For this entry in our series on women in design, we look at the work of Indian-Australian engineer Veena Sahajwalla, who’s bringing her passion for waste reduction to the interior design industry.
Next in our series about influential women in design, we look at the Glasgow Girls, a group of women in the early twentieth century who excelled in the art scene before they could even vote.
For the first article in our series on the powerhouse women who’ve changed the design industry, we look at graphic artist, digital innovator, and design educator, Muriel Cooper.
Dual towers on tiered garden platforms will provide a striking addition to the Shenzhen skyline, with Zaha Hadid Architects securing the highly sought-after Tower C contract.
With the design inspired by a painting of an Australian landscape, the new HOTA Gallery on the Gold Coast is set to become a cultural hub of both local and international art.
Rising sea levels and high-density housing needs are both obstacles for those who dream of a relaxed life on the waterfront, but this project could be the solution to both.
Garment and textile designs by artists and designers from the world’s oldest living culture have been collated in the Australian exhibition Piinpi: Contemporary Indigenous Fashion.
From giant spiders to tiny spinning tops, augmented reality (AR) sculptures play with the laws of physics in this curated selection of digital artworks, all available through your phone.
After extended closures due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) – the epicentre of Melbourne’s vibrant arts scene – is finally set to reopen to the public this month.
Nigerian artist Eniwaye Oluwaseyi highlights the difficulties of shared spaces in a vibrant exploration of identities, narratives, and power struggles, questioning how and by whom these elements of a person are defined.
German design firm 3deluxe have set themselves a lofty goal: reimagining New York’s iconic Times Square as a thoroughfare that prioritises pedestrians and sustainability.
Today marks the start of the largest creative festival in the Middle East, Dubai Design Week 2020, showcasing industries ranging from urban design and jewellery to technology and science.
A holiday on the high seas is about to get a whole lot more luxurious with the Scarlet Lady, the first in a line of four cruise ships operated by Virgin Voyages.
With so much technology in our lives, more and more people are deciding to keep it old-school in their workspaces, with whiteboards and the good old pen-and-paper replacing the use of even more screens.
The Austrian Cultural Forum New York (ACFNY)’s latest exhibition, Spaces of No Control, opened on Oct 1, centring on the modern city and urban dystopias in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
The National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) announced that the second edition of the landmark, city-wide exhibition, Melbourne NOW, will be centred at The Ian Potter Centre in 2023.
The Victorian Pride Centre will be the first of its kind in the country, designed to be a new home for many Australian LGBTQI+ organisations as well as a space for the community to come together.
Maxim Zhestkov is a Russian digital artist that we’ve been keeping an eye on for a while: his incredible art films of undulating structures in virtual gallery spaces are both beautiful and fascinating.
As the world collectively stays at home, one thing a lot of people are missing is visiting cultural sites: from theatres and monuments to museums and galleries.
Polar bears take on a vibrant aesthetic for Italian artist Paola Pivi’s collection We Are the Alaskan Tourists, showing between February 29 and September 20 at Denmark’s ARKEN museum.
Despite the unexpected turns 2020 has taken, Melbourne’s cityscape is continuing to evolve and grow, with the Australian Government bringing several construction projects forward.
Surrealism returns to the forefront of the art world with the works of Nicolas Party, a Swiss artist whose vivid pastels and immersive exhibitions has captured the attention of collectors and the public alike.
One of the biggest names in outdoor furniture, and definitely the biggest in woven furniture, is Dedon, the pioneering German company that is the only one to own and control its fibre production.
Goblins, ghosts, and shapeshifters are on display at the Art Gallery of NSW in Japan Supernatural, an exhibit featuring over 180 works from Japanese artists between the eighteenth century and the present.