Monday, April 6, 2026

How to Take Great Photographs of Art, According to Artists https://ift.tt/4nBHhYw

In our age of ubiquitous information, visiting a gallery almost inevitably involves taking a photograph. Visitors lean in with their phones, framing paintings, sculptures, and installations (and sometimes other photographs) before moving on.

These small acts of preservation happen for many reasons. A show is finite; an image can retain the experience for longer, trigger memories when you’ve forgotten an artist’s name, act as a kind of virtual postcard, or help explain to someone else how it felt to encounter a once-in-a-lifetime exhibition.

Regardless, when we look back through those images, they tend not to capture what it felt like to stand in front of the artwork itself—the inspiration, awe, delight, or pure horror of seeing another’s creation.

We asked five photographers how they approach photographing artworks, and what they attempt to capture when they do.


1. Look for interesting details

The best photographs of artworks often begin with a simple question: Why did this work stop you?

For photographer Mohamed Hassan, photographing art isn’t about neutral documentation but retaining the experience of the encounter. “I’m less interested in a neutral reproduction and more interested in holding onto why it stopped me,” he told Artsy. Often, that response is tied to scale and intimacy: “When the artwork is small, I often feel an even stronger desire to photograph it. Small works feel more precious and intimate, and almost fragile. They require you to move closer, to slow down, to adjust your breathing. That closeness creates a private moment between you and the object.”

Rather than photographing everything, start there. What drew you in? What felt easily missed but deserving of attention? Your photograph can be a way of preserving that specific experience.


2. Get in close

Photographs can be a way of studying the artwork you’re capturing. Artist Ed Templeton, who produces paintings, photography, and drawings, often uses his phone as a tool for understanding how paintings are made: “As a painter, I might be working on something and can use the images. I shoot to dissect how a certain painter achieved something, how they used their materials and brushwork, and how it might inform me if I’m doing something similar,” he said. That curiosity often means “getting as close as the museum guards will let me.”

In this sense, a photograph becomes less a souvenir and more a reference—a way of building a visual archive. Templeton describes his approach as “practical,” even if he acknowledges the other impulse at play, which he admits to occasionally falling for: people photographing art “almost like a trophy or a celebrity, to prove that they were in the presence of a famous work.”

Being clear about what you’re looking for—detail, technique, composition—can shift how you frame the image.


3. Use the whole space

While some photos gain from capturing detail, other cropped images can flatten an artwork, stripping away what about the installation made the work impactful.

For Alexandra Gordienko, founder of MARFA Journal and a prolific photographer, context is crucial. She recalls Lisa Brice’s 2023 exhibition at Sadie Coles HQ in Bury Street, which featured just two paintings. “If you took a photograph and cropped it around the work, it would have looked like just another white space and the artwork,” she explained.

A wider shot, however, tells a different story—revealing “how sparsely the space was arranged, and how small the gallery was in relation to the artworks, how they sit in this historical building.” Sometimes the most meaningful photograph isn’t the closest one, but the one that captures how the work exists in space.


4. Notice (and accept) what you can’t photograph

Even the most careful photograph can’t reproduce the physical experience of encountering art. “Texture is hard to translate, and scale is sometimes hard to understand,” Templeton noted. For him, seeing Otto Dix’s monumental triptych The War (1932) in person was unexpectedly demystifying. “In close detail, some of the brushwork and the way the paint sat on the canvas was surprisingly simple,” he said. “It was very eye-opening.”

Photographer Martha Naranjo Sandoval recalls a similar shift when viewing a physical print of Graciela Iturbide’s La niña del peine (1980). Despite having seen the image depicting a girl with a comb many times, Sandoval had never noticed what lay beyond the doorway she stands in front of.

“The first time that I could see that something was happening behind the girl was when someone showed me a print,” she said. “It’s something so delicate and subtle that, if I had tried to photograph it on my phone, it wouldn’t have shown.”

Rather than seeing this as a failure, it’s worth embracing the gap; a photograph can’t fully preserve an artwork—it points back to an experience you can’t fully replicate.


5. Share what you love

Finally, it’s worth turning the question back on yourself. Artist Zora Sicher describes her phone as a tool for thinking through what she sees. “All I’m doing is making connections between different influences for myself.” Photographing becomes a way of processing—“feeling something about someone else’s brain,” and holding onto “the little piece of it that makes sense to me.”

At its simplest, the impulse is human, and a core part of Sicher’s practice: to share something that excites her with the world.

Rather than aiming for a perfect reproduction, it can be useful to think of your photograph as a response to what moved you.



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Basquiat’s most expensive work heads to Miami this June. https://ift.tt/S3Ux9pQ

The Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) will present Jean-Michel Basquiat’s record-breaking Untitled (1982) as part of “Basquiat: Figures, Signs, Symbols.” The show opens on June 25th, during the FIFA World Cup, and will feature nine paintings and one sculpture by the artist.

“As Miami prepares to welcome a global audience for the FIFA World Cup, Pérez Art Museum Miami offers an extraordinary opportunity to experience visual art from across the Americas,” said collector Kenneth C. Griffin, CEO of Citadel LLC, who is loaning the works in the show. “I am proud to partner with PAMM to present some of the greatest works by one of America’s most iconic artists, Jean-Michel Basquiat, whose art has a unique power to connect across communities and generations.”

Untitled (1982) is an iconic example of Basquiat’s paintings of the human head. The canvas features a giant skull with intense red-and-white eyes against a blue background. It sold for $110.5 million at Sotheby’s in 2017, to Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa, setting the artist’s auction record. At the time, it was the most expensive artwork by an American artist. Griffin is reported to have privately purchased the work from Maezawa for $200 million in 2024.

Other exhibition highlights include Untitled (Tenant) (1982), a portrait of a skeletal man throwing his arms up in discontent among burning city buildings, and In Italian (1982), a painting that features several human figures among enigmatic phrases such as “Diagram of the Heart Pumping Blood” and “Sangre Sangre.”

Megan Kincaid, curator of the Kenneth C. Griffin Collection, and PAMM director Franklin Sirmans are collaborating to curate the exhibition. Sirmans was previously involved in Basquiat’s posthumous 1992 retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art and in the Brooklyn Museum’s 2005 traveling exhibition of the artist’s work.

“This is a compelling moment to revisit Jean-Michel Basquiat not as a market phenomenon or pop icon, but as a rigorous, self-taught master of painting and form,” Sirmans said. “By bringing together works that are rarely seen in depth, we’re inviting audiences to slow down, to look closely, and to encounter a new way of understanding an artist whose name is universally known but whose complexity still demands deeper study.”



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Friday, April 3, 2026

Maurizio Cattelan launches a hotline to hear people confess their sins. https://ift.tt/2OqPKSY

Maurizio Cattelan, the Italian provocateur known for his art world stunts and pranks, is taking confessions from sinners in the United States. The Confessional, the artist’s latest performance artwork, asks the guilt-ridden to call a hotline and divulge their wrongdoings to the artist.

The hotline, which opened on April 2nd and can be dialed by anyone in the U.S. at +1 601-666-7466, will remain open through April 22nd. Cattelan will choose a number of confessions to be livestreamed on April 23rd, when the artist-as-priest will absolve these sins.

Cattelan’s performance ushers in the return of La Nona Ora (1999), a wax sculpture featuring Pope John Paul II reclining on a red carpet, his bottom half apparently smashed by a meteor. The title, which translates to “the ninth hour,” alludes to the death of Jesus Christ on the cross. London-based online platform Avant Arte has released a miniature version of the sculpture in an edition of 666.

“Catholicism is something you grow up inside, even if you try to step out of it. It’s belief, theater, control, comfort, all at once. I’m not trying to defend it or attack it,” Cattelan told the Guardian. “I’m interested in the images it produces and the tension they carry. If someone feels offended, it probably means the image is still alive.”

At first, Cattelan simply created a sculpture of the pope holding a crucifix. “When it was finished, and I stood in front of it, I felt as if something was missing, that the piece was not complete,” he told Sculpture magazine in 2005. “What it needed was very simple: It lacked drama and the capacity to convey the feeling of being in front of something extraordinary and powerful. It didn’t have the sense of failure and defeat.”

The original La Nona Ora certainly sparked that drama when Cattelan revealed the sculpture in 1999. In 2000, a pair of Polish politicians removed the meteorite from the sculpture while it was on display at the Zachęta National Gallery of Art in Warsaw. As with many of Cattelan’s works, the outcry and controversy created a lucrative buzz. It sold for $886,000 at Christie’s New York in 2001. Three years later, Phillips, de Pury & Company auctioned another version for $3 million.



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5 Standout Shows to See at Small Galleries This April https://ift.tt/2wxvOSz

MAMA DEE, 2025
Eniwaye Oluwaseyi
Zidoun-Bossuyt

CNALB 2, 2026
Ramon Enrich
Cadogan Gallery

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


Ramón Enrich

Dos Verds | Un Blau

Cadogan Gallery, London

Through Apr. 25th

VILLA GRAN , 2026
Ramon Enrich
Cadogan Gallery

Doorways puncture flattened, geometric landscapes in Ramón Enrich’s paintings. The apertures are set into blank walls and empty courtyards, imbuing these surreal structures with a sense of mystery. A selection of these architecture-obsessed works is on view in “Dos Verds | Un Blau” at London’s Cadogan Gallery.

Enrich’s paintings are rendered in muted, sunstruck palettes, with late-day shadows falling across the canvas. Some works focus on a single building. PORTA 3 (2026), for example, features an entryway jutting out from a large building. The artist adds scale with a sharp, oval tree sprouting from the ground. Meanwhile, CNALB 2 (2026) zooms out into a much larger, labyrinthine structure. These dreamlike settings channel the artist’s love for urban design. “My true passion is architecture,” he said in an interview. “I’ve found a more frivolous outlet for it in painting, where I can create landscapes illuminated by two or three suns.”

Born near Barcelona in 1968, Enrich first studied at the School of Fine Arts in Barcelona before graduating in graphic arts at Gremi d’Arts Grafiques de Catalunya in 1990. In the 1990s, the Spanish artist moved to New York, where he worked as Julian Schnabel’s assistant. He has recently had solo exhibitions at Cadogan’s Milan location in 2025 and at Singapore’s Richard Koh Fine Art in 2024.


Sumit Mehndiratta

Nailed-It

Galerie P6 Berlin, online

Through May 2nd

Nailed It series no. 172, 2025
Sumit Mehndiratta
Galerie P6 Berlin

One word best defines Sumit Mehndiratta’s wide-ranging art practice: experimentation. The Indian artist taught himself how to make art by trying out a range of media, from abstract oil paintings to irregularly shaped plastic sculptures. “My art is more about the playfulness and excitement of how beautiful visual patterns and color can emerge during improvisation,” he said on his website. That ethos carries through Galerie P6 Berlin’s online exhibition of Mehndiratta’s mesmerizing geometric textile wall sculptures.

Nailed-It” features a selection of Mehndiratta’s series by the same name, in which he meticulously places nails on teak wood panels and weaves in multicolored textiles to create hypnotic patterns. Nailed It series no. 160 (2021) is constructed around three “V”-shaped peaks, across which neon yellow, pink, green, and orange are layered together in a waveform-like pattern. Another work from the series, Nailed It series no. 180 (2025) uses grayscale fibers to create a shape that resembles contorted, battered metal sculptures.

Mehndiratta first pursued a career in fashion, graduating with a master’s in fashion marketing from Manchester Metropolitan University. The artist held a solo show at Paris’s galerie bruno massa in 2023.


Janny Baek

Life Forms

Joy Machine, Chicago

Through May 9th

Prismatic Walking Cloud, 2023
Janny Baek
Joy Machine

Flower Power, 2024
Janny Baek
Joy Machine

All of Janny Baek’s candy-colored ceramics look as if they were plucked from a radioactive coral reef. The sculpture Flower Power (2024), for instance, is a bulbous form that evokes some hybrid organism with an undulating blue surface. Decorated with a protruding eye and a red heart, this playful—and disturbing—form suggests organic mutations. This work is part of Baek’s debut solo show at Joy Machine in Chicago.

Baek handcrafts these ceramic forms using a Japanese pottery technique known as nerikomi, in which a sculpture is layered with multicolored designs to create a striated final product. Color gradients, for Baek, are a way of thinking about “natural processes.” So in Prismatic Walking Cloud (2023), a swelling, cumulus form is marked by shifting colors. In an interview with designboom, she described color gradients as symbolic to the “continuous nature of change,” understanding the “multitude of colors as potential, abundance, and vitality, and patterns as signals and communications.”

Born in Seoul and raised in New York, Baek currently lives in downtown Manhattan. After graduating with a BFA in ceramics from Rhode Island School of Design, she pursued her master’s in architecture at Harvard. She founded her firm, McMahon-Baek Architecture, in 2014, and briefly paused her ceramics practice before resuming in 2019.


Postcards

Mama Projects, New York

Through Apr. 23rd

Late Afternoon, July, 2026
Kayla Risko
Mama Projects

Postcards suggest morsels of experiences. We send them to mark where we’ve been, even if we don’t say that much on them. In “Postcards” at New York’s Mama Projects, a group of five artists works at this same miniature scale, presenting fleeting, self-contained images.

Chicago-based artist Kayla Risko focuses on the fleeting moments of the day in her paintings, where figures appear lost in thought. Late Afternoon, July (2026), for instance, shows a girl in a yellow dress staring out into the ocean. Likewise, Brazilian artist Adriel Visoto treats painting as a way to archive his life, documenting overlooked moments from the day-to-day. One work in the show, Little nap II (from the series: Sunday blues) (2023), features a sleeping dog rendered in soft blue tones. Meanwhile, Mexican artist Sebastián Hidalgo explores dreamy, uncanny ideas in works like Gatos y fotones (Cats and Photons) (2026), which features two floating cats suspended among balls of energy.


Eniwaye Oluwaseyi

Buried Roots Up in the Air Part 1” and “Buried Roots Up in the Air Part 2

Zidoun-Bossuyt, Luxembourg City and Paris

Through Apr. 25th and May 2nd, respectively

The story of Space and time, 2025
Eniwaye Oluwaseyi
Zidoun-Bossuyt

Home is a memory for Eniwaye Oluwaseyi, who immigrated from Nigeria to Amsterdam in 2023. He paints intimate yet distanced paintings of family and friends, inhabiting domestic space, inspired largely by his personal archive of photographs. These works combine the formality of mid-century studio portraiture with expressive color and layered surfaces. Oluwaseyi presents a series of new works in parallel solo exhibitions with Zidoun-Bossuyt in Luxembourg and Paris: “Buried Roots Up in the Air Part 1” and “Buried Roots Up in the Air Part 2,” respectively.

These dual exhibitions explore how memory is inherited through place and lived experience. The story of Space and time (2025) is a portrait featuring a family of four seated on the couch with a solemn, sculptural stillness that gives the sense of a staged photograph. Rather than a personal experience, it seems like an artifact, preserved for an archive. One standout portrait, MAMA DEE (2025), features a poised woman in an intricately patterned dress, her steady gaze fixed on the viewer. These paintings echo the work of other contemporary Black portrait painters, like Kerry James Marshall, in their quiet assertion of Black presence.

Oluwaseyi studied agricultural and biosystems engineering at the University of Ilorin in Nigeria and is a self-taught artist. His work has been acquired by the Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) and Xiao Museum in Rizhao, China, among others.



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Thursday, April 2, 2026

Meet the Gallerists Trading White Cubes for Unconventional Architecture https://ift.tt/zouvIbG

Entering the “white cube” of a contemporary art gallery is like entering a liminal state. Artworks appear to float free of context, stripped bare from the noise of the outside world.

Though the term itself entered the art world lexicon in 1976 with critic Brian O’Doherty’s three-part Artforum essay titled “Inside the White Cube,” the proliferation of these spaces runs concurrent with the rise of modern art.

Vienna’s Secession Building was one of the first major sites to incorporate white walls in the last gasp of the 19th century. It paved the way for the Museum of Modern Art’s inaugural director, Alfred Barr, to standardize the hue upon the museum’s opening in New York City in 1929—a move that turned the white cube into an institutional staple.

This design remains the orthodoxy nearly a century later—for good reason. The neutrality of these cubes focuses the viewer’s attention solely on the work, allowing for deeper reflection. It’s also very easy to replicate anywhere in the world, as long as you have enough white paint and bright lights.

This staging—now ubiquitous across the art world—offers familiarity, but it also inspires rigidity. Within a rapidly shifting industry, a growing crop of gallerists is bucking the trend, moving from the ease of a white cube to complex narratives staged within unconventional architecture.

From a former tenement building in Hong Kong to an 18th-century Hamptons farmhouse, the character and history of the buildings are becoming just as important as the works that appear within them.

These imperfect environments alter how works are staged. In London, two young galleries present congruent case studies in balancing convention with experimentation. Helen Neven’s namesake gallery in East London occupies a disused taxi office across the road from the Young V&A museum, the result of a hunt for “somewhere with a history and character that might leak through a little,” she explained to Artsy.

Accessible via a heavy steel door set below the last vestiges of the old cab business’s faded lettering, the interior is punctuated by odd recesses and mismatched ceiling heights that disrupt the ideal of cubic perfectionism.


In northwest London, meanwhile, Chilli Gallery founder Aubrey Higgin created two distinct exhibition spaces within a former Japanese restaurant: The ground floor, with its wall of windows and large footprint, serves as the more conventional area, while the tiled, labyrinthine basement (formerly used as the kitchen) provides a more peculiar curatorial playground.

“Both draw out different dialogues,” Chilli’s assistant director, Max Rumbol, told Artsy. In a show earlier this year, “Split Studies,” Willa Cosinuke’s tessellated paintings—made of a series of interlocking panels—played off the basement’s discordant surfaces, including a metal security shutter.

While some galleries have embraced the grain of these commercial roots, others have taken a softer turn. In both the rustic 18th-century farmhouse of Amagansett’s Galerie Sardine and the former private home of Francis Gallery founder Rosa Park in Los Angeles, shows are imbued with a familial intimacy.

“The white cube is an extraordinary tool for focus, but it can also create a kind of distance,” Galerie Sardine co-founder Valentina Akerman told Artsy. “In a domestic setting, the work instead shares space with books, tables—signs of everyday life. Rather than diminishing the work, that context can deepen the relationship; the art becomes perhaps less monumental, more intimate, but also more present.”

Park echoed this observation. “People tend to feel far more at ease coming to see work in a home than in a white cube—even when it’s the same gallery putting on the show,” she told Artsy. “There’s perhaps a touch of voyeurism in it too: a curiosity about how others live, how a space is inhabited.”

Though Francis Gallery’s permanent location is on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles, Park is perhaps best known for her residential concepts; alongside a handful of shows in her own Spanish Colonial home last year, which enforced a strict “no social media” policy, she’s also recently staged a presentation of John Zabawa’s paintings in late artist Richard Neutra’s modernist VDL Research House in L.A.


This pivot from sterility to domesticity is, in some ways, a homecoming for the art world. During the Dutch Golden Age of the 17th century, a booming middle class emerged, and art production exploded as families filled their homes with art—an activity once reserved solely for the elite. While the white cube may be the de facto way to exhibit works in many galleries and institutions today, art has also always existed outside this model.

Salons, which affix as many works as possible onto a wall, have operated since the first official Paris Salon in 1667, while nomadic, pop-up galleries in homes and empty shopfronts have offered a cost-effective means of showing and selling art for decades. Still, the accelerant spurring a fresh wave of cube-free spaces traces back, like many things, to the pandemic.

After an industry-disrupting pause that forced art to be consumed through screens (its own kind of liminal white cube), gallerists are responding to an appetite for a more participatory relationship with art; one that embraces, rather than eliminates, context. When husband-and-wife duo Lorraine Kiang and Edouard Malingue of Kiang Malingue began converting a ’60s-era tenement building into their new Hong Kong headquarters in 2022, context was elemental.

Alongside Beau Architects, they stripped back the storied building to its foundations, preserving its history while reimagining what the site could offer. Two floors of the six-story building were removed to create a stack of concrete, double-height galleries.

A windowless white-cube zone, meanwhile, provides a touch of the traditional, and a library, tea area, and rooftop terrace retain some of the structure’s heritage.

Together, these elements reflect a balanced push to respond to the moment. “The public is expecting more than a sales pitch. It’s not enough for a work to be ‘cool’ and ‘going up in value.’ No one believes this in the current market,” Malingue told Artsy.

“The public is looking for a more unique, meaningful experience. A domestic space in a cherished neighborhood is part of the answer.”



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$17.9 million Raja Ravi Varma painting sets new record for Indian painting at auction. https://ift.tt/BaiJVFN

Raja Ravi Varma’s Yashoda and Krishna (ca. 1890s) sold for ₹1.67 billion rupees ($17.9 million) at the Saffronart auction in Delhi on April 1st, becoming the most expensive painting to sell at auction by an Indian artist. It was sold to pharmaceutical billionaire Cyrus Poonawalla, founder of the Serum Institute of India. (All figures include fees.)

Yashoda and Krishna portrays a tender scene in which the Hindu deity Krishna hugs his foster mother, Yashoda, as she milks a cow. The young Krishna stands in waiting with a small golden cup, with a playful yet impatient look on his face.

Varma, born in 1848, is considered one of the pioneers of modern Indian painting. He is perhaps best known for his realistic depictions of scenes from the Mahabharata and Ramayana, two of Hinduism’s most famous epic poems. Varma achieved international stature during his lifetime, notably securing an award at the 1873 Vienna Exhibition and later winning two gold medals at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago.

“Varma’s genius lies in this very balance: the sacred rendered through the familiar,” The Ravi Varma Heritage Foundation wrote of Yashoda and Krishna on its Instagram. “The textures of silk, the gleam of jewelry, the softness of skin, and the gentle stillness of the cow together create a scene that is both devotional and intimate.”

Varma’s previous auction record was set in 2023, when another painting of the same Yashoda and Krishna scene, Yashoda Krishna (n.d.) sold for $4.5 million at Pundole’s auction house in Mumbai.

Varma is one of just nine artists designated “national art treasures” by the official government Indian Art and Antiquities Act of 1972, meaning that works by these artists cannot travel overseas. Other artists include Rabindranath Tagore, Abanindranath Tagore, Gaganendranath Tagore, Amrita Sher-Gil, Jamini Roy, Nandalal Bose, Nicholas Roerich, and Sailoz Mookherjea.

Before this sale, the most expensive Indian painting at auction was M.F. Husain’s Untitled (Gram Yatra) (1954), which sold for $13.75 million at Christie’s New York in March 2025. Before that, the record was held by Hungarian Indian painter Amrita Sher-Gil’s The Story Teller (1937), which sold for $7.4 million at Saffronart in Mumbai in September 2023.



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Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Jeff Koons unveils new collaboration with French water brand Evian. https://ift.tt/XoVY0eB

Jeff Koons and French spring water brand Evian have unveiled a new water bottle collaboration. The announcement, made April 1st, is genuinely not an April Fool’s prank.

To celebrate the water company’s 200th anniversary, Koons designed a specialty bottle featuring images of his iconic “Balloon Dog” sculptures. Evian, the luxury water brand founded in 1827, released still and sparkling varieties of the collaboration. Both bottles read “200 Years Young: Jeff Koons” beneath the logo. The still version features a pink balloon dog, while the sparkling water is adorned with a blue balloon dog.

Koons debuted his “Balloon Dog” in 1994. The first iteration was part of his “Celebration” series, which featured some 20 massive sculptures of balloon animals, inflatable animals, and easter eggs, among other party-associated ephemera. He made several more over the years. These are among the most in-demand artworks ever made. Balloon Dog (Orange) (1994–2000), for instance, sold for $58.4 million at Christie’s in 2023, the fifth most expensive artwork sold by a living artist at auction.

“When Evian approached me, the message about youth immediately resonated with me,” Koons said in a press statement. “I chose to incorporate my ‘Balloon Dog’ into the design because it not only echoes the iconic status of the brand itself, but also embodies the spirit of celebration, playfulness, curiosity, and the joy of creating, a moment that feels both life-giving and uplifting.”

Evian also released a photoshoot featuring its brand ambassador to commemorate the 200th anniversary. In one image, Koons sits on a pink Evian crate, surrounded by Spanish tennis player Carlos Alcaraz, British tennis player Emma Raducanu, American tennis player Frances Tiafoe, and French golfer Céline Boutier. The setting is the French Alps, where the titular Evian spring is located.



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How to Take Great Photographs of Art, According to Artists https://ift.tt/4nBHhYw

In our age of ubiquitous information, visiting a gallery almost inevitably involves taking a photograph. Visitors lean in with their phones...

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