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ArtReview September 2025 + Korea Supplement

ArtReview September 2025 + Korea Supplement

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The September issue of ArtReview looks at how histories are written. Naeem Mohaiemen’s work considers how the narratives surrounding past events evolve over time, writes Oliver Basciano; Jeremy Gloster observes how Stephen Prina’s oeuvre is in dialogue with the past; Jenny Wu gets up close to Kerry James Marshall’s painting School of Beauty, School of Culture (2012), a work that restores Black figures to the Western art-historical canon; Alessandro Rabottini unpacks the iconography of Victor Man’s paintings; Chris Fite-Wassilak discusses the new logics created by Gala Porras-Kim’s depictions of museum and private collections; and Elise Morton dives into the layered histories of Central Asia references in Almagul Menlibayeva’s photograph Red Butterfly (2012). Also in this issue, Paz Errázuriz talks about photographing under the censorship of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship; Joanna Walsh wonders about artwashing; Antony Gormley writes about public sculpture; Steven Piel makes kin in the ‘identoscene’; and J.J. Charlesworth tells you what to think about Immanuel Kant’s 1784 article What is Enlightening, in which the philosopher argues you ought to think for yourself. Plus reviews of exhibitions and books across the world and a comic by Margot Ferrick  

What's inside the issue?

 
Art Observed
Paz Errázuriz by Finn Blythe
On Artwashing by Joanna Walsh
Growing Pains by Antony Gormley
Who Are You by Steven Piel

Art Featured
Naeem Mohaiemen by Oliver Basciano 
Up Close: Kerry James Marshall by Jenny Wu
Gala Porras-Kim by Chris Fite-Wassilak
Stephen Prina by Jeremy Gloster
Up Close: Almagul Menlibayeva by Elise Morton
Victor Man by Alessandro Rabottini
An Answer to the Question, What is Enlightening? by Immanuel Kant translated by John Richardson annotated by J.J. Charlesworth

Art Reviewed

Exhibitions
13th Berlin Biennale, by Martin Herbert
Peter Fillingham, by Wilson Tarbox
Stan Douglas, by Qingyuan Deng
Wolfgang Tillmans, by Louise Darblay
EJ Hill, by Ho Won Kim
Kevin Beasley, by Claudia Ross
The Gatherers, by A. Cerisse Cohen
Delaine Le Bas, by Jonathan McAlloon
Germaine Kruip, by Gabriel Levine Brislin
Donald Locke and Anderson Borba, by Oliver Basciano
TREES NEVER END, AND HOUSES NEVER END, by Jenny Wu 
Alexandra Metcalf, by Mia Stern
Ser Serpas, by J.J. Charlesworth
In A Bright Green Field, by Athanasios Argianas
Joana Choumali, by Chaze Matakala
Yoshitomo Nara, by Tom Denman
Milly Thompson, by Jennifer Thatcher
Anthea Hamilton, by Giovanna Manzotti
Ljubljana Biennale, by Sylvie Fortin

Books
Fascist Yoga: Grifters, Occultists, White Supremacists, and the New Order in Wellness, by Stewart Home, reviewed by Chris Fite-Wassilak
Loren Ipsum, by Andrew Gallix, reviewed by Susan Finlay
A Noble Madness: The dark side of collecting from antiquity to now, by James Delbourgo, reviewed by Mark Rappolt
Who Owns Beauty?, by Bénédicte Savoy, reviewed by J.J. Charlesworth Cannon, by Lee Lai, reviewed by Mia Stern

Backpage
Comic by Margot Ferrick


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