Today's Art Pulse

Laure Prouvost Unveils Quantum‑Inspired Multisensory Installation at Grand Palais
The French artist will debut "Nous, frissons d’étoiles" at the Grand Palais, a two‑year project that translates quantum‑computer research into kinetic sculpture, light, sound and scent. The work was created in collaboration with Google Quantum AI scientists and philosopher Tobias Rees, and anchors the LAS Art Foundation’s Sensing Quantum program.

PAGING DR. FEELGOOD via Perrotin, Los Angeles by Piper Olivas
PAGING DR. FEELGOOD, a pop‑up group show presented by Perrotin, opened in Los Angeles during LA Art Week, occupying the former Spago venue. The exhibition stages four thematic sections that blend bar culture, hyperreal landscapes, gender‑bending portraits, and a shrine‑like finale of sculptures, textiles, and AI‑generated heads. Artists invoke Hollywood excess, wellness trends, and biblical iconography to explore altered states and desire. Running from February 23 to March 1, 2026, the show invites visitors to drink, interact, and confront provocative visual narratives.
Digital Painting in LA and Beyond, the Set List
The Los Angeles event, co‑hosted by LACMA Digital Leaders and Ark/8, assembled a curated selection of works that the organizer classifies as digital painting, ranging from early Photoshop pieces to recent code‑generated art. Speakers and artists—including Bee Beep, Parker Ito, and Casey Reas—demonstrated how...

Civilization Is A Sculpture: The Art of Dustin Yellin
Brooklyn‑based artist Dustin Yellin blends painting, sculpture and collage into massive glass installations that explore civilization, migration and climate change. His twelve‑ton work “The Triptych” and the multi‑panel “Migration in Four Parts” use found objects to create hyper‑detailed, narrative‑driven scenes....
Board Updates for Rhizome’s Fourth Decade
Rhizome announced the election of artist‑designer Katherine Frazer and investor Jeannie Vu to its Board of Directors as the nonprofit enters its fourth decade. Frazer, an Apple product designer with a multidisciplinary art practice, brings expertise in user‑centered design and...

2025 Booooooom Illustration Awards Winner: Andrea Cheung
Andrea Cheung won the Editorial category of the 2025 Booooooom Illustration Awards for her piece in Our State magazine. The award, backed by Format, highlights top talent across editorial, advertising, product and student categories. Cheung’s winning illustration blends painterly realism...

Turner and Constable (2026)
The new documentary "Turner and Constable" (2026) commemorates the 250th birthdays of J.M.W. Turner and John Constable, pairing their rival yet complementary landscapes with the current Tate Gallery exhibition. Director David Bickerstaff eschews a conventional narrative, using curators, sketchbooks and...

David Hartt
Galerie Thomas Schulte’s "Naturphilosophie" showcases David Hartt’s new series of photogravures and tapestries that depict plants photographed across historic university towns in northern Europe. The works reference 18th‑century naturalists, especially Carl Linnaeus, and use scientific naming to foreground botanical subjects....

5 Questions to Camila Agosto (Composer, Interdisciplinary Artist)
Camila Agosto, a composer‑interdisciplinary artist and Columbia doctoral candidate, will premiere her new work *The Shape of Forgetting* with the International Contemporary Ensemble at Roulette Intermedium on March 11. The piece, part of ICE’s “Call For ___” commissioning initiative, explores identity, memory, and healing...

Angkor Wat
Angkor Wat, the world’s largest religious monument, was built in the 12th‑century Khmer Empire under King Suryavarman II. Construction employed roughly 300,000 laborers over three decades, creating a temple complex that symbolizes Mount Meru and honors Vishnu. Its intricate bas‑reliefs and engineering...

Ray Rogers on Gesture, Gravity, and the Ongoing Present
Ray Rogers, a six‑decade veteran of abstract painting, continues to work from his upstate studio, emphasizing poured acrylic gestures that respond to gravity and line. He describes his canvases as visual dialogues, where each gesture interacts with others in real...

Frieze Week Los Angeles 2026: A City as Gathering Point
Frieze Week Los Angeles returns from 26 February to 1 March 2026, anchoring the city’s art calendar at Santa Monica Airport. The seventh edition hosts nearly 100 galleries from 22 countries, blending international visibility with a strong local presence. Expanded programming includes a...

Claude Monet | Stacks of Wheat (End of Summer)
The episode spotlights Claude Monet’s "Stacks of Wheat" series, created around 1890 as a hallmark of Impressionist experimentation with light and color. Monet painted the same agricultural structures repeatedly, capturing subtle shifts in weather and time of day. He worked...

Artist Interview | Herb Williams
Herb Williams, a former foundry worker, has gained attention for sculpting large‑scale artworks entirely from crayons. In a recent interview, he explains how his background in lost‑wax casting informs the melting and shaping process that gives the crayons structural strength....
Epis. 384: Boston Artist and Lifelong Art School Teacher on Photography and Teaching in Art Schools for 46 Years
Boston photographer Jim Dow, a 46‑year veteran art school instructor, discusses the intertwined Boston art scene, his analog‑to‑digital workflow, and the economics of a photography career. He explains using large‑format cameras in public, teaching students how to document exhibitions digitally,...

Meet Cute: Collaboratove Duo DABSMYLA Communicates Through Color, Pop Culture & The Power of Piles of Cute
Australian pop‑art duo DABSMYLA, formed by Darren Mate and Emmelene Victoria, have turned a college romance into an internationally recognized brand. Their collaborative process hinges on spoken dialogue and shared sketches, producing work that feels created by a single hand....
Episode 928: Robert Burnier
In this episode of Bad at Sports, host Duncan McKenzie chats with artist Robert Burnier about his recent experimental show at Andrew Rafis' gallery, which blends drawing, metalwork, and performance. Burnier explains how his practice uses twisted metal and vibrant...

What Artists Can Learn From User Experience Design
The article draws direct parallels between user experience (UX) design and visual art, showing how principles such as flow, hierarchy, clarity, emotional design, and iteration can sharpen a painter’s, printmaker’s or digital creator’s work. It explains how each UX concept...

What Epstein's Emails Tell Us About the Art Market
In this episode, senior reporter Katya Kazekina unpacks the newly released DOJ files that reveal how Jeffrey Epstein facilitated sophisticated financial maneuvers for ultra‑wealthy art collectors, especially billionaire Leon Black. The documents expose the massive scale of Black’s art holdings—valued...