The ‘Breathless Enthusiasm’ of Reyner BanhamMark RappoltBook ReviewsArtReview28 August 2025This collection gathers era-defining essays on Pop aesthetics, the rise of consumer culture, Brutalist architecture and nascent green concerns
Unpacking the ‘Art of the Kingdom’ArtReviewPartner Contentartreview.com28 August 2025A new exhibition at Beijing’s National Museum of China attempts to redefine what Saudi culture could and will be
Umber Majeed: The Weary TravellerLauren StrohReviewsArtReview28 August 2025‘J😊Y TECH’ sends up the superficial, spectatorial ways that Western travellers engage with cultures besides their own
Event: Bex Wade and Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley, Off the RecordArtReviewLive Eventsartreview.com28 August 2025Join ArtReview and Ursula on Tuesday 2 September for a conversation with Bex Wade and Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley
Teiger Foundation announces 2025 awardees of curatorial grantArtReviewNewsartreview.com28 August 2025The grant supports US curators to conduct research, mount exhibitions and host touring shows
Antony Gormley: Sculpture is ‘the Most Radical’ of ArtformsAntony GormleyOpinionArtReview27 August 2025In the increasing constraints of the city, the artist claims public sculpture might just be a way out
Over 150 US cultural institutions speak out against state censorshipArtReviewNews26 August 2025National Coalition Against Censorship and the Vera List Center for Art and Politics issued a statement calling for solidarity and a commitment to shared values between US art and culture institutions
Tatiana Trouvé’s Community of FormsGiovanna ManzottiReviewsArtReview26 August 2025The artist’s most substantial show to date, ‘The Strange Life of Things‘, resituates materiality as a continual process of preservation
The Interview: Seoul Mediacity Biennale 2025ArtReviewFeaturesArtReview26 August 2025ArtReview met with the the curators to discuss the biennale’s history, AI and the potential of mediation
Whatever Happened to the Collectors?Mark RappoltBook ReviewsArtReview22 August 2025Once the preserve of freaks, collecting is becoming ‘the norm’ – and going out of fashion