MANIFESTO
#63
CHANGE OF SPACE
CARSTEN HÖLLER
BARBARA KRUGER
PHOTOGRAPHY
VERSACE JEANS COUTURE
2024.04.15
DESIGN
SAINT LAURENT
MDW
2024.04.16
From April 16th to April 20th, Bottega Veneta pays homage to the genius of Le Corbusier with a renewed version of the Tabouret LC14, originally designed in 1952 for the Cabanon: a cabin built by the architect in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin on the Côte d’Azur where, alongside numerous fixed furnishings, movable furnishings are all conceived as boxes.
LORO PIANA
CARSTEN HÖLLER
Carsten Höller allowed space for creativity by being portrayed in Stockholm, within the spaces of his provocative restaurant Brutalisten, and recounting his enormous approach to the art of experimentation and his fantastic practice evolved over the course of the experience.
Carsten Höller allowed space for creativity by being portrayed in Stockholm, within the spaces of his provocative restaurant Brutalisten, and recounting his enormous approach to the art of experimentation and his fantastic practice evolved over the course of the experience.
Photography JOHN SCARISBRICK
Interview HANS ULRICH OBRIST
BARBARA KRUGER
2024.02.19
Barbara Kruger has developed an iconic visual language that often draws from advertising techniques and aesthetics, as well as other media. Since the 1970s, her artworks have continuously explored complex intersections of power, gender, class, consumerism, and capital. Her first solo institutional show in London is on view at the Serpentine; on this occasion, MUSE explores its intricate artistic mechanisms.
FROM THE MAGAZINE
2024.02.19
Kudzanai-Violet Hwami’s practice is a profound exploration of identity, memory, and the intricate interplay between the past and the present. Her paintings express a compelling ambiguity, continually probing the boundaries of images and visual cultures in their representation of identity. Hwami’s creative journey embodies a complex weave of personal encounters and influences, migration, and cultural amalgamation.
TRAVEL
2024.02.21
The soul of Val Senales reveals itself through the words of Paul Grüner, guardian of a tradition passed down through generations in his family’s hospitality. Among the secrets of the Certosa and Ólafur Elíasson’s observatory-machine, the larch trees around the farmhouse at Infanglhof mingle with the scent of milk and hay.
PHOTOGRAPHY