Magazine
All Editorial

Black Orpheus: Who Gets to Frame a Black Cultural Canon?

Public Fiction: How Art Drafts Realities

When We Gather: On the Not-Yet-Become in Lagos

The Aftercycle: Speculations on Responsive Touch and Restituted Objects

Water is Running: Wura-Natasha Ogunji’s Aquatic Archive
The Barbican Centre presents Project A Black Planet: The Art and Culture of Panafrica

‘In Minor Keys’ Schools at the 61st Venice Biennale

On Ancestral Recipes and Diasporic Foodways

AfterBiennales: The Lagoon of Nations at Venice

Aggregates of Plunder: Ndidi Dike’s Rare Earth Rare Justice

Thenjiwe Niki Nkosi Frames Printmaking As A Relay Process

Seed Archives: Thabo Weaves a Cocoon for Listening

Olukemi Lijadu: Feedback, Friction and Black Atlantic Music

Melvin Edwards (1937–2026)

Moving Parts: Yinka Bernie's Sonic Bridge Across Lagos

Naafia Naahemaa: What Appears Solid Is Already In Motion

Pre-Sale! C& Artists’ Editions #6: Thenjiwe Niki Nkosi

Sounding the Ocean: Spiral Networks of Remembrance and Elation

Investec Cape Town Art Fair 2026

Artist-Led Organizations in Focus At The 61st Venice Art Biennale

Notes on Editorial Dis/Continuities

On Rematriation and Spiritual Reparations

The Olympia Effect: Who Gets Credit for Sexual Liberation On/Off Screen?

The Deconstructive Lens of Ngadi Smart: From Drag to Climate Change

Blending documentary intimacy with carefully staged fiction, Thero Makepe’s photography reanimates family memory as both personal archive and political reckoning. Drawing on his lineage shaped by exile, anti-apartheid activism, and unspoken grief, writer Vamika Sinha unpacks how the Botswana-born artist creates images that feel at once tender and theatrical.

C& Highlights of 2025

The Museum of Black Futures

The Re:assemblages Symposium: How Might We Gather Differently?

Nnena Kalu wins Turner Prize 2025

On Ghosts and The Moving Image: Edward George’s Black Atlas

Caribbean Sounds: The Connective Possibilities of Radio

Werewere Liking: Of Spirit, Sound, and the Shape of Transmission

Black Canadian Print Cultures: Of Quiet and Enduring Legacies

Noel W. Anderson: The Spirit Will Not Descend Without Song

On Exile, Amulets and Circadian Rhythms: Practising Data Healing across Timezones

Rest in/as Freedom: kiarita and Black Politics of Liberation

Paris Noir: Pan-African Surrealism, Abstraction and Figuration

Maktaba Room: Annotations on Art, Design, and Diasporic Knowledge

Introducing the C& Cyclopedia

Tadáskía Wins the 2025 K21 Global Art Award

Zimbabwe Pavilion Announces “Second Nature | Manyonga” for Venice Art Biennale 2026

The Art of Dialogue: Living Archives, Memory and Practice

The 36th São Paulo Biennial

A Collector’s Guide to São Paulo

Jazsalyn’s A(spora): On the Gullah Geechee Corridor

Steve McQueen: The Bassline As Sonic Intelligence

Naomi Beckwith Unveils Core Artistic Team for documenta 16

Bernice Mulenga’s LMK WHEN U REACH

Mapping Literary Circuits with Bao Books From Tunis to Cairo

This is not an exhibition of heroes and heroines in the posture so often privileged within Southern African visual histories, where liberation iconography has dominated the frame and shaped the post-colonial and post-apartheid narrative. It resists the pull of monumentality and turns instead toward neighbours, colleagues, and loved ones – ordinary people whose lives unfold across the street, the workshop, the yard, and the long daily commute. It is about the quiet act of showing up, and the radical gesture of asking to be seen.

Mangrove Ecologies: Grounded Forms of Questioning in the Art/World

Dignity Under Duress: Black Figuration Beyond the Global Art Market

Sampling the City: Tristany Mundu’s Cypher with Linha de Sintra

Paula Nascimento and Angela Harutyunyan Announced as Curators of Sharjah Biennial 17

Sudan Art Archive Aims to Reclaim a Canon from Afar

Fundação Bienal de São Paulo Announces List of Participants for its 36th Edition

Samson Mnisi: A Master Posthumously Receives His Due

Emmanuel Aggrey Tieku Wins 2025 Ellipse Prize Focused on Ghana’s Emerging Art Scene

AMANI kukita | kung’oa - German and Tanzanian Perspectives on a Colonial Collection

Image Interventions in "The African Gaze"

Venice Biennale 2026 Will Follow Late Koyo Kouoh's Vision

‘To Treat Process with Care and Intention’: Favour Ritaro Carries Forward Important Curatorial Legacies

Koyo Kouoh (1967 – 2025)

Dispatches from Tint Library’s London Pop-Up

Kapwani Kiwanga Wins the 2025 Joan Miró Prize

FESPACO 2025 Made Space for the Ceremony of African Cinema

Kombo Chapfika and Uzoma Orji: What Else Can Technology Be?

Imagining a Future for the Arts in the US

‘Apprendre à Flamboyer’: Collective Joy in Practice at Palais de Tokyo

Stewarding an Antidisciplinary Practice

Ethel-Ruth Tawe to Lead C& Magazine as Editor-in-Chief

Examining De/Colonial Traces Through Colonial Collections

Thinkers and Titles: On Black German Literary Tradition

AWARE (Archives of Women Artists, Research & Exhibitions)

ROM Announces Tandazani Dhlakama as Curator of Global Africa

In Conversation with Lubaina Himid: The Artist Set to Represent the UK at Venice Biennale 2026

Osei Bonsu: A Curatorial Lens on Photography as Identity and Tradition, Counter-Histories and Imagined Futures

Dr. Zoe Whitley Named Curator of Art Toronto Focus Exhibition

Ladji Diaby’s Sampling Sensibilities Are Material and Time-Bending

Modupeola Fadugba Wins The Norval Sovereign African Art Prize 2025

On History and Fiction: Tuan Andrew Nguyen's Cinematic Memory Work

Cabo Verde’s Layered Temporalities Emerge in the Work of César Schofield Cardoso

Kampala Calling: The African and Diaspora Artists Flocking to Uganda

Unidigrazz: A Collective Practice and a Holding Place

To Spring From Salted Earth

The Secret Apothecary

AWU Library

C& Highlights of 2024

The Resilient Spirit of the Bamako Biennale

Naomi Beckwith Appointed Artistic Director for documenta 16

Maheder Haileselassie Tadesse Wins Main Prize at Rencontres de Bamako

, so I dream: An Ode to Stuart Hall

C& Builds a Living Digital Archive

Bring Home your C& Collectors Box!





