Monday, May 4, 2026

The Story Behind Tschabalala Self’s Met Gala Dress by Brandon Blackwood
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Tonight, the 2026 Met Gala kicks off “Costume Art,” the newest exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute (the show officially opens on May 10). For artist Tschabalala Self, it’s a major milestone: She serves as a gala co-chair and will attend the fete for the first time. To celebrate one of the most important moments on the global fashion calendar, Self enlisted her friend, designer Brandon Blackwood, to create her gown and style her look for the evening. He worked with New York’s Atelier YQS on the dress, his first for the major event.

It’s a full-circle moment for the pair, who were both born and raised in New York City, Blackwood in Brooklyn and Self in Harlem, before attending Bard College together. Since then, Blackwood has earned acclaim for his statement anti-racism handbags and has expanded into shoes and ready-to-wear. He’s also designed custom gowns for Beyoncé, Serena Williams, and Megan Thee Stallion. Self, meanwhile, has become a rising name in the contemporary art world. Major exhibitions of her paintings, which employ fabric and mixed media to depict the exaggerated silhouettes of her dynamic Black subjects, have taken place at the Baltimore Museum of Art, Finland’s Espoo Museum of Art, and other galleries and institutions. She was also awarded London’s Fourth Plinth Prize in 2024 and featured in The Artsy Vanguard 2019. She recently installed a sculpture of an embracing couple, titled Art Lovers (2025), at the newly reopened New Museum in Lower Manhattan. In advance of their Met Gala moment, Blackwood and Self spoke to Artsy about their long friendship and the influences they drew on for the dress, from Degas’s ballerina sculptures to unconventional textiles.

Read their conversation with Artsy below (answers have been edited for length and clarity).

Alina Cohen: How did you two meet?

Brandon Blackwood: We met on the quad in 2009. She was sitting with future friends of mine, and we all ended up talking. We had the New York connection. When you go to a small liberal arts school upstate, in the middle of nowhere, and you meet someone who kind of looks like you in a space where that isn’t the norm, you bond very quickly. I’ve always wanted a sister, and Tschaba’s like a sister to me.

Tschabalala Self: We lived together for one year in this dorm called “Feitler.” It was a vegan co-op but also like a black fraternity house on campus.

A.C.: Did you connect over creative interests?

B.B.: We’d go to each other’s dorms or, when we were living together, meet in the kitchen and talk about our ideas, which ranged from movie scripts to designing. For a second, we wanted to launch a brand together and call it “Self Love.” So this is very full circle.

T.S.: We wanted to make gender-neutral clothing that was ready-to-wear, with an elevated street style vibe.

A.C.: Is this the first time you’re truly collaborating?

T.S.: I’d say the second. Brandon designed my wedding dress last year. That was a big milestone. Brandon was also essentially a bridesmaid. He was with me every step of the way.

That was the first time we collaborated on something that was out in the world, even in our shared community. But I’ve always been able to talk to Brandon about ideas.

B.B.: Tschaba has custom pieces of mine. I also have a custom piece of hers.

A.C.: That’s Tschaba’s painting behind you?

T.S.: Yes, it’s called Dancer (2026). Brandon just moved. It was a piece for his new home.

B.B.: I have a few pieces of Tschaba’s throughout the house. Two feature female figures, and one is a man and woman together. When you walk in my door, her art is the first thing you see. It’s very powerful; it makes me feel good; and it’s low-key a little sexy: the shapes, the colors. I’m very proud of it. When you surround yourself with things you love so much, you can’t help but incorporate that into your day.

A.C.: How did the Met Gala collaboration come about?

T.S.: I told Brandon that I was going to be on the host committee. I asked if he wanted to make my dress for the gala. He was really excited and just jumped in.

B.B.: It’s a huge milestone. We started brainstorming. The theme is “Fashion Is Art,” and I wanted the dress to border on costume but feel refined…like a period piece come to life.

T.S.: When Brandon was describing the silhouette, he’d say that it should look like an upside-down tulip: a form found in nature that is also regal, feminine, and timeless. The gown is super contemporary, with lots of different silhouettes. It makes me think of Degas’s ballerina sculpture, which is a fusion of this hard bronze sculpture with textile. This garment’s unique textile elements really speak to me, because textiles are such an important part of my practice. The dress is a perfect combination of both our aesthetics and formal concerns.


A.C.: What are the unique textile elements in the dress?

B.B.: We have a silk corseted gown with a draped-over skirt held up by this really beautiful, soft tulle underlay. I played around with volume in an unconventional way and tried to layer texture in a way that’s easy to read. We used a lot of satin, a lot of chiffon. The bodice is a matte chiffon, which is cool. It’s usually shinier, more exposed. We’re doing a corset-lace bodice, which will hug the body and help tell the overall story of the dress.

T.S.: When I put on the dress, I felt like I was embodying an artwork. And that fits the theme perfectly for the gala.

A.C.: Were there other visual references?

B.B.: I was looking a lot at Tschaba’s work. She loves to mix textures, loves a kooky mash-up of things. I wanted to translate that. You’ll see how the skirt drapes over the tulle, how what we're doing is unconventional, like her artwork.

T.S.: The dress also creates an emphasized silhouette to the body through construction and costume. This really elevated, feminine hourglass shape is also a throughline in my practice. That’s a peak symbol of beauty for us, for our background. We’re accentuating that. I’m almost becoming an embodiment of the subjects in my work. I love the shape.

B.B.: It’s really severe. Choosing a cinched lace corset, dropping where the skirt starts so that you get the hip. You get the bust. You get the waist. There’s a lot of body.

A.C.: Are there elements that feel very “New York?”

T.S.: Right now in the Hudson Valley, where Brandon and I met, there are tulips everywhere. Many of our memories are here. There’s a certain lightness and easy elegance that remind me of this region. There’s a throughline, the city to here, and back.

B.B.: The dress still has a severe moment that feels true to a native New Yorker. It’s Hudson-meets-Harlem.

T.S.: That’s my whole thing!

A.C.: Tell me about the color.

B.B.: We chose a really muted, sexy gray. This is the first gray piece I’ve ever made. It’s cool and impactful and looks beautiful on her skin tone. We’ll add jewelry, some diamond detailing. It’s gonna be a moment.

A.C.: Shoes?

T.S.: Gray Jimmy Choo. Very simple. Pointed-toe pump, something that complements the dress but doesn’t take any attention away.

A.C.: What does it mean to work together for the Met Gala?

T.S.: I feel blessed I’m working on this with a friend. And not just any friend. I’ve known him since I was 20, and Brandon was a teenager. Our brains weren’t finished growing! I’m excited and also nervous. It’s nice to have a friend who’s also family—to do it together. It’s fun and I feel more carefree, more myself. It’s another creative moment we can share. It’s really beautiful.



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Christo and Jeanne-Claude artwork to be presented for the first time ever at Gagosian.
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An unrealized work by Christo and Jeanne-Claude that was recently discovered in the Christo’s atelier will be unveiled at Gagosian in London later this month. Entitled Air Package on a Ceiling, the installation consists of a 52-foot-long, 33-foot-wide inflated form wrapped in rope. Softly illuminated from within, the work resembles half of a cloud protruding from the ceiling. The piece will be realized based on the original model from 1968 as well as preparatory drawings and collages. It will be on view at Gagosian’s Mayfair gallery from May 21st through August 21st.

Original plans for the piece were discovered in 2018 by Christo’s studio manager, Lorenza Giovanelli, while clearing space in the artist’s studio. Upon moving a plinth she came across a box that contained the detailed scale model of the work that included electric wiring to demonstrate the piece’s lighting component. “It’s in such great condition because it’s never seen the sunlight. It was not even dusty … It’s been hidden for 50 years,” said Giovanelli in an interview with The Guardian. Air Package on a Ceiling had first been conceived for the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) in Philadelphia, though was abandoned due to technical restraints.

Christo and Jeanne-Claude, his wife and collaborator, made a series of works in the 1960s that experimented with wrapping air by capturing it within transparent polyethylene packages and rope. These pieces, which pull focus onto the act of wrapping the object rather than on the object itself, gave way to their later installations that wrapped popular monuments like Paris’s Pont Neuf or the Reichstag in Berlin.

A selection of these earlier works from that period will also be on view, alongside Wrapped Automobile–Volvo, Model PV-544 (1981), in which Christo covered an old car belonging to art dealer Serge De Bloe as a means of saving the automobile from destruction.



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Friday, May 1, 2026

5 Standout Shows to See at Small Galleries in May 2026
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Marz, 2023
Sheida Soleimani
Harlan Levey Projects

Deathly Silence, 2016
Nicolas Vionnet
Al-Tiba9 Gallery

In this monthly roundup, we spotlight five stellar exhibitions at small and rising galleries.

K. T. Kobel

Hand, Body, Object, Sin

Kutlesa, Goldau, Switzerland

Through May 29

Practice Makes Permanent, 2026
K.T. Kobel
Kutlesa

An Exit Without Leaving, 2026
K.T. Kobel
Kutlesa

Since 2022, British-born, Amsterdam-based painter K. T. Kobel has staged shows from Los Angeles to Milan. This month, the artist mounts his first major Swiss exhibition, filled with cinematic paintings that embrace fragmentation and loose ends. His compositions, which are reminiscent of storyboards, offer disjointed images that the viewer must piece together.

Each of Kobel’s new works features four painted scenes, vertically stacked within a singular wooden frame. An alluring, eerie haze ensconces these three-foot-tall arrangements, created using pigment transfer, acrylic, and encaustic. Their contents blend taboo and tension: Practice Makes Permanent (all works 2026) features a hissing black cat, while the screaming mouth and black latex bodysuit in An Exit Without Leaving suggest both horror and kink. The images recall the Spaghetti Slashers Kobel holds dear, though they are not, in fact, from real films.

The human mind naturally detests ambiguity. Here, however, Kobel reminds us of all the imagination can conjure when given a few mysterious, compelling frames. As the artist himself says, “repetition becomes ritual.”


Terra Incognita (Unknown Land) – Part II

Al-Tiba9 Gallery, Barcelona

May 14–July 25

Floating Court Reflections, 2026
ChingKe Lin
Al-Tiba9 Gallery

Hybrid Cluster, 2025
Dongbay
Al-Tiba9 Gallery

Last spring, the chic Al-Tiba9 Gallery, located in Barcelona’s picturesque El Born neighborhood, unveiled “Terra Incognita.” The group show featured five international artists who tested the boundaries between nature and humanity. Its sequel arrives this month, presenting work by a new crop of five artists who explore how humanity situates itself within Earth’s diverse environments.

Swiss photographer Andy Storchenegger will present a three-channel film, Nobody is Okay (2022). This collaboration with Zambian poet Marita Banda explores the psychology of masquerades. Self-proclaimed Chinese “eco-warrior” Dongbay suspends decorated animal pelts and textiles made of recycled Carhartt clothes within metal scaffolding. These spatial experiments bring the artist’s illegal urban art practice into the white cube. Swiss painter and sculptor Nicolas Vionnet—the only participant to feature in both editions of the exhibition—alternately calms and frustrates viewers with canvases that feature melancholy landscapes and a sculpture of an impractical skateboard equipped with crutches. Taiwanese artist Ching-ke Lin’s signature whirls of bamboo render an ancient, natural material futuristic. Meanwhile, Milan-based duo Dan Molin & Milani contribute a motorized fitting room titled Muletto (2022), which transforms an intimate space into something industrial. Together, these works ask: What does it take to make a home?


Sheida Soleimani

Flyways

Harlan Levey Projects, Brussels

Through June 27

Iranian-born, American-based photographer and filmmaker Sheida Soleimani integrates activism into her art and life. When she’s not producing political imagery that protests the powers that necessitated her parents’ exile from Iran, the artist cares for injured migratory birds. She’s all too aware that their plight—and gorgeous resilience—parallels her family’s.

Soleimani’s third exhibition in six years with Harlan Levey Projects unites two of her ongoing, interconnected series—both of which figured in her 2025 New York institutional debut, “Panjereh,” at the International Center of Photography. That presentation introduced audiences to Soleimani’s maximalist “Ghostwriter” series of magical realist scenes shot with overwhelming clarity. These works are collaborative: Soleimani’s mother created drawings which appear throughout the compositions, while her father provided graphics and slogans that oppose Iran’s authoritarian leadership—and any ruler, really, who abuses power.

The exhibition pairs “Ghostwriter” specimens like Marz (2023) and Safehouse (2024) with additional shots like Misunderstanding (2024) and Exodus (2024), drawn from Soleimani’s more recent “Flyways” series inspired by her avian rescue. Especially exciting is the debut of the artist’s new film, Wave (2025), which unites the distinct series throughout her latest show. Here, the Soleimanis care for insects and deer in a desert landscape, intermittently reciting mantras that honor the resolve of all intrepid species: “We are alive because we refuse to rest.”


Patrick Puckett

Daze of Our Lives”

Wally Workman Gallery, Austin

May 9–May 31

U.S.A., 2026
Patrick Puckett
Wally Workman Gallery

Watermelon, 2026
Patrick Puckett
Wally Workman Gallery

Mississippi-born and -based painter Patrick Puckett has already had eleven solo shows since 2013 with Wally Workman Gallery, a 46-year-old Austin art stronghold situated in a historic home. With each successive year, Puckett’s self-professed “Hillbilly Baroque” compositions have grown tighter, bolder, more dynamic, and ever-brighter.

Daze of Our Lives,” Puckett’s twelfth presentation at the gallery, offers yet another body of life-sized portraits depicting blissed-out figures. They’re rendered in Puckett’s signature high-contrast, electric palettes. 7 of the 12 new works are oil paintings on canvas. The rest are mixed media on paper. Motifs repeat, like a ping pong table, echoed by the racket that another figure brandishes, legs splayed, in U.S.A. (all works 2026).

Yet these “Daze of Our Lives” aren’t all fun and games. Puckett immortalizes his recurrent ping pong player in the pensive lulls between volleys. There are many moments of ambrosial seduction here too, from the reclining goddess in Watermelon to the female figure lazing in a lawn chair with a bouquet between her legs in Garden. Indeed, while Puckett’s figures are alluring, they’re never fully idealized. His electric hues underscore their more serious sides, the people they might be after closing the bathroom door to catch their breath during a party.


John Vitale

TIME ISN'T AFTER US

Court Tree Collective, New York City

May 2–June 6

Spirit Portal #2, 2026
John Vitale
Court Tree Collective

Spirit portal #3, 2026
John Vitale
Court Tree Collective

TIME ISN'T AFTER US” seems to take its name from “Once in a Lifetime,” the Talking Heads’ most famous song. It’s a fitting callout, considering critics have already likened Brooklyn-based John Vitale’s gentle geometric abstractions to music, with all its rhythms and rests.

Vitale’s latest paintings present additional contradictions. Black voids underscore pastel forms in compositions that balance groundedness and buoyancy. Vitale’s energetic hand remains palpable in these works of acrylic, house paint, pencils, aerosol, and china markers on raw canvas, despite their easygoing overtones. Adding a touch of bawdy humor are flaccid, phallic forms that accumulate around circular portals—a new visual element in the artist’s work.

After years of teaching himself how to paint (and a short stint at New York’s storied School of the Visual Arts in 2008), Vitale is hitting his stride. “These paintings led me in an interesting direction,” he wrote on Instagram alongside Spirit Guide (2026). “This piece in particular may have cracked something open for me and my practice moving forward.” The work is awfully playful, considering the guru status he’s imbued it with.



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Thomas Hart Benton, Jessie Wlicox Smith announced for shows at Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. 
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The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, the long-anticipated Los Angeles institution co-founded by filmmaker George Lucas and businesswoman Mellody Hobson, has unveiled the lineup for its inaugural exhibitions. The ambitious survey will feature more than 1,200 works drawn from a founding collection that spans more than 40,000 objects.

Housed in a 300,000-square-foot building designed by Ma Yansong of MAD Architects with Stantec, the museum is dedicated to what Lucas has called “the people’s art: the tradition of telling stories through images, from prehistoric cave paintings to comics and cinema.”

Spread across more than 30 galleries occupying roughly 100,000 square feet, the opening program traces visual storytelling across time periods and geographies. Several exhibitions are organized around enduring myths of love, family, community, and adventure, while others spotlight individual 20th-century figures.

Among the headlining solo presentations are Thomas Hart Benton, with selected works depicting American life; Jessie Willcox Smith, whose classic scenes illustrated fairy tales and other children’s books; and N.C. Wyeth, represented by book illustrations from the 1910s through the 1940s. Norman Rockwell, Maxfield Parrish, and Frank Frazetta will each receive their own dedicated galleries.

Themed exhibitions round out the presentations. “Children’s Stories” gathers illustrations by Beatrix Potter, Leo Politi, E.H. Shepard, and Jacob Lawrence. “Comics & Graphic Stories” showcases the museum’s holdings of American and European comics, with works by Mœbius, Marie Severin, Jack Kirby, Alison Bechdel, Jim Lee, Frank Miller, and Rafael Navarro, alongside a complementary survey of manga and anime. A “Murals” exhibition presents large-scale public works by Judith F. Baca, Diego Rivera, and JR, while “Narrative Forms” explores adventure, fantasy, romance, and science fiction through artists including Julie Bell, Boris Vallejo, Ken Kelly, Georges Méliès, John C. Berkey, and Jeffrey Catherine Jones.

A photography gallery brings together documentary images by Robert Capa, Gordon Parks, Alfred Eisenstaedt, and Dorothea Lange. Additional sections are devoted to architecture, cinema—drawing on production designs, props, and costumes from the Lucas Archives—history, “Civic Life,” “Western Stories,” and a suite of “Everyday Life” galleries on themes from childhood and motherhood to play, school, sports, and work. Works by Frida Kahlo, Charles White, Kadir Nelson, and Robert Colescott will also be on view. The museum opens on September 22nd.



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German artist Georg Baselitz dies at 88.
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Georg Baselitz, a titan of 20th-century art, has died at 88. Thaddaeus Ropac, one of the galleries that represents the artist, announced his death with an obituary from Baselitz’s family.

The poet Robert Isaf writes in the statement that Baselitz—known for his large-scale, expressionistic canvases—“defined German visual art for a generation, profoundly influencing artists around and after him and the international world of art.” Isaf confirmed in the statement that the artist died “peacefully.”

Baselitz was born Hans-Georg Bruno Kern in Deutschbaselitz, Germany, in 1938. His family lived first under the Nazi regime, then under the East German government. Early on, the artist fought for art-world acceptance. The Art Academy of Dresden rejected him, the Weißensee Academy of Fine and Applied Arts in East Berlin suspended him, his peers accused him of “sociopolitical immaturity,” and the press called his style “pornographic” after he debuted his first solo exhibition, in West Berlin, in 1963.

Baselitz experienced a breakthrough with his “Heroes” series (1965–66). The large-scale oil paintings featured thickly rendered male figures. They were often larger than life, appearing in torn uniforms across ruined landscapes. By the end of the decade, Baselitz had inverted his figures. The motif became his calling card and persisted through the decades. Isaf writes, “What elevates Baselitz to the status of era-defining visionary is not his command of contour, for instance, or shadow, but of relationship—that is to say, the relationship between viewer and viewed.”

Art historians often situate Baselitz’s work alongside that of fellow Germans Gerhard Richter and Anselm Kiefer, who similarly wrestled with their country’s legacies of violence and repression. The artist has also been deemed a Neo-Expressionist for mounting what the New York Times called “a frontal attack on Minimalism and Conceptualism, the dominant ‘cool’ styles of the 1970s.” Isaf situates the artist within the world of Pop, “which most fully among contemporary movements could be said to take up manipulating the dimension of viewer relationship as its core concern.”

Baselitz mounted several high-profile exhibitions over his long career. In 1972, he exhibited in Documenta in Kassel, Germany. He represented Germany at the 1980 Venice Biennale. More recently, the Centre Pompidou opened a major retrospective in Paris in 2021, and White Cube and Gagosian, which also represent the artist, have presented solo shows in the past few years.

Baselitz continued working until his death. On May 6, the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, in Venice, will open “Eroi d’Oro.” The presentation will coincide with the 61st Venice Biennale and feature the artist’s most recent series of paintings, which depict self-portraits and renderings of Elke, the artist’s wife. She survives him, along with his sons, gallerists Daniel Blau and Anton Kern. In the obituary, Isaf writes, “[Baselitz’s] ultimate subject is and will always have been Elke. His final paintings, his portraits of him and her, honest, unflinching, and profoundly human, come to terms with all of what this means. They float suspended, inverted, among golden eternity and the many gilded worlds and lives they’ve lived together.”

Baselitz continued working until his passing. On May 6, the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, Venice will open “Eroi d’Oro.” The presentation will coincide with the 61st Venice Biennale and feature the artist’s most recent series of paintings. They depict self-portraits and renderings of Elke, the artist’s wife. She survives him, along with his sons, gallerists Daniel Blau and Anton Kern. In the obituary, Isaf writes: “[Baselitz’s] ultimate subject is and will always have been Elke. His final paintings, his portraits of him and her, honest, unflinching, and profoundly human, come to terms with all of what this means. They float suspended, inverted, among golden eternity and the many gilded worlds and lives they’ve lived together.”



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Thursday, April 30, 2026

Banksy statue appears in Central London.  https://ift.tt/H71Gnbd

A large statue that mysteriously appeared in central London earlier this week has been confirmed as the work of the street artist Banksy. The piece, which bears the artist’s signature, depicts a suited man carrying a flag that obstructs his face as he walks off a plinth.

It was installed in Banksy’s signature fly-by-night guerrilla style at Waterloo Place in St. James’s, central London, near other statues of figures from British history. The work is near statues of Edward VII and Florence Nightingale, as well as a memorial dedicated to the Crimean War. Also nearby is a gilded statue of Athena on the facade of the Athenaeum Club.

The work was installed in the early hours of Wednesday morning, while a video shared to Banksy’s social media this afternoon confirmed its authenticity after growing speculation. Crowds have gathered to take photos of the statue, and it is unclear how long it will remain in place.

“[Banksy has] pulled off another fantastic coup . . . the positioning is absolutely knockout,” said James Peak, the creator of the BBC podcast series The Banksy Story, in an interview with the BBC. “Here, you’ve got a brilliant comment on a bumptious, chest-puffed-out man in power with the flag completely obscuring his vision, which is why he is about to fall off the plinth. . . . I don’t know how he’s managed to do it.”

Banksy is best known for his graffiti, though he has installed statues elsewhere before, including one titled The Drinker (2004), which he placed in London’s West End in 2004. The piece was a play on The Thinker (1904), by Auguste Rodin, and was removed shortly thereafter.

Other recent public artworks by Banksy in London have included a mural at the Royal Courts of Justice last year and a series of animal artworks around the city in 2024.



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Pulp singer Jarvis Cocker and Kim Sion to curate 2027 Hepworth Wakefield show. https://ift.tt/FjzQHdY

Musician Jarvis Cocker and his wife, the creative consultant Kim Sion, will organize a sprawling group show at The Hepworth Wakefield in the United Kingdom next year. The exhibition, titled “The Hodge Podge,” will bring together a wide range of artworks across era and media, centered on artists who challenges conceptions of what is considered art. This is the Pulp frontman’s first curatorial effort at a major institution.

“The Hodge Podge” will create unlikely dialogues between artists such as Peter Doig, Barbara Hepworth, and Jeremy Deller, in addition to outsider artists and those who have never before shown in the U.K. The curatorial duo will explore a diverse array of themes including alternative spiritualities, psychedelia, fandom, dreams, poetry, and music as they interrogate self-expression as it exists beyond the traditional art world or religious contexts.

The couple have written a manifesto to introduce the show. They write, “The dictionary says: ‘a hodgepodge is a chaotic, disorderly mixture or a random assortment of diverse, unrelated things. It represents a jumble that lacks coherence or order.’ Yeah? Couldn’t that also be the dictionary definition of the word ‘world?’”

Cocker himself was the subject of a 2022 show at London’s The Gallery of Everything titled “Good Pop, Bad Pop - The Exhibition.” It coincided with the release of his eponymous book, a memoir through objects. “Jarvis Cocker has a long-held interest in art, attending St Martin’s College of Art & Design in the early 1990s, and as a Yorkshireman, felt like the ideal person to work with to consider a fresh way of thinking about and experiencing art,” The Hepworth Wakefield’s artistic director, Laura Smith, said in a press statement. “The art that he and Kim have gathered together in ‘The Hodge Podge’ will encourage the feelings of joy, marvel and curiosity that great works of art can inspire and offer our audiences an expanded idea of creativity and community. We are thrilled to be working with Jarvis and Kim on this incredibly exciting exhibition.”

The show will take place as part of Yorkshire Sculpture International 2027, which partners with The Hepworth Wakefield as well as Henry Moore Institute, Leeds Art Gallery, and Yorkshire Sculpture Park. Previous collaborations at The Hepworth Wakefield include shows with fashion designer Jonathan Anderson and ceramicist Magdalene Odundo.



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