Reviews


Ilana Halperin

EDINBURGH Fruitmarket Gallery Halperin’s practice offers a meditation on human and geological life spans, melding our fleeting years on this planet with the vastness of deep time. In bringing the two together, she suggests that they are one and the same, that our relationship with the world we briefly inhabit is defined by connection rather than separateness.

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Bella Feldman

OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA The Orchard / Galleries on 25 Feldman (1930–2024) focused on the big issues—feminism, war, ecology—addressing her subject matter with acerbic wit and subtle humor in tough-minded and provocative works totally lacking in cynicism.

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Sacha Ingber

NEW YORK Uffner & Liu For eight years, Sacha Ingber juggled art-making with part-time work as a prop stylist on a Food Network cooking show. This might explain the recurring plates and utensils in her current exhibition “Two” (on view through May 9, 2026).

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“MONUMENTS”

LOS ANGELES The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA and The Brick Kara Walker, discussing her work with Hamza Walker last year, asked, “Where does it begin to take on a new life that embodies this question of its use value as a monument, as a holder of White Supremacist desire, as a relic of the Lost Cause? It’s holding all of these ideas that don’t work in the republic that we live in.”

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Cal Lane

CAMBRIDGE, ONTARIO, CANADA Cambridge Art Galleries So, if Lane’s work has sundered the claims of the utile, does it represent a frontal attack on the lineage of the Duchampian readymade? Think about it: these pieces have, as their origins, objects that might have been used on a daily basis with nary a second thought.

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Yu Ji

NEW YORK P.P.O.W Starting at the entrance and winding through two spacious white rooms, Yu’s singular arrangements of fabricated and everyday objects suggest resting places along a route of travel.

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Anila Quayyum Agha

SEATTLE Asian Art Museum By re-creating patterns and designs found in South Asian shrines, tombs, mosques, and palaces and literally projecting them onto viewers, Agha democratizes motifs that have often been employed in spaces marked by gendered and class-based divisions—arguably more in the spirit of Islam’s original intent than what it has become.

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Elisabetta Di Maggio

TURIN Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea Di Maggio’s technical language embraces mutability. Her work suggests organic remnant, decorative product, and artwork; and her co-ordination of eye, hand, and sharp-pointed instrument can fool the observer into imagining a machine was involved rather than a human.

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