Laleh Khalili’s new book, ‘The Corporeal Life of Seafaring’ considers people and bodies as a measurement of the economic, social, racial and political world
“The difficulty I stage in my paintings, how hard they are to read and how you have to struggle to read them, is the struggle to understand anything about race or identity”
Reflecting on Archie Moore’s presentation ‘kith and kin’ for the Australia Pavilion, the talks programme will explore two of the exhibition’s central themes
No longer the butt of an old joke, Ono’s works on show at Tate Modern can be seen for what they’ve always been: an intrusion of artificiality and performance into everyday reality
Two new books attempt to examine how platforms and their algorithms vine into our desires, preferences and self-conception – and the answer is always messier than it first seems
While the cultural sphere is engaged in displays of inclusivity, positive representation and post-#MeToo feminism, billions of people are slumped over their smartphones, feeding the monster under society’s bed
Something of a phenomenon among South Korean artists of his generation, Kim blurs the lines between the real and virtual until we’re no longer sure there’s much of a difference
The late and overlooked artist’s works, on view at Project Native Informant, London, present a disturbing vision for our morally and aesthetically puritanical era
The bombardment of Gaza presents a new context for the complicated relationship between sharing something on social media, and taking ‘meaningful’ political action