Posted by Fabio 30 October 2012

Esbat Stitches is a series of digital embroidery/canvas by artist Vaka Valo. read more

Olga Nenazhivina

Posted by Fabio 29 October 2012

Daughter of a prominent Russian sculptor Valery Nenazhivin, Olga was born in Saratov, Russia in 1966, but her parents soon moved to Far East, to the city of Vladivostok, where Olga grew up, studied and still calls her home. A Child prodigy, she had her first solo show at the age of five and continues to live in art and for art. read more

Damien Hirst’s Verity statue

Posted by Fabio 29 October 2012

Damien Hirst’s 66ft sculpture of a naked pregnant woman will remain in the seaside town of Ilfracombe in Devon for 20 years. The statue of the woman – named Verity – holding aloft a sword and standing on a base of legal books is meant to be a “modern allegory of truth and justice.”

Andy Vible

Posted by Fabio 29 October 2012

American artist Andy Vible makes life-size sculptures of human bodies whose heads have been replaced by everyday objects. These objects determine the action the bodies are engaged in (sitting, eating, drinking, knitting, etc.). The object interacts with the action, making the piece a self-referencing loop. read more