The Week Mar. 23–29, 2026

Group Show: ‘QUEERE KUNST IN DER DDR?’ Opening Reception & Book Launch with Distanz Verlag: Wednesday, Mar. 25; 6–9pm Exhibition: Mar. 28–June 28, 2026 kvost.de/en Leipziger Straße 47, 10117 Berlin, click here for map Andreas Fux: ‘Handelszentrum Friedrichstraße’, Berlin, 1985, Fotografie // Courtesy of Andreas Fux und KVOST, Berlin Group Show: ‘QUEERE KUNST IN DER DDR?

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Turning Creativity into Career: The Professional Rise of Suresh Chapele

Transforming creativity into a sustainable career is a challenge many aspiring artists face. It requires not only talent, but also strategy, adaptability, and continuous learning. Suresh Chapele’s professional journey is a compelling example of how passion can evolve into a successful career through determination and discipline.

After completing his Bachelor of Fine Arts, Suresh realized that artistic skill alone was not enough to build a stable profession. He understood the need to bridge creativity with practical application. This realization led him to explore graphic design a field where art meets functionality.

Learning design tools, typography, layouts, and visual communication opened new possibilities for him. It allowed him to understand how creativity could be applied to real-world problems, from branding to digital content. This shift marked a significant transition from traditional art to applied creativity.

Moving to Pune, Suresh entered a competitive professional environment. His first role as a Background Artist in an Android gaming studio provided valuable industry exposure. Here, he learned about deadlines, teamwork, and the importance of delivering consistent quality.

However, his career path was not linear. Personal challenges forced him to pause his professional journey, creating uncertainty and financial difficulties. Restarting was not easy, but his resilience helped him push forward.

In 2019, Suresh joined Pride Group as a Graphic Designer a turning point in his career. With dedication and a strong work ethic, he consistently improved his skills and contributed meaningfully to projects. His ability to combine creativity with strategic thinking helped him stand out.

Within three years, he was promoted to Design Head. This role required more than technical skills it demanded leadership, decision-making, and the ability to guide creative teams. Suresh successfully adapted to these responsibilities, proving his capability as both a designer and a leader.

His journey highlights an important lesson for professionals: success is not just about talent, but about consistency, adaptability, and mindset. By continuously learning and evolving, Suresh transformed his passion into a thriving career.

“From Opportunity to Achievement: A Career Built on Learning and Persistence”

My career journey did not begin with confidence or clarity, it began with opportunity and the willingness to learn. Coming from Solapur, my early life was focused on doing whatever work I could to support my family, and although those days were difficult, they built a mindset of persistence within me. After years of effort and struggle, a major turning point came through my sister, who played a crucial role in opening a door that would eventually change my life. Because of her support, I got an opportunity to attend an interview at Pride, and although the process itself was not very difficult, getting selected meant everything to me because it marked the beginning of my professional journey. When I joined, I was someone who had no understanding of how a professional environment worked, I did not know how to communicate in a corporate setting, how to behave in an office, or how to present myself among experienced people, but what I did have was the willingness to learn and the determination to improve. My sister and my seniors became my biggest support system during this phase, they guided me at every step, corrected me when I made mistakes, and helped me understand the standards required in a professional world, and I made sure to stay connected with them, observe them, and learn from every interaction. Slowly, I started developing myself, I began understanding workplace culture, communication, and responsibilities, and I worked consistently on improving my skills. My passion and dedication started reflecting in my work, and I did not limit myself to only completing tasks, I focused on learning beyond my role, I started interacting with different people, including businessmen and professionals from various backgrounds, which helped me gain valuable market knowledge and exposure. I learned how to communicate smartly, how to understand people, and how to handle conversations in a way that helped achieve results, and these skills gradually built my confidence. With time, my hard work started showing results, I was recognized for my efforts and eventually got promoted, and along with that, my salary also increased. That phase was very emotional and meaningful for me because I could clearly see the difference between my past and my present, there was a time when even a single rupee mattered to me, and now I was earning through my own efforts in a professional environment, it was not just growth in career, it was growth in life. However, the biggest turning point came when I got the opportunity to move to Dubai with my company, it felt like starting a new chapter all over again, a new country, a new work culture, new people, and completely different expectations. Once again, I found myself in a situation where I had to learn and adapt quickly, I started interacting with new people from different cultures, understanding a global work environment, and adjusting to a new lifestyle. It was not easy at all, there were challenges at every step, but I did not step back because by then, I had already built a strong mindset through my past experiences. I continued learning, improving, and pushing myself beyond my limits, and throughout this journey, the support of my seniors remained constant, they motivated me, guided me, and helped me grow in ways I had never imagined. Today, when I look at myself, I see a completely different person from the one who first joined without any knowledge of professional work, I see growth, confidence, and stability, and I proudly say that I have built a successful career in my field. Whatever I have achieved today is not just because of my hard work, but also because of the guidance, trust, and continuous support I received from my seniors, they have played a major role in shaping my journey, and their belief in me pushed me to become better every single day. My career journey is not just about promotions or salary growth, it is about transformation, learning, and the courage to step into new challenges without fear, and I strongly believe that no matter where you start, if you are willing to learn, stay consistent, and work hard, you can create a path that changes your life completely.

Dissolving Boundaries: ‘K-NOW! Korean Video Art Today’ at MASI Lugano

Overlooking Lake Lugano in Switzerland, the three-story museum MASI Lugano recently opened ‘K-NOW! Korean Video Art Today,’ bringing together the works of eight Korean artists in an immersive exploration of South Korea’s contemporary art scene. Situated at a geographic and cultural crossroads between the north and south of the Alps and between Latin and Germanic Europe, the museum has served as a…

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Open Call for Hopper Prize for Artists

The Hopper Prize is now accepting submissions for its Spring 2026 artist grants, offering support to visual artists and photographers working across all media worldwide. Awarded twice annually, this grant cycle provides six grants totaling $13,000 USD, designed to encourage creative experimentation and professional development. Two artists will each receive a grant of $4,500…

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Weaving Memories: An Interview with Igshaan Adams

As you enter the foyer of Mudam Luxembourg, your eye is drawn upward. ‘Gebedswolke iii (prayer cloud)’—an installation made up of charms, wire and metallic disks—is suspended from the ceiling. It is an ethereal constellation of floating forms and a continuation of a motif (the cloud) that South African artist Igshaan Adams has worked with over the past ten years, initially as scribbles and later…

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Amateur Traumatics: An Interview with William Joys

This article is part of our feature topic Abjection. Abjection and power go together like Deleuze and Guattari, but it’s not always clear which one is in charge. Power dynamics lie at the heart of human relationships, but they’re often invisiblized. Among the few times and places such relations are laid bare for consideration is on the stage. The theater opens the hidden corners of the human…

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The Week Mar. 16–22, 2026

Peter Hujar & Liz Deschenes: ‘Persistence of Vision’ Opening Reception: Wednesday, Mar. 18; 7pm Exhibition: Mar. 19–June 28, 2026 gropiusbau.de/peter-hujar-liz-deschenes Niederkirchnerstraße 7, 10963 Berlin, click here for map Peter Hujar: ‘Beauregard and his Dog Pilar (I),’ 1983 // © The Peter Hujar Archive / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2026 Group Show: ‘Seeing Words, Reading Images – Die…

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Confronting Incoherence: ‘The Double’ at GHMP Zvon

This article is part of our feature topic Abjection. Abjection often conjures images of horror—filth, ugliness, death—in their most visceral, corporeal form. Yet what we tend to neglect are abject forms of the mind: a kind of psychic horror that arises from the slippery grip we have on our sense of self. This discomfort, the circling ambiguity of our personhood and the world we inhabit…

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The Week Mar. 9–15, 2026

Laura Nitsch: ‘Violett’ Screening: Mar. 9–15, 2026 Part of: ‘Uglier, Louder, Taller, Weirder – Hearing the Weeds grow’ galerie-im-turm.net/weeds Frankfurter Tor 1, 10243 Berlin, click here for map Group Show: ‘(Zieh mir den) Zahn der Zeit’ Opening Reception: Thursday, Mar. 12; 6–9pm Exhibition: Mar. 13-Аpr. 25, 2026 bode.gallery/zieh-mir-den-zahn-der-zeit Karl-Marx-Allee 82…

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