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Vintage photos and mini zines: Wonder Gallery opens in Coney Island with free Brooklyn-themed art exhibits

Wonder Gallery, a new seasonal art space, opened on Memorial Day Weekend at the Coney Island History Project in Brooklyn. The inaugural exhibition features documentary black-and-white photographs by Anders Goldfarb, capturing Coney Island from the late 1970s to early 1980s, alongside Kelly Luu's interactive "Coney Island Zine Machine," which dispenses miniature zines in plastic capsules. The gallery is a partnership between Prachute Literary Arts and the Coney Island History Project and will run through Labor Day Weekend with free admission.

Dans un champ près de Toulouse, l’artiste Almudena Romero signe la plus grande œuvre photographique jamais réalisée

Anglo-Spanish photographer Almudena Romero has created "Farming Photographs," a 11,000-square-meter photographic work in a field near Toulouse, France, making it the largest photograph ever made. Using the 19th-century anthotype process, the image—a giant eye composed of traits from various races, genders, and ages—was planted as a crop of wheat and winter grasses, with each pixel corresponding to a tractor-width plot. The work emerges in spring, is visible from May to June, transforms until harvest, and ultimately becomes edible flour. Romero collaborated with France's INRAE agricultural research institute, dividing the image into 1,350 pixels and assigning different plant varieties to each based on color and density.

At the ‘new’ Portland Art Museum, the kids are alright

The Portland Art Museum has reopened after a major renovation, with a renewed focus on engaging younger audiences. The museum's transformation includes updated galleries, new programming, and a deliberate effort to make the institution more accessible and relevant to children and families, signaling a shift in its curatorial and educational priorities.

Waddesdon’s Art in Nature returns with a new 70-metre land artwork by James Brunt and Jon Foreman

Waddesdon Manor in the UK has launched the 2026 edition of its Art in Nature program, featuring a monumental 70-meter mandala created by land artists James Brunt and Jon Foreman of Sculpt the World. The collaborative work, made with support from Mark Ford and Eric Ford, draws inspiration from the manor's architecture and surrounding landscape, using natural materials like leaves, stones, and branches. The program runs until May 31 and includes workshops, talks, and participatory making sessions with artists such as Rebecca and Mark Ford of Two Circles Design, Tim Pugh, Ana Castilho, Richard Shilling, Julia Brooklyn, and disability activist Sam Cleasby.