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29 Mar

Art shows to depart the home for this February

From Alice Neels’ hotly anticipated London retrospective, to Portia Munson’s famed pink bedroom in Latest York, we select the must-see exhibitions from around the world

FEELING HER WAY, SONIA BOYCE, TURNER CONTEMPORARY, MARGATE, UK

In case you couldn’t make it to the Venice Biennale to see the British artist’s seminal work on the British Pavilion – which she took home the Golden Lion for Best National Participation – then here’s your likelihood to see it on her home soil. A really mesmerising installation, Feeling Her Way examines the ‘vocal experimentation’ of Black female musicians Jacqui Dankworth, Poppy Ajudha, Sofia Jernberg, Tanita Tikaram, and composer Errollyn Wallen through video, collage, music, and sculpture. 

Until May 8, 2023

CINZIA SAYS…, CINZIA RUGGERI, GOLDSMITHS CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART, LONDON, UK

The genius behind that wavy, pink mirror has her first major retrospective currently wrapping up its final week in London. Seen as a seminal but missed figure inside Italian postmodern art and design, the late artist’s work spanned fashion, furniture, lighting, sculpture, performance, and architecture, often bordering on the surreal, while “at all times questioning how the body might inhabit space”.

Until February 12 2023

BETWEEN THE STACKS, LYDIA GARNETT AND D MORTIMER , 12 SUNBURY WORKSHOPS, LONDON, UK

Few things are sexier than reading with a partner – the topic of photographer and director Lydia Garnett’s latest photo series and exhibition, Between the Stacks. Described as “a tongue-in-cheek exhibition dedicated to a legacy of queer pulp fiction, our mutual love of the general public library, and the total body pleasure of reading”. The series is inspired by friends and artists D Mortimer, Prinx Silver, and Maz Murray being evicted from their studio above a public library attributable to an anonymous criticism accusing them of getting sex within the studio. To memorialise their time, Garnett captured D Mortimer and Prinx Silver within the space, reading and loving. The outcomes are a young portrait that may encourage you to lose yourself between the pages… and the sheets.

Until February 24, 2023

HOW DARE YOU MAKE ME FEEL THIS WAY, MUSEUM ARNHEM, ARNHEM, NETHERLANDS

An emboldened exhibition of queer and trans joy featuring a few of the most enjoyable queer and trans artists working in photography and film today. From Leo Xander Foo to Zanele Muholi, Sinéad O’Dwyer, Kinke Kooi, and lots of more.

Until May 14 2023

YOU SMELL LIKE OUTSIDE…, JA’TOVIA GARY, PAULA COOPER GALLERY, NEW YORK CITY, USA

One in all my absolute favourite artists working in film, sculpture and installation, Ja’Tovia Gary’s latest film Quiet As It’s Kept will premiere in her second exhibition on the Latest York City gallery, in addition to a latest sculpture. Known for recontextualising and interrogating film archives, Quiet As It’s Kept examines the unconventional possibilities of narrative and the ability and responsibility of language. The sculpture, from Gary’s Citational Ethics series, transforms key quotes from Black female figures, similar to Zora Neale Hurston or Toni Morrison, in neon and anchors them into monuments, mementoes or markings of Black history, similar to a motel sign that replicates where Dr Martin Luther King Jnr. was killed.

From February 11 – March 11, 2023

HIP HOP CONSCIOUS, UNCONSCIOUS, FOTOGRAFSIKA MUSEUM, NEW YORK CITY, USA

Hip hop is believed to have been born almost 50 years ago – on the night of August 11, 1973, at a basement party within the Bronx. In honour of the groundbreaking impact the music has had globally, Fotografsika is hosting a “visual expression” as an exhibition exploring the people, places, and things that hip hop has given the world. From the pioneers to the current day, witness the trajectory of what’s undoubtedly the world’s most influential genre today. When you’re there, stop by and see surreal photographer Elizaveta Porodina’s exhibition Un/Masked too! 

Until May 21, 2023

HOT OFF THE GRIDDLE, ALICE NEEL, BARBICAN, LONDON, UK

Self-described “collector of souls”, American painter Alice Neel defied the expectations of her time by working in “deeply retro” figurative painting. While she passed away greater than three many years ago, her portraits celebrated society’s marginalised leaders – from pregnant women to civil rights activists and queer performers. Work that earned her the title of the “court painter of the underground”. Now, the Barbican is hosting the largest UK exhibition of her profession featuring greater than 70 of her works, in addition to archival film and photography.

From February 16 – May 21 2023

NOW I’M HOME, LIPS THAT KNOW MY NAME, JONATHAN LYNDON CHASE, SADIE COLES HQ, LONDON, UK

Truly one in every of my favourite artists ever. I first encountered Chase’s work about five years ago in Miami. Now, they’re the topic of their first solo show in London, at Sadie Coles HQ. Described as “an explorative, domestic installation that embraces the queer experience of affection, sexuality, subjectivity, and identity”, the exhibition transforms the gallery right into a protected space for expression. Latest paintings, soft sculptures, installation, drawing, and videos offer a sensory experience of unapologetic queer Black existence.

From January 25 – March 11, 2023

THE DUNGEON SERIES, JIMMY DESANA, PPOW, NEW YORK CITY, USA

Within the late Seventies, subversive photographer Jimmy DeSana created what’s now generally known as one in every of his earliest bodies of labor: The Dungeon Series. DeSana collaborated with writer and dominatrix Terence Sellers, who invited him to photograph her often sadomasochistic clients. The series introduces several compositional motifs that may go on to define DeSana’s work, notably home items, a single light source, and contorted faceless subjects.

Until March 11, 2023

BEYOND THE STREETS, SAATCHI GALLERY, LONDON, UK

Essentially the most comprehensive graffiti and street art exhibition will bring together over 100 international artists – from train writers to large-scale muralists. Think FUTURA2000, Glen E. Friedman, Fab 5 Freddy, TAKI 183, Maripol, Keith Haring, Martha Cooper, Guerrilla Girls, Jenny Holzer, and more. The London iteration follows the success of the LA and NYC openings. It would feature large-scale installations, original ephemera, and the style that has defined the many years of the artistic movement, so often linked to punk and hip hop. F

From February 17 – May 9, 2023

THE PINK BEDROOM, PORTIA MUNSON, THE MUSEUM OF SEX, NEW YORK CITY, USA

Portia Munson rose from an early 90s Latest York art set along with her almost obsessive penchant for collecting (and arranging) pink objects. She featured alongside The Guerilla Girls, Laura Aguilar, and Carrie Mae Weems within the Bad Girls show, curated by Marcia Tucker. Her work stood out for its daring embrace of kitsch and criticism of the commodification of ladies’s sexuality and the infantilisation of our bodies – powerful work which still endures today, and takes on latest life within the partitions of the Museum of Sex.

Until July 26, 2023

COMPERSION, MAYA FUHR, SADE GALLERY, LOS ANGELES, US

Borrowing its title from the moral non-monogamy community, Compersion is described as “the other of jealousy… a positive emotion one feels when one sees their partner involved with one other person”. In Los Angeles-based artist Maya Fuhr’s case, she uses it to explore sex and celebrity through voyeurism and images of famous sex-positive figures similar to Brooke Candy and Mia Khalifa wrapped in latex that visitors can touch – lube and gloves included.

From February 14 – March 14 2023

GUT FEELINGS, HAYV KAHRAMAN, THE THIRD LINE, DUBAI, UAE

Artist Hayv Kahraman presents latest work that continues her exploration of ‘Otherness’ and the results of trauma and care on the (often female) body. Her powerful paintings and drawings pay respect to her experiences as a refugee fleeing the war in Iraq, in addition to the aftermath of arriving in Europe and being on the mercy of a dysfunctional immigration system.

Until March 24, 2023

FRIEZE, SANTA MONICA AIRPORT, LOS ANGELES, USA

Once more, Frieze returns to the City of Angels but takes up residency at a latest location: the Santa Monica airport. Expect art but in addition an entire lot of star spotting, with everyone from Andre 3000, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kendall Jenner and Owen Wilson having passed by the fair in previous years.

From February 17-20, 2023

ZANELE MUHOLI, LA MEP, PARIS, FRANCE

For those in Paris who couldn’t make it to Tate Modern’s survey of the incredible queer South African artist, Zanele Muholi, now could be your likelihood to see their work in all its glory of their first-ever retrospective in France. Notable for his or her fearless documentation of the Black LGBTQIA+ community, this show will honour the total scale of Muholi’s work from the early 00s to today.

Until May 21, 2023

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