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  • Home
  • About Us
    • History, Mission and Vision
    • Founder and Team
    • Contact Us
  • What’s On
  • Tours
  • Art Advisory
  • Blog

Sonia Gomes: Symphony of Colours

Exhibition ReviewBy Gabriela Moraes16/11/2023

‘Sonia Gomes: Symphony of Colours’ is Sonia Gomes’ show currently on display at the Pinacoteca do Estado museum, a top local art institution.

Claudette Johnson: Presence

Exhibition ReviewBy Gabriela Moraes23/11/2023

At a time when prominent UK arts institutions are amplifying women’s voices, The Courtauld has taken a significant step by presenting its first-ever exhibition dedicated to a black woman

Turner and Bonington: Watercolours from the Wallace Collection

Exhibition ReviewBy Gabriela Moraes09/11/2023

The exhibition showcases a carefully selected collection of hidden watercolours by Turner and Bonington, both renowned for their mastery of the watercolour medium.

Georg Baselitz: Sculptures 2011-2015

Exhibition ReviewBy Gabriela Moraes03/11/2023

Celebrating its 20th anniversary, Frieze London returns to Regent’s Park, showcasing art from 160 galleries spanning 46 countries.

Frieze London 2023

Exhibition ReviewBy Gabriela Moraes20/10/2023

Celebrating its 20th anniversary, Frieze London returns to Regent’s Park, showcasing art from 160 galleries spanning 46 countries.

Marina Abramović

Exhibition ReviewBy Gabriela Moraes10/10/2023

Marina Abramović’s major retrospective, the largest in the UK to date, is currently on display at the Royal Academy of Arts in London until January 2024.

Maxwell Alexandre

Exhibition ReviewBy Gabriela Moraes04/10/2023

Since 26 August, a solo show by Maxwell Alexandre has been on display at Casa SP-Arte. The artist, born in 1990 in Rio de Janeiro city, is globally recognized, having exhibited extensively in Brazil and abroad.

Sarah Lucas: Happy Gas

Exhibition ReviewBy Gabriela Moraes29/09/2023

Tate cleverly used the walls surrounding this exhibition to engage in a fun conversation between young Sarah and today’s Sarah.

Mediation: Bonds and Narratives

Exhibition ReviewBy Isabela Galvao30/08/2023

Based on the inspirational phrase of the artist Lygia Clark (1920-1988), I developed my role as an art educator, awakening the public’s memory and nurturing it.

35th São Paulo Biennial: Choreographies of the Impossible

Exhibition ReviewBy Gabriela Moraes12/09/2023

With a vibrant selection of 121 participants, this walloping show unites mostly diasporas and native people – 80% of them self-declare as being black or indigenous.

London Art Walk

Gabriel Massan & Collaborators. Third World: The Bottom Dimension

Exhibition ReviewBy Isabela Galvao04/09/2023

Moved by curiosity as much as ignorance (as I don’t know much about digital games), I went to see the exhibition Third World: The Bottom Dimension, hoping to learn about this experimental project conceptualised by multi-hyphenate artist Gabriel Massan.

London Art Walk

After Impressionism: Inventing Modern Art

Exhibition ReviewBy Isabela Galvao30/08/2023

The exhibition explains how modern art evolved from movement to movement, Impressionism to Expressionism, redefining what painting means and its uses to paint what can’t be seen with the eye.

HILMA AF KLINT AND PIET MODRIAN: FORM OF LIFE Tate Modern Spring 2023

Hilma Af Klint and Piet Mondrian: Forms Of Life

Exhibition ReviewBy Isabela Galvao29/07/2023

Sweden artist Hilma Af Klint was born in 1862, 10 years before the birth of Dutch star artist Piet Mondrian. They died in the same year in 1944 but never met, and neither saw each other’s work.

Ai Weiwei: Making Sense
Design Museum, Spring 2023

Ai Weiwei: Making Sense

Exhibition ReviewBy Isabela Galvao29/07/2023

Using objects to try and make sense of the world is the core of the current Ai Weiwei’s
exhibition at the Design Museum. He questions the value of things and if time changes that.

Brazilian Art History and Markets Through the Work of Adriana Varejão

Essay on Adriana Varejao

Exhibition ReviewBy Isabela Galvao29/07/2023

This essay considers the intersections between the Brazilian past – starting from its colonisation by the Portuguese in 1500 – and the art of Adriana Varejao, illustrating the parallels between the Brazilian cultural, social and political context and her oeuvre.

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