‘Titanic: The Digital Resurrection’ Unveils an Unprecedented View of the Harrowing Maritime Disaster

‘Titanic: The Digital Resurrection’ Unveils an Unprecedented View of the Harrowing Maritime Disaster

In the summer of 2022, a team of deep-sea researchers spent six weeks in the North Atlantic Ocean at a remote site about 370 nautical miles off the coast of Newfoundland. The final resting place of RMS Titanic, which sank on April 14, 1912, the ocean floor bears the magnificent remains of the 883-foot-long vessel. When the ship disembarked from Southampton, England, it carried more than 2,200 passengers and crew, but only about 700 were rescued after it struck an iceberg.

Using remotely operated underwater vehicles, scientists explored the wreck from a range of vantage points, expanding their survey across a debris field that stretches as wide as three miles. The aim of this expedition revolved around capturing an unprecedented digital view of the ship, enabling a lifelike, virtual reconstruction.

Two submersibles captured a whopping 16 terabytes of data, comprising 715,000 images and a high-resolution video. The files were processed and assembled over the course of seven months to create what Atlantic Productions head Anthony Geffen describes as a “one-to-one digital copy, a ‘twin,’ of the Titanic in every detail.”

Released last Friday, Titanic: The Digital Resurrection chronicles the monumental task of capturing the footage and creating a never-before-seen view of the famous site. Produced by Atlantic Productions and National Geographic, the film follows the crew of deep-sea investigation outfit Magellan as they explored the iconic, hulking remains.

“Accurate to the rivet,” a statement says, the film traces nearly two years of research by historians, scientists, and engineers. “Their mission is to review and challenge long-held assumptions, including reconstructing a minute-by-minute timeline of the tragedy to uncover new insights into the ship’s final moments on that fateful night in 1912.”

Titanic: The Digital Resurrection is now streaming on Disney+ and Hulu.

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In Elaborate ‘Textile Paintings,’ Anne von Freyburg Reframes Femininity in European Art History

In Elaborate ‘Textile Paintings,’ Anne von Freyburg Reframes Femininity in European Art History

As if splashed onto the wall with a monumental brush, Anne von Freyburg’s installations visualize fabric and fiber as gestural splotches of paint. Colors bleed into one another and drips extend to the floor in what the London-based Dutch artist describes as “textile paintings.”

Drawing on 17th and 18th-century European painting traditions like the still lifes of the Dutch Golden Age and the stylized exuberance of Rococo, von Freyburg reframes relationships between craft and fine art.

an abstract, oval composition made from quilted textile with a colorful fringe bordering the bottom
“Fantasia (After Boucher, Venus and Cupid)” (2022), textile painting: acrylic ink, synthetic-fabrics, tapestry-fabric, sequin fabrics, hand-embroidery, polyester wadding, and hand-dyed tassel fringes on canvas, 144 x 195 centimeters

References to Rococo artists like Jean-Honoré Fragonard and François Boucher play prominently in von Freyburg’s solo exhibition, Filthy Cute, at Saatchi Gallery. Tapping into “the clichés of heterosexual romance and societal expectations of women…she explores the pressures women face, particularly the expectations of being ‘caretakers’ and ‘pleasers,’” says a statement. Von Freyburg turns her attention to themes of compassion, freedom, and women as sovereign individuals.

Filthy Cute celebrates sensuality and the feminine while highlighting unexpected associations between materials. The artist’s abstract compositions often reference florals that are blurred, dripping, and verging on complete abstraction. Glossy fabrics in a range of colors swirl without fully mixing, resulting in sensual shapes that are beguiling and strange.

Von Freyburg describes one undergirding theme as “commodity fetishism,” tapping into the 17th-century fashion for Dutch floral still lifes and the infamous economic speculation bubble that characterized Tulip Mania between 1634 and 1637.

The show continues through May 11 in London, running concurrently Flowers: Flora in Contemporary Art and Culture, which also includes work by von Freyburg. Find more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

a monumental, abstract wall installation that appears to be cascading in purple, teal, and pink hues
“Electric Feel (After Fragonard, The Pursuit)” (2025), textile painting: acrylic ink, synthetic fabrics, PVC fabric, tapestry-fabric, sequin fabrics, hand-embroidery, polyester wadding, and hand-dyed tassel fringes on canvas, 350 x 250 centimeters
a detail of a monumental, abstract wall installation that appears to be cascading in purple, teal, and pink hues
Detail of “Electric Feel (After Fragonard, The Pursuit)”
a detail of a monumental, abstract wall installation that appears to be cascading in purple, teal, and pink hues
Detail of “Electric Feel (After Fragonard, The Pursuit)”
a wall-mounted abstract textile artwork with a shiny black border and long black fringe at the bottom, with colorful, almost floral quilted patterns in the center
“Kabloom (After Jan van Huysum, Flower still-life)” (2024), acrylic ink, synthetic-fabrics, PVC fabric, tapestry-fabric, sequin fabrics, hand-embroidery, polyester wadding, and hand-dyed tassel fringes on canvas, 230 x 130 centimeters
“Tuttifrutti (After Jan van Huysum, Flower still-life)” (2024), acrylic ink, synthetic-fabrics, PVC fabric, tapestry-fabric, sequin fabrics, hand-embroidery, polyester wadding, and hand-dyed tassel fringes on canvas, 235 x 135 centimeters
a detail of a monumental, abstract wall installation that appears to be cascading or bleeding a range of neon colors, as if the medium has been thrown at the wall and it is dripping down to the floor
Detail of “Sunny Side Up (After Fragonard, The Lover Crowned)”
an installation view in a large, white-walled gallery space of three large-scale wall installations
Installation view of ‘Filthy Cute’ at Saatchi Gallery, London

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An Ikebana Artist and His Student Sow an Unconventional Approach to Flower Arranging

An Ikebana Artist and His Student Sow an Unconventional Approach to Flower Arranging

“I want to explode the idea of beautiful ikebana,” says Kosen Ohtsubo, one of the foremost conceptual artists working in the Japanese tradition.

Since the 1970s, Ohtsubo has been unsettling the ancient art of flower arranging. Incorporating atypical botanicals like cabbage leaves or weaving in unconventional materials like bathtubs and scrap metal, the artist approaches making with the mindset of a jazz musician, a genre he frequently listens to while working. Improvisation and experimentation are at the core, along with an unquenchable desire for the unexpected.

a close up image of a large orb-like installation made of flowers
Detail of Kosen Ohtsubo, “Linga München” (2025), 300 Basket willow branches, candle, metal frame, plastic and metal ties, scrap metal, soil, various flowers and leaves

An exhibition at Kunstverein München in Munich pairs Ohtsubo with Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham who, after discovering the ikebana icon’s work in a book in 2013, became his student. Titled Flower Planet—which references a sign that hangs outside Ohtsubo’s Tokorozawa home and studio—the show presents various sculptures and installations that invite viewers to consider fragility, decay, and the elusive qualities of beauty and control.

Given the ephemeral nature of the materials, photography plays an important role in most ikebana practices as it preserves an arrangement long after it has wilted. This exhibition, therefore, pairs images of earlier works with new commissions, including Ohtsubo’s standout orb titled “Linga München.” Nested in a bed of soil and leaves, the large-scale sculpture wraps willow with metal structures and positions a small candle within its center.

Similarly immersive is “Willow Rain,” which suspends thin branches from the ceiling. Subverting the way we typically encounter fields of growth, the work is one of many in the exhibition that seeds questions about our relationship to the natural world and the limits of human control.

Flower Planet is on view through April 21. Explore Ohstubo’s vast archive on Instagram.

a bust covered in green leaves
Kosen Ohtsubo, “ケロイド人間 / Keloid Man” (August 1976), mannequin, paulownia. First published in Ikebana Ryusei Magazine, October 1976. Photo by Ryusei Photo Department
a close up image peering through an orb of flowers and stems to reveal a candle nested in a pool of soil and flowers below
Detail of Kosen Ohtsubo, “Linga München” (2025), 300 Basket willow branches, candle, metal frame, plastic and metal ties, scrap metal, soil, various flowers and leaves
an installation of grass dangling from the ceiling
Kosen Ohtsubo, “Willow Rain” (2025), 800 basket willow branches, metal frame
a field of fluffy grasses in a white cube gallery
Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham, “Corruption”
green fronds hang over a basket with orange flowers in the center
Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham, “Penny Waking up from a Dream” (2025), carrot, Chinese long bean,
reflecting sphere, Japanese woven bamboo basket
carrots with green stems peeking out from a basket
Detail of Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham, “Penny Waking up from a Dream” (2025), carrot, Chinese long bean, reflecting sphere, Japanese woven bamboo basket
a close up image of a pool of soil and flowers
Detail of Kosen Ohtsubo, “Linga München” (2025), 300 Basket willow branches, candle, metal frame, plastic and metal ties, scrap metal, soil, various flowers and leaves
white lilies emerge from a square vase with wooden reeds forming an arch
Kosen Ohtsubo, “怪芋III / Strange Callas III” (2025), Calla lily, willow, custom-designed iron box

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Melding Craft and Sustainability, Richard Haining Sculpts Sleek Vessels from Reclaimed Wood

Melding Craft and Sustainability, Richard Haining Sculpts Sleek Vessels from Reclaimed Wood

Renewal is at the center of Richard Haining’s practice. The Brooklyn-based artist and designer (previously) sculpts supple vessels and functional goods from reclaimed wood sourced from local workshops or buildings destined for demolition. Intrigued by signs of wear and former uses, Haining has a deep reverence for the material and its history.

In his ongoing STACKED series, small offcuts nest together in intuitively laid grids. An angle grinder and hand tools help to smooth any jagged edges and create the soft, sleek forms Haining is known for.

a wooden vessel with curved handles

The artist shares that his inspiration comes from a wide array of sources, “from Classical Antiquity to East Asian design (to) 17th-century European Craftsmanship.” His holy trinity, though, is beauty, craftsmanship, and mindfulness for the environment. He adds:

By juxtaposing repurposed ‘low-value’ materials with ‘high-art’ forms, I invite viewers to reconsider what is truly valuable. Ultimately, I hope to spark a conversation about sustainability, showing that art, craftsmanship, and environmental responsibility can coexist—and that beauty can emerge from the most unexpected places.

Haining is participating in two group exhibitions in New York, one at Lyle Gallery through April 20 and Paraphernalia Exhibition: Desire opening on May 7. Follow the latest on Instagram.

detail of a curved wooden handle
a wooden vessel made of small pieces of wood stacked together
a wooden vessel made of small pieces of wood stacked together
a detail image of a wooden vessel made of stacked pieces in varied colors
a wooden vessel made of small pieces of wood stacked together
a detail image of a wooden vessel made of stacked pieces in varied colors
a wooden light fixture made of small pieces of wood stacked together
a wooden light fixture made of small pieces of wood stacked together
a wooden lamp made of small pieces of wood stacked together
a wooden sconce made of small pieces of wood stacked together

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How Do You Honor an Artist? A Daughter Grapples with Continuing Her Mother’s Legacy

How Do You Honor an Artist? A Daughter Grapples with Continuing Her Mother’s Legacy

Anyone who’s stood to inherit a family business knows the difficulty of charting one’s own course. “Legacy is complicated,” says Violet Oliphant-O’Neill, the daughter of the wildly prolific artist Sarah Oliphant. “(When you have) parents who are successful, being their child is complicated.”

Directed by Anna Louise Andersen, “The Promise of Spring” is an intimate portrait of a mother and daughter and the struggle of inheriting a parent’s passion. The film visits Oliphant Studios, which has painted backdrops gracing the covers of Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, and The New York Times and stood behind icons like Michelle Obama and Simone Biles, to name a few. It’s been in operation since 1978.

Oliphant’s output is revered globally, but for her daughter, stepping into an essential role in the studio isn’t simple. The film follows the pair as they work together and unravels each of their journeys to art-making—Oliphant through a natural proclivity that began in childhood and Oliphant-O’Neill by way of her mother.

As Andersen writes, the film grapples with “the tension between honoring family traditions and creating one’s own destiny.”

Watch “The Promise of Spring of Above,” and find more from the filmmaker on Vimeo.

a younger woman sits on the floor while an older woman paints a canvas with a roller

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Geometric Scaffolding Structures Geoffrey Todd Smith’s Gouache-and-Ink Portraits

Geometric Scaffolding Structures Geoffrey Todd Smith’s Gouache-and-Ink Portraits

From the center of a gridded structure made of striped orbs and oblong shapes are two elements redolent of eyes. Seeming to peer out from the largely abstract composition, these facial features are augmented by forms that mimic ears, noses, and mouths all nested within the vivid patterns.

The work of Chicago-based artist Geoffrey Todd Smith, these ambiguous portraits rendered in gouache and ink reference masks or mirrored reflections, revealing a distant figure without a defined identity. “To be honest, I keep thinking of them as evolving forms,” he tells Colossal. “I try to find new things in them when I look at them. I’m not entirely sure I want to figure them out because I probably won’t want to make them if I understand them.”

an abstract symmetric work with colorful geometries and delicate linework reminiscent of a face and in a white frame
“Picture of Dorian Greige” (2024), gouache and ink on paper, 24 x 22 inches

Continually drawn to abstraction and geometry, Smith is known for his mesmerizing works that infuse elaborate, often zigzagged motifs with simple structures. Vibrant spheres seem to spill across the paper, creating trippy, symmetric compositions bursting with energy.

The artist departs from pure abstraction in this new body of work as he incorporates humanoid components amid his interlocked shapes. Geometry still provides a scaffolding, though. He adds:

If there is a break from logic, that sense of order can quickly collapse, creating tension, sort of like removing the bottom pieces in a game of Jenga. Either way, geometry helps me construct a sort of game board to which I respond with more decorative or ornamental decisions. Even the decorative hand-drawn elements play an optical and structural role. They either assert or interfere with order, depending on how I manipulate them.

These ornamental additions are the product of a slow, introspective process. Smith prefers not to mix colors and instead layers materials to achieve a particular palette.

an abstract symmetric work with colorful geometries and delicate linework reminiscent of a face and in a white frame
“Medieval Knievel” (2025), gouache and ink on paper, 33 x 29 inches

“The mark from a gel pen is so immediate and relatable. I like that they were marketed to teenagers because nobody feels quite as deeply as they do at that age,” he says. “I think of the intensity and rigor of my marks as mysterious emoting or like writing a gut-wrenching, abstract love letter.”

If you’re in Chicago, you can see Smith’s solo show Assembly at Western Exhibitions through April 12. Otherwise, find more of his work on his website and Instagram.

an abstract symmetric work with colorful geometries and delicate linework on an aqua background
“Frock Of Regals” (2023), gouache and ink on paper, 22 x 30 inches
an abstract symmetric work with colorful geometries and delicate linework reminiscent of a face and in a white frame
“King Cobralabra” (2024), gouache, acrylic and ink on paper, 24 x 22 inches
an abstract symmetric work with colorful geometries and delicate linework reminiscent of a face and in a white frame
“Beastmaster General” (2024), gouache and ink on paper, 24 x 22 inches
an abstract symmetric work with colorful geometries and delicate linework reminiscent of a face and in a white frame
“Mixed-Message Magician” (2025), acrylic, gouache, and ink on paper, 37 1/2 x 29 inches
an abstract symmetric work with colorful geometries and delicate linework on a purple background and in a white frame
“Chicago Armadillo” (2023), acrylic, gouache, and ink on paper, 30 x 22 1/4 inches
an abstract symmetric work with colorful geometries and delicate linework on a black background and in a white frame
“Atom Bomb Boom Box” (2023), acrylic, gouache, and ink on paper, 30 x 22 1/4 inches
an abstract symmetric work with colorful geometries and delicate linework on a gray background
“Molotov Pineapple” (2023), acrylic, gouache, and ink on paper, 22 1/4 x 30 inches

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In Hyperrealistic Oil Paintings, Chloe West Summons Magical Realism in the American West

In Hyperrealistic Oil Paintings, Chloe West Summons Magical Realism in the American West

Set against mountains, desert plains, and the cobalt blue skies one finds at high elevations, Chloe West’s striking oil paintings merge Dutch Golden Age iconographies with both mythic and everyday motifs of the American West.

West was born and raised in Wyoming, the peaks and pastures of which continue to influence her hyperrealistic figurative works. In her current solo exhibition, Games of Chance at HARPER’S, the artist draws on European portraiture and still life traditions in a series of self-portraits and tableaux challenging stereotypes of the West as a frontier molded by machismo.

a portrait of a brown-haired woman seated at a table next to an animal skull against a blue sky
“Cowboy Philosopher” (2024-25), oil on linen, 84 x 68 inches

“Cowboy Philosopher,” for example, portrays the artist in direct confrontation with the viewer, seated beside a mountain lion skull at a table covered with a celestial tapestry. The painting evokes Salomon Koninck’s “A Philosopher” (1635) and works by other Flemish artists of the 17th and 18th centuries, who often depicted alchemists and scholars in their studies accompanied by skulls, devices, and documents.

West subverts our understanding of cowboy culture as predominantly masculine, juxtaposing her own body with bones, small weapons, and fabric backdrops that establish a tension between life and death, folklore and daily life, and the sacred and the profane. Animal bones, thorns, and knives nod to memento mori, a reminder of the impermanence of life, while also invoking the supernatural and a sense of cyclical time. Casting deep, dark shadows, the glaring sun reveals all.

Portraying herself in western wear, West bonds to the continuum of the landscape and its customs and narratives while considering the way European attitudes and actions like Manifest Destiny shaped our understanding of the region. The artist taps into legend, history, and magical realism to blur distinctions between the past and contemporary experience. “Ultimately, throughout Games of Chance, West confronts the idealization of frontier heroism, dismantling its pre-established boundaries and expanding upon the legacy it left behind,” the gallery says.

Games of Chance opens today and continues through May 10 in New York City. Find more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

an oil painting of a woman's hand holding an opossum skull in her palm set against a Western landscape with dramatic clouds
“Hand with Opossum Skull” (2024-25), oil on linen, 24 x 20 inches
a detail of an oil painting showing a woman's hand and the fabric details of a red Western shirt
Detail of “Gored Cowboy”
a still life oil painting of a group of animal bones suspended on a pink cloth with dark shadows, draped in front of a Western landscape
“Trapper’s Still Life” (2024-5), oil on linen, 48 x 38 inches
an oil painting of a woman's back with a line of small animal bones down her spine
“Pearled Back” (2024-25), oil on linen, 58 x 46 inches
a portrait of a brown-haired woman in front of a red drape, which hangs in front of a Western landscape, with an animal skull being held in front of her eyes
“Portrait with Capped Skull” (2024-25), oil on linen, 58 x 48 inches
an oil painting of a pocketknife on a blue handkerchief
“Pocketknife” (2024), oil on linen, 16 x 12 inches
an oil painting still life of an antlered animal skull suspended on a purple cloth, draped in front of a Western landscape
“St. Veronica at the Geyser Basin” (2024-25, oil on linen, 48 x 38 inches
an oil painting of a woman's hand holding a thorn in front of a dusky Western landscape
“Hand with Thorn” (2024-25), oil on linen, 24h x 20w in
a detail of an oil painting showing a woman's hands gesticulating near an animal skull
Detail of “Cowboy Philosopher”

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‘And Then There Was Everything’ Unearths the Allure of Natural Motifs at Joy Machine

‘And Then There Was Everything’ Unearths the Allure of Natural Motifs at Joy Machine

Joy Machine is thrilled to announce its second exhibition, And Then There Was Everything, featuring works by Paul S. BriggsDavid CassLaura CatherwoodYellena JamesJeremy MirandaJeffly Gabriela Molina, and Anna Ortiz. An opening reception will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. on April 18.

And Then There Was Everything takes its name from the opening line of Richard Powers’ novel The Overstory, which beckons readers into a winding, interconnected narrative tuned into the intimations of the trees. Powers writes that “a good answer must be reinvented many times, from scratch,” a sentiment each artist uniquely investigates through painting, ceramic sculpture, and collage. Iterating on natural motifs, these artists tap into our personal and collective psyches to unearth the recurring messages within.

a beige ceramic vessel surrounded by hand-pinched leaves
Paul Briggs, “Effloresce (Series)” (2025), black stoneware, white cone 6 glaze

Rendering the familiar unfamiliar has long been a way to investigate the overlooked and to surface hidden emotions, and each artist presents seemingly common subject matter as an invitation to pause and look inward.

In Briggs’ leafy vessels, repeating motifs are key to achieving equanimity. The artist uses a technique he calls “hand-turning” and works in a “very assertive but tender process.” From a single ball of clay, he pinches small, dynamic fronds surrounding the vessel walls as he finds a meditative balance in both his mind and the sculptures themselves.

Although working at an intimate scale, Cass zooms outward as he paints undulating waves on antique tins, matchboxes, pulleys, and more, a collection of 14 of which are installed at Joy Machine. Visible swipes of paint delineate the horizon in some pieces, while others are entirely awash in curved lines. Interested in conveying the effects of a heating planet and rising waters, Cass uses repurposed, human-made containers representative of physical constraints as metaphors for our collective limits to adapt.

In James’ alluring canvases, dense ecosystems spill from edge to edge. Striving for a perfect balance that becomes “a sort of compulsive meditation,” the artist paints delicate, otherworldly environments evocative of both land and sea. Catherwood similarly lingers in uncertainty as she renders hybrid creatures with fantastic motifs. Painted with soft, tender brushstrokes, the arresting beings become welcome companions to explore life’s mysteries and adjust to its cycles.

a blue landscape with a pair of agave plants
Anna Ortiz, “Reflexión” (2024), oil on canvas, 30 x 34 inches

Ortiz, too, conjures the uncanny in “Reflexión,” a desert landscape dotted with a pair of agave plants underneath an eclipse reflected on Lake Texcoco. The saturated, limited color palette renders the time of day ambiguous and helps establish a surreal borderland in which the now-dried lake still exists. Mixing memory and imagination, Ortiz draws on her own ancestral connections and positions the twin agaves as a way to consider unfulfilled destinies. 

Miranda and Molina grapple with similar questions as they utilize recollections of moments and spaces. Observation is at the heart of Miranda’s works, and he harnesses the ethereal qualities of light to cast familiar spaces anew. In his hands, a nondescript pocket of forest or humble bonfire becomes dreamlike, prompting questions of perspective and how we understand our relationships to the settings that surround us.

For Molina, a flutter of yellow butterflies and a mirrored parrot are symbols of connection and care. The brightly colored insects accompany a portrait of the artist’s mother as a child in “Mother Our Castles Will Not Be Made of Sand,” while “To Misericordia” conjures a place long gone. A poem inscribed in the work reads, “… And do you know that glitter and gold have gone out of fashion, and that your parrot no longer remembers himself?,” which references Molina’s great-grandmother’s pet and the ways companions give shape to the self.

And Then There Was Everything is on view from April 18 to June 7. RSVP to the opening reception here.

a portrait of a child next to a flutter of yellow butterflies on a blue backdrop
Jeffly Gabriela Molina, “Mother Our Castles Will Not Be Made of Sand” (2020), watercolor on Arches 300 Lb, 23 x 23 inches
an antique marine pulley with a painting of a wave pattern on the front
David Cass, “Pulley I – Rockport, ME” (2023-24), oil on marine pulley, 23 x 11.5 x 8 centimeters

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Christopher Wilton-Steer’s 25,000-Mile Journey Captures a Contemporary View of an Ancient Trade Route

Christopher Wilton-Steer’s 25,000-Mile Journey Captures a Contemporary View of an Ancient Trade Route

From aerial views of modern-day Venice to a 15th-century caravanserai in Kyrgyzstan, Christopher Wilton-Steer’s awe-inspiring photographs capture contemporary views of life along a series of 1,500-year-old trade routes. An extraordinary historical, cultural, and archaeological phenomenon, the Silk Road connected China in the East to Rome and the Mediterranean in the West.

Around 4,000 miles long in its entirety and comprising numerous linking routes—some of which still exist as highways today—the network was used to transport valuable silks from China westward while sending wool and precious metals east. Travelers also transmitted global news, religious beliefs, and disease—most famously The Black Death in the 14th century—along the storied route.

an aerial photograph of Venice
An aerial view of Venice

In The Silk Road: A Living History, forthcoming from Hemeria, Wilton-Steer traces the trade artery from Italy through the Balkans and into Turkey, wending through Iran, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, and India, before continuing through the breadth of China.

Starting in London, the photographer traveled nearly 25,000 miles across Europe and Asia, detouring to visit nearby cities and cultural centers, mountains, deserts, remote communities, and spectacular architecture. He captures elaborate mosaic ceilings like those of the Tash Hauli Palace in Khiva, Uzbekistan, or the Shrine of Fatima Masumeh in Qom, Iran. And traces of medieval cities, like Ani in Turkey, sit timelessly in vast landscapes.

“When we fly somewhere, we arrive at the destination and most aspects of life of different,” Wilton-Steer says in a foreword. “Traveling overland, I wanted to experience the transitions between different cultures and gain a deeper understanding of what connects us.”

In our increasingly integrated world, trade is facilitated through elaborate pan-global shipping networks shaped by modern technologies. Yet the system is volatile, and the impacts of a global pandemic, accidents, or tariffs can usher in waves of disruption.

As China embarks on the world’s largest-ever infrastructure project through its Belt and Road Initiative, the legacy of the Silk Road is front-and-center as the endeavor aims to connect more than 60 percent of the global population.

Wilton-Steer is interested in the juxtapositions of contemporary life with ancient traditions, cultures, and historical narratives. Just as the Silk Road helped shape European and Asian civilizations hundreds of years ago, the route’s legacy underpins the region’s contemporary social, economic, and cultural spheres.

The Silk Road: A Living History will be released on May 20, and you can order your copy in Hemeria’s shop. Wilton-Steer is donating proceeds from the book to the Aga Khan Foundation, which addresses root causes of poverty and works to improve the quality of life in a number of countries along the Silk Road and further afield.

You might also enjoy Fatemeh Hosein Aghaei’s stunning photographs of historic Iranian mosques and palaces.

historic stone ruins with a dome and wall enclosure amid mountains
Tash Rabat
a spread from the book 'The Silk Road: A Living History' showing an elaborate, geometric mosaic
a photograph of an extremely elaborate Muslim shrine in Iran with lots of mosaicked facets and patterns
Ceiling details from the Shrine of Fatima Masumeh, Qom
a blue-domed mausoleum against a blue sky in a field of golden grass
The Mausoleam of Oljaytu, Soltaniyeh
a photograph of a modernist building in a large plaza against a blue sky, with a large circular detail on top
Alem Entertainment Centre, Ashgabat
a spread from the book 'The Silk Road: A Living History' showing a small wooden building in a broad expanse of grassland on a sunny day
a photograph looking up at the detailed geometric, mosaic ceiling of a mosque
Details from the Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque, Isfahan

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Sebas Velasco’s Dreamy Oil Paintings Illuminate Cinematic Urban Landscapes

Sebas Velasco’s Dreamy Oil Paintings Illuminate Cinematic Urban Landscapes

Sebas Velasco (previously) has long been drawn to the landscapes and cultures of the Balkans and former Yugoslavian countries in southeastern Europe, where he has spent the past decade traveling and researching for his large-scale paintings and murals.

The Morning Will Change Everything at the History Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina marks the Spanish artist’s first institutional exhibition. Inspired by the title of a song by Sarajevo-based band Indexi, the show continues Velasco’s exploration of urban landscapes and themes of relationships and passing time.

an oil painting of two male figures standing in a grassy area at night with large buildings behind them
“Wherever I May Roam,” oil on canvas, 195 x 195 centimeters

Rendered in oil on wood or canvas, Velasco’s paintings depict figures, architecture, and old cars illuminated by street lamps or headlights in a realistic yet dreamlike world. Taking cues from photography through the use of cinematic lighting effects and portraiture, he often juxtaposes contrasting elements like grassy meadows with brutalist high-rises or derelict cars with wildflowers.

Whether glowing under an orange street light or spotlit against a fuzzy smattering of brake lights and apartment windows, Velasco’s subjects are relaxed, poised, and unhurried. One can imagine the din of car horns, music, and other city noises in the background, yet Velasco emphasizes brief, self-assured interactions as if momentarily, time is at a standstill.

Nighttime plays a starring role in Velasco’s compositions, which tap into dualities of the known and unknown, revelations and secrets, individuality and anonymity, and the quotidian and the extraordinary. He conjures “gateways to complex socio-economic narratives,” the museum says, emphasizing the power of humanity amid ever-evolving identities and the tumult of globalization.

Find more on Velasco’s website and Instagram.

a detail of an oil painting of a man in a hat and jacket with his head tilted down, with buildings in the background
Detail of “Wherever I May Roam”
an oil painting of a vintage, gray Volkswagen Golf at night, illuminated partially by an orange street lamp
“Golf II,” oil on wood, 41 x 27 centimeters
an oil painting of an early morning scene of a housing estate with cars parked outside in the snow
“The Morning Will Change Everything,” oil on wood, 120 x 120 centimeters
an oil portrait of a young woman with blonde hair pulled back and wearing a blue jacket, pictured at night with her face illuminated and buildings in the background
“Agata,” oil on wood, 81 x 65 centimeters
a detail of an oil portrait of a young woman with blonde hair pulled back and wearing a blue jacket, pictured at night with her face illuminated and buildings in the background
Detail of “Agata”
an oil painting of the rear of a Yugo car in a grassy area, illuminated headlights or a spotlight
“Yugo 45 III,” oil on wood, 24 x 35 centimeters
an oil painting of a doorway looking out into the night
“Interior Night Sarajevo II,” oil on wood, 46 x 33 centimeters
a young man works on a painting inside of a museum, with materials and other paintings nearby
Velasco working on a painting in his solo exhibition at the History Museum of Bosnia and Heregovina

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