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ArtReview Magazine

9 números al año   |  English
0 Reseñas   •  English   •   Art & Photography (Art)
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Carefully curated to inspire and inform both professional artists and art enthusiasts alike - ArtReview sits proudly as one of the world’s leading international contemporary art magazines. Released nine times a year, this delightful digital magazine is dedicated to expanding contemporary art’s audience and reach.


Since the first exciting edition was released over seven decades ago - ArtReview has been honouring and highlighting the unique voices that make the contemporary art scene so endlessly appealing. Since 1949, ArtReview has been loyally leading art lovers towards exciting and engaging art that encourages audiences to explore the ever-changing artistic landscape.


Featuring a mixture of carefully constructed criticism, unbiased reviews, commentary and analysis - an ArtReview digital magazine subscription is sure to connect you to the contemporary art world every time a new issue is downloaded to your device.

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ArtReview

April 2025 In the April 2025 issue of ArtReview, Japanese-Sāmoan artist Yuki Kihara brings to Britain her ongoing Paradise Camp project, part of a larger practice that explores the diversity of sex and gender traits while dismantling the historical Western gaze cast on the bodies and sexuality of Indigenous peoples in the South Pacific – expect appearances by Charles Darwin. Gabrielle Goliath approaches historical traumas and their expression in contemporary violence through photography, video installations and performances that aim to create space for what the artist refers to as the lifework of mourning. Also: if the eternally popular genre of body horror serves as a barometer for society’s unspoken fears and anxieties, what is its current revival in film and art about? Plus: opinion pieces on food, fashionability, artworld legitimacy and why David Salle trained AI on a diet of his own paintings; a look at what ‘disrupt’ has come to mean in art contexts; and comprehensive exhibition and book reviews.


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ArtReview issue April 2025

ArtReview  |  April 2025  


In the April 2025 issue of ArtReview, Japanese-Sāmoan artist Yuki Kihara brings to Britain her ongoing Paradise Camp project, part of a larger practice that explores the diversity of sex and gender traits while dismantling the historical Western gaze cast on the bodies and sexuality of Indigenous peoples in the South Pacific – expect appearances by Charles Darwin. Gabrielle Goliath approaches historical traumas and their expression in contemporary violence through photography, video installations and performances that aim to create space for what the artist refers to as the lifework of mourning. Also: if the eternally popular genre of body horror serves as a barometer for society’s unspoken fears and anxieties, what is its current revival in film and art about? Plus: opinion pieces on food, fashionability, artworld legitimacy and why David Salle trained AI on a diet of his own paintings; a look at what ‘disrupt’ has come to mean in art contexts; and comprehensive exhibition and book reviews.
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