Future Of Art Part Nine Ben Lewis
18 July 2010 • Mark Westall
What art offers that design and architecture don’t, is some kind of ’comment’, ’critique’ – messages, to use a simple word – about our society and how it should be.
18 July 2010 • Mark Westall
What art offers that design and architecture don’t, is some kind of ’comment’, ’critique’ – messages, to use a simple word – about our society and how it should be.
22 June 2010 • Mark Westall
The current art establishment is a mirror image of the Victorian art establishment, replacing tradition with novelty, pomposity with pretentiousness, sentiment with vacuity, and craft with junk.
23 May 2010 • Mark Westall
And I wonder where one finds the enthusiasm for such relentless repetition of what is ostensibly based on the ‘new’, but is disappointingly the same.
17 May 2010 • Mark Westall
JANET LEE Series Editor, The Culture Show, BBC2 First, considering art of the present, we are in a curious period… Read More
13 May 2010 • Mark Westall
For an upcoming episode, focusing on the relationship between art and science, BBC2’s The Culture Show is producing a feature… Read More
10 May 2010 • Mark Westall
FUTURE OF ART TEXT 5 CEDAR LEWISOHN Programmer, Tate Media The futures bright. The futures orange, or so the advert… Read More
3 May 2010 • Mark Westall
FUTURE OF ART TEXT 4 TOM MORTON CURATOR, HAYWARD GALLERY Hi Ben, thanks for your invitation. Below is an extract… Read More
24 April 2010 • Mark Westall
The future of art is global. In recent years, in art as well as in economics and technology, the centre of gravity has shifted away from the West towards the East, with artists from China, India and the Middle East producing work that reflects the changing face of cities, cultures and national identities. In the future…………
10 April 2010 • Mark Westall
JOSH BAER Art market reporter and analyst, Baerfaxt Report Every decade of the 20th century had a dominant or important… Read More
9 April 2010 • Mark Westall
Ben Lewis in his capacity as Guest editor asked some of his friends what was the future of art.
This week we start with Hans Ulrich Obrist…