Type
Event Status
Popularity
Start Time
Sound of Nashville präsentiert: Alexandra Kay - All I've ever known - The Tour | Cologne
5月12日 (UTC+1)
Cologne
Interzum 2025 | Koelnmesse
May 20–May 23, 2025 (UTC-5)
Cologne
Interzum 2025, the leading global event for the furniture and interior construction industries' supplying sections, will take place in Cologne at the esteemed Koelnmesse venue. From May 20th to May 23rd, this event will showcase the latest trends and visions that will shape future living spaces. With a focus on modern materials, outstanding design, and exclusive innovations, Interzum is the premier platform for industry professionals to explore and experience the cutting-edge advancements in the field. Located at Messepl. 1, 50679 Köln, Germany, this event will bring together experts, manufacturers, and designers from around the world. Attendees will have the opportunity to discover the most innovative products, connect with industry leaders, and gain valuable insights into the future of furniture and interior construction. Join us at Interzum 2025 and be a part of the global conversation that is shaping the future of living spaces.
Martin Wong: Works on Paper | Cologne
Feb 7–May 3, 2025 (UTC+1)
Cologne
Drawing was a crucial component and constant within Martin Wong’s various artistic practices. In our fifth solo exhibition dedicated to Martin Wong, we are showing an overview of his works on paper from 1968 to 1997.
Martin Wong was born in Portland, Oregon and grew up in North Beach, neighboring San Francisco’s Chinatown. After graduating high school in San Francisco, he studied ceramics at Humboldt State University in Arcata. His study of ceramics would exert an immense influence on his practice as a painter, particularly on his palette (with its earth reds, burnt siennas, ochers, and umbers) and his deep feeling for materials. After graduating from Humboldt State University in 1970, Wong traveled to Europe, the Middle East and Asia to work with local ceramic artists. Concurrent with his ceramics, Martin Wong developed a practice around calligraphy starting in the late 1960s, foreshadowing his lifelong interest in poetry, graffiti, and sign-language. Between 1970 and 1973, Martin Wong again lived in San Francisco, where he worked in the environment of the queer performance groups Cockettes and Angels of Lights, of which he was also a member for some time. After 1973, Wong returned to Humboldt County, where he concentrated on his painting over the next few years. In 1978, Martin Wong moved to New York and, beginning in the early 1980s, lived in the Lower East Side. Wong became part of the emerging art and poetry scene there and was also particularly interested in graffiti. In 1994, Martin Wong was diagnosed HIV-positive. Due to the better medical care in San Francisco, he decided to return to his parents, with whom he had a very close relationship. He stayed with them until his death in 1999.
Martin Wong: Works on Paper | Cologne
2025年2月7日–5月3日 (UTC+1)
Cologne
Drawing was a crucial component and constant within Martin Wong’s various artistic practices. In our fifth solo exhibition dedicated to Martin Wong, we are showing an overview of his works on paper from 1968 to 1997.
Martin Wong was born in Portland, Oregon and grew up in North Beach, neighboring San Francisco’s Chinatown. After graduating high school in San Francisco, he studied ceramics at Humboldt State University in Arcata. His study of ceramics would exert an immense influence on his practice as a painter, particularly on his palette (with its earth reds, burnt siennas, ochers, and umbers) and his deep feeling for materials. After graduating from Humboldt State University in 1970, Wong traveled to Europe, the Middle East and Asia to work with local ceramic artists. Concurrent with his ceramics, Martin Wong developed a practice around calligraphy starting in the late 1960s, foreshadowing his lifelong interest in poetry, graffiti, and sign-language. Between 1970 and 1973, Martin Wong again lived in San Francisco, where he worked in the environment of the queer performance groups Cockettes and Angels of Lights, of which he was also a member for some time. After 1973, Wong returned to Humboldt County, where he concentrated on his painting over the next few years. In 1978, Martin Wong moved to New York and, beginning in the early 1980s, lived in the Lower East Side. Wong became part of the emerging art and poetry scene there and was also particularly interested in graffiti. In 1994, Martin Wong was diagnosed HIV-positive. Due to the better medical care in San Francisco, he decided to return to his parents, with whom he had a very close relationship. He stayed with them until his death in 1999.
Martin Wong: Works on Paper | Cologne
2025年2月7日–5月3日 (UTC+1)
Cologne
Drawing was a crucial component and constant within Martin Wong’s various artistic practices. In our fifth solo exhibition dedicated to Martin Wong, we are showing an overview of his works on paper from 1968 to 1997.
Martin Wong was born in Portland, Oregon and grew up in North Beach, neighboring San Francisco’s Chinatown. After graduating high school in San Francisco, he studied ceramics at Humboldt State University in Arcata. His study of ceramics would exert an immense influence on his practice as a painter, particularly on his palette (with its earth reds, burnt siennas, ochers, and umbers) and his deep feeling for materials. After graduating from Humboldt State University in 1970, Wong traveled to Europe, the Middle East and Asia to work with local ceramic artists. Concurrent with his ceramics, Martin Wong developed a practice around calligraphy starting in the late 1960s, foreshadowing his lifelong interest in poetry, graffiti, and sign-language. Between 1970 and 1973, Martin Wong again lived in San Francisco, where he worked in the environment of the queer performance groups Cockettes and Angels of Lights, of which he was also a member for some time. After 1973, Wong returned to Humboldt County, where he concentrated on his painting over the next few years. In 1978, Martin Wong moved to New York and, beginning in the early 1980s, lived in the Lower East Side. Wong became part of the emerging art and poetry scene there and was also particularly interested in graffiti. In 1994, Martin Wong was diagnosed HIV-positive. Due to the better medical care in San Francisco, he decided to return to his parents, with whom he had a very close relationship. He stayed with them until his death in 1999.
Robert Adams & Josef Albers: The Discovery of Form | Galerie Thomas Zander
Mar 22–May 9, 2025 (UTC+1)
Cologne
With the American photographer Robert Adams (born 1937 in Orange, New Jersey) and Josef Albers (born 1888 in Bottrop, died 1976 in New Haven, Connecticut), Zander Galerie is presenting two outstanding protagonists of art after 1945 in conversation. While Adams’ photography focused on capturing the American West—from the vastness of the prairies through to the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Ocean—, Albers examined the effects colors generate when set in reciprocal relationships, foremost in the paintings of his Homage to the Square series which he worked on from 1950 to 1976.
Robert Adams & Josef Albers: The Discovery of Form | Galerie Thomas Zander
2025年3月22日–5月9日 (UTC+1)
Cologne
With the American photographer Robert Adams (born 1937 in Orange, New Jersey) and Josef Albers (born 1888 in Bottrop, died 1976 in New Haven, Connecticut), Zander Galerie is presenting two outstanding protagonists of art after 1945 in conversation. While Adams’ photography focused on capturing the American West—from the vastness of the prairies through to the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Ocean—, Albers examined the effects colors generate when set in reciprocal relationships, foremost in the paintings of his Homage to the Square series which he worked on from 1950 to 1976.
Robert Adams & Josef Albers: The Discovery of Form | Galerie Thomas Zander
2025年3月22日–5月9日 (UTC+1)
Cologne
With the American photographer Robert Adams (born 1937 in Orange, New Jersey) and Josef Albers (born 1888 in Bottrop, died 1976 in New Haven, Connecticut), Zander Galerie is presenting two outstanding protagonists of art after 1945 in conversation. While Adams’ photography focused on capturing the American West—from the vastness of the prairies through to the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Ocean—, Albers examined the effects colors generate when set in reciprocal relationships, foremost in the paintings of his Homage to the Square series which he worked on from 1950 to 1976.