Snow Day in the Art World
From Helene Schjerfbeck to Glenn Ligon, here’s what to read — and where to go when the snow clears.
Entertainment gossip news
From Helene Schjerfbeck to Glenn Ligon, here’s what to read — and where to go when the snow clears.
Classic city scenes become floral fantasies in this year’s pop-timistic iteration of the park’s iconic annual show.
After a successful pilot, artists will be paid hundreds of euros weekly over three years.
"Phoenix Ladder" is an homage to the people of the Bronx, a lighthouse for our collective futures, and our witness.
In true Angeleno fashion, a slew of local exhibitions and art events act as a counterbalance to this year’s eight fairs — or more, depending on how you define them.
Wilkinson was arrested after photographing a protest at the New York Times's headquarters.
Laurence des Cars's resignation comes months after the infamous jewel heist drew international ire.
Basic income for artists turns permanent, Louvre director resigns, orchid extravaganza in NYC, and the Bronx artist who's driving the right nuts.
The fair will bring together 80 exhibitors and an expanded focus on drawings in a nod to the medium’s long-standing relationship with printmaking.
Christophe Leribault, who heads the Palace of Versailles, succeeds Laurence des Cars within one day of her resignation.
Emilia Evans-Munton, a Glasgow School of Art graduate, said she made the giant sculpture as an “ode to the toys that are left behind.”
“In Minor Keys” opens on May 9, a year after beloved curator Koyo Kouoh’s passing.
This week, we honor a Hungarian avant-garde artist, a Philadelphia mosaicist, a Swiss pop artist, and others.
Juliette Lewis turns into a chair in a film that critiques mass culture’s conflation of femininity with consumerism and envy.
Toxic positivity has become a cultural system in America, says historian and professor Kate Bowler. She traces how optimism became an emotional mandate in American life: a belief that bright sides and...
However you feel about artificial intelligence (AI) — and, in particular, about the large language models and chatbots that are powered by it — the reality is that humanity is currently building and e...
For most of human history, love was not a choice we made, love was a choice made for us. By our family, our class, or by means of survival. Now that love has been liberated, it seems to have bec...
On a rough day, it’s rarely the workload that breaks you. It’s the human layer: the meeting that turns tense, the work chat message you read as disrespect, the impulse to fire off a reply that feels r...
I read Mark Lynas’s book Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet when I was 14 years old, and it scared the life out of me. Lynas takes the reader on a journey of what to expect from a world that’s...
Here on Earth, it seems easy and straightforward to know “where” anything is, or to know “when” an event either occurred or will occur. After all, we’ve mapped out the en...