Art Gallery of New South Wales appoints new directorArtReviewNewsartreview.com21 March 2025Maud Page will be the Gallery’s first woman director
Palestinian artist Dorgham Quraiqi killed in Israeli airstrikeArtReviewNewsartreview.com21 March 2025The Israeli airstrikes that took Quraiqi life on 18 March were part of a brutal attack restarting Israel’s war on Gaza
‘Not Only Cringey but Politically Troubling’: Paul Preciado’s Dysphoria Mundi, ReviewedHannah ProctorOpinionartreview.com21 March 2025The philosopher’s reflections on his own privileged experience of the COVID-19 pandemic range from the bizarre to the frankly obscene
The Domestic Antics of Zamanbap ArtTyler CoburnFeaturesArtReview21 March 2025Wordplay, tradition and politics swirl around a collective of performers attempting to define ‘contemporary art’ in Kyrgyzstan
Taipei Biennial announces theme and participating artists for 2025 editionArtReviewNewsartreview.com20 March 2025Titled ‘Whispers on the Horizon’, the biennial will explore the many dimensions of yearning
The Unshakeable T.J. ClarkCraig BurnettBook ReviewsArtReview20 March 2025Over the past 50 years, is there anyone who’s written with more breadth, cogency and conviviality about the intersection of art and politics?
11th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art Review: For the RegionNaomi RiddleReviewsArtReview20 March 2025Anchored by First Nations perspectives and the significance of communal modes of making, APT11 thrives in its sense of the local
The Horny and Homicidal World of Cerith Wyn EvansMartin HerbertFeaturesArtReview19 March 2025From 2006: “My old friend Leigh Bowery would ask: ‘Where is the poison?’ And that’s a question I keep asking myself”
‘Silent Catastrophes’ by W.G. Sebald, ReviewedBrian DillonBook ReviewsArtReview19 March 2025Before he was a novelist Sebald was a straight scholar. What insight into his enigmatic literary oeuvre can we ascertain from these newly published essays?
Leigh Bowery Through the Looking GlassMendezOpinionartreview.com19 March 2025The artist and performer tore up cultural hierarchies not just as a form of political activism but as a way of making sense of who he really was