“Visit the interior of the Earth and, by transformation, you will find the hidden stone”. This quote by 15th century alchemist Basilius Valentinus opens up TLmag’s latest Autumn/Winter print edition — co-edited by visual artist Amy Hilton.
Kiki van Eijk’s current retrospective exhibition at the Textiel Museum in Tilburg brings fresh insight into the artist’s creative imagination.
Vienna’s Museum für angewandte Kunst (Museum of Applied Arts or MAK) was founded in 1863 as a new type of accessible forum for the emerging fields of industrial art and design.
Spazio Nobile Gallery presents the show The New Age of Humanism, a journey that is both experiential and holistic, physical and cosmic.
Part of the curatorial series ‘Matters of Concern’, this exhibition by Barbara Chase-Riboud is the renowned sculptor, poet and novelist’s first in Europe in a very long time.
The Carpenters Workshop Gallery in Paris presents the solo exhibition Slow Motion with 19 new and recent works by Dutch artist Aldo Bakker for the first time in France. Crossing the boundaries between art and design, the objects slowly reveal their ambiguous forms and meaning as each one has its own character and singular appearance.
Parley for the Oceans is a new form of environmental organization, established in 2012 by award-winning designer and brand/product developer Cyril Gutsch.
Masataka Hosoo, innovator and president of HOSOO, a Kyoto-based traditional kimono textile maker, is bringing Nishijin-ori weaving techniques and textiles to the forefront of the design and fashion scenes worldwide. TLmag sat down with him to talk about HOSOO Studies: an ongoing R&D project that aims to create a modern perspective surrounding the relationship between human beings and textiles since ancient times.
TLmag contributor Lara Chapman takes us through the monochromatic images of Polish photographer Joanna Piotrowska, whose uneasy visuals and refusal to create easily digestible images ask us to embrace the discomfort of uncertainty.
With a focus on rare materials and a certain savoir-faire, the Paris based duo Garnier & Linker created the Diatomée Vases. The inspiration was formed by light-absorbing molecules, indeed, the vases gently illuminate a host of colors and veins.
Since launching the Fondation Thalie in Brussels in 2018, in a popular neighbourhood for contemporary art galleries, patron, author, curator, and art collector Nathalie Guiot has hatched an assortment of multidisciplinary projects that resonate more than ever, as an invitation to expand our field of possibilities.
Ragnar Kjartansson, the Icelandic artist’s performance and video work, mines the experience of monotony with its repetition and a stretched duration.