Louise Gibson makes monumental sculpture from salvaged materials, pairing crushed and twisted metal with reclaimed fabrics. Her current exhibition “Beachheads,” at Edinburgh Sculpture Workshop where she has been a resident artist, took around nine months to create and developed in parallel with her third child.
Albert Paley: Humanizing Space
Recipient of the 2025 Lifetime Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Award It is a good time to position the work of Albert Paley within the Modernist canon, and not only because for decades he has been understood internationally to be one of the most important artists whose workis centered on metal.
Carlie Trosclair
ROCKLAND, MAINE Center for Maine Contemporary Art Carlie Trosclair, the 2024 recipient of the Ellis-Beauregard Foundation’s Visual Arts Fellowship, perceives nature as all-encompassing and regenerative, offering a lens through which to counteract our fears of annihilation and feel connected to each other.
Formed in the Act: A Conversation with Courtney Smith and Iván Navarro
Can art activate intuitive, collective problem-solving? The collaborative projects of Iván Navarro and Courtney Smith, working together as Konantü, seek to answer that question, spanning media, disciplines, and contexts while honoring their roots in sculpture. Each artist brings a particular set of skills to this dynamic partnership.
Tobias Bradford
HELSINKI Sinne “Health and Safety” demonstrates Bradford’s ability to scope out oxymoronic circumstances and construct scenarios that expose their shortcomings. In that regard, the blandness of the title is strategically deceptive.
Jaume Plensa: Timely and Timeless
For every artist who has earned and sustained widespread critical acclaim and captured devoted international attention, there comes a moment when the poetic consideration of their work within a larger, longer historical framework arrives: More than merely converse with, how might they be considered within the ambiance of the masters and monuments of eras past?
Collapsing Structures: A Conversation with Aaron T Stephan
Aaron T Stephan’s meticulously crafted works employ ordinary objects to communicate a deep underlying messaging that disrupts our normal approach to narrative and meaning, telling us more about the environment and society in which we live.
Family Matters: A Conversation with Emma Jääskeläinen
From the moment I first encountered Emma Jääskeläinen’s sculptures, I made a mental note to follow her progress. In works such as According to Shadow and Creator (New Potato and Olive) (both 2017), she mixes elements large and small, hard and soft, mineral and organic to create bold, visually poetic, and appealingly absurd juxtapositions.
Olivia Erlanger
NEW YORK Luhring Augustine In Olivia Erlanger’s recent exhibition, “Spinoff,” a disruptive volley of arrows piercing the upper wall of Luhring Augustine Tribeca’s entry hall and main space lent a mythic spin to intriguing simulacra of a not-quite-natural world.
Gilberto Zorio
NAPLES Galleria Lia Rumma By intertwining concepts of energy exchange in space and time, Zorio seeks to make intelligible an encounter between artistic practice and the fluid, dynamic forces that are the essence of being.



