Among Fontana’s least-known works, the Spatial Environments feel like the pieces that can allow for a better understanding of the depth and breadth of the artist’s practice, which is too often solely associated with the famous cut-up paintings.
Francesco Dama
Francesco Dama is a freelance art writer based in Rome, Italy.
He regularly writes for several print and online publications, and wastes most of his time on Instagram.
How the Cosmos Has Inspired a Photographer’s Vision
Thomas Ruff’s photographs question history, art making, and the medium itself.
Researching Queer Archives from the Former Eastern Bloc
Karol Radziszewski began his art publication DIK Fagazine in 2005, and has since delved into the little-known queer archives of former Soviet Union countries.
Seeing 1970s Italy Through Its Subversive Public Broadcasting Network
Francesco Vezzoli has delved into the archival material of Radiotelevisione Italiana, shaping a narrative of the culture, politics, and entertainment of the period.
Why Are London’s Museums Royally Overhung?
Countless exhibitions in the capital are stuffed full of art like a trussed turkey.
Photographs that Pick Apart Gay Archetypes of the 1970s
A current show of Hal Fischer’s photography at Project Native Informant confirms a renewed interest in gay life in the 1970s.
Collector Valeria Napoleone on the Need to Support Women Artists
On the occasion of publicly showing her private collection of work by women artists, Valeria Napoleone talks about why such a display is necessary.
Guerrilla Girls Find — Surprise! — that European Museum Collections Are Heavily White and Male
The Whitechapel Gallery has recently commissioned the feminist collective to create a new artwork that resurrects the 1986 Guerrilla Girls campaign “It’s Even Worse in Europe.”
A Cozy Night in London’s New Hotel for Artists
Designed to attract artists, actors, and musicians, Green Rooms offers affordable accommodations at a discounted rate to any creative.
A Tribute to Oscar Wilde in the Prison Where He Was Incarcerated
The art organization Artangel has invited visual artists, writers, and performers to respond to Reading Gaol’s most famous inmate, Oscar Wilde.
Camille Henrot’s Melancholic Mondays
NAPLES, Italy — “I don’t care if Monday’s blue,” sang the Cure. But French artist Camille Henrot seems to care a great deal.
From a Missing Woman to an Overpowering Odor, Adventures from London’s First Art Night
LONDON — “Have you seen Betty? She has big boobs! She has disappeared!”