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"Being Singular Plural: Moving Images from India" at the Deutsche Guggenheim is the first show to dedicate itself exclusively to contemporary art from India. [more]
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She lets gender roles clash with fears and longings. In 2006 Chitra Ganesh participated in the exhibition "pa.per.ing" at the 60 Wall Gallery of Deutsche Bank New York. [more]
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Art from countries like China and India are experiencing a worldwide boom. But what are the chances and risks resulting from this development? ArtMag asks artists, curators, and critics. [more]
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Whether he lets jeans rain down from the sky in Colombia or installs a floating ready-made house for the Venice Biennale—when he examines the phenomena of a global consumerist culture, Mike Bouchet’s subversive humor is always in evidence. [more]
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Dayanita Singh is considered to be the most important figure in contemporary Indian photography. Recently, a selection of her black and white portraits was acquired for the Deutsche Bank Collection. [more]
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"Indian Highway", "Chalo! India" or "The Empire Strikes Back"—a large number of major exhibitions have testified to an increasing western interest in contemporary Indian art. [more]
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Disco Kid, Malcolm X, Angela Davis-photographer Samuel Fosso of the Central African Republic slips into a wide array of roles, tapping African cultural history for his store of props. [more]
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In the late sixties, Jürgen Klauke placed his own body at the center of his photographic work, and in doing so he radically called conventional gender roles into question. [more]
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