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Pamela Zeplin

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Articles

  • Nov 1, 2023 | artasiapacific.com | HG Masters |Alison Carroll |Pamela Zeplin |John Hoskin

    Issue What is a monument? What values do monuments project into civic spaces? And what does it mean to work in a monumental format? The three-person collective Tromarama, comprised of Febie Babyrose, Herbert Hans, and Ruddy Hatumena, conceived of their moving-image work (2023) for the giant 65-by-110-meter screen on the M+ Facade as an intimate family tribute.

  • Nov 1, 2023 | artasiapacific.com | Béatrice Grenier |Alison Carroll |Pamela Zeplin |John Hoskin

    YU HONG, The Ship of Fools, 2021, acrylic on canvas, 250 × 900 × 5 cm. Courtesy the artist and Lisson Gallery.

  • Nov 1, 2023 | artasiapacific.com | Jennifer Piejko |Alison Carroll |Pamela Zeplin |John Hoskin

    Issue There is no surer welcome for a graffiti artist than the humble iron gate: ornamental, industrial, and imposing, these barred portals present irresistible frontiers that invite as much as they repel. For Norwegian artist Ida Ekblad the fence circling a bus depot in Oslo was once an oblique point of entry, a place into which she could drift and paint murals on the walls and roof, leave her mark, and turn a municipal complex into a summer hideout with her peers.

  • Nov 1, 2023 | artasiapacific.com | HG Masters |Alison Carroll |Pamela Zeplin |John Hoskin

    Issue What is a monument? What values do monuments project into civic spaces? And what does it mean to work in a monumental format? The three-person collective Tromarama, comprised of Febie Babyrose, Herbert Hans, and Ruddy Hatumena, conceived of their moving-image work (2023) for the giant 65-by-110-meter screen on the M+ Facade as an intimate family tribute.

  • Nov 1, 2023 | artasiapacific.com | Jennifer Piejko |Alison Carroll |Pamela Zeplin |John Hoskin

    Issue There is no surer welcome for a graffiti artist than the humble iron gate: ornamental, industrial, and imposing, these barred portals present irresistible frontiers that invite as much as they repel. For Norwegian artist Ida Ekblad the fence circling a bus depot in Oslo was once an oblique point of entry, a place into which she could drift and paint murals on the walls and roof, leave her mark, and turn a municipal complex into a summer hideout with her peers.

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