
The Latest

10 Films to Get to Know Ukraine
From music and architecture to comedy and horror, these films showcase Ukrainian culture and its long-held ethos of resistance.

Who Discovered Eva Hesse?
A new exhibition focuses on Hesse’s works on paper, and the way they demonstrate the role of drawing in the famed sculptor’s process.

Stanford Arts Hosts a Virtual Conversation With Amy Sherald and Calida Rawles
Part of the university’s Artists on the Future series featuring renowned artists and cultural thought leaders, this online event is free and open to the public.

Queering the Archive, Tracing One’s History
The artists showcased in Archival Intimacies examine the colonial trauma’s impact on Asian Americans and search for ways to overcome it.

They Tried to Make a Sexy Movie About Eiffel Tower Engineer
Eiffel inadvertently paints its protagonist not as a great man worthy of scrutiny or praise, but as the Elon Musk of his day.

A Pathway Through Modern & Contemporary Armenian Art Dives Into an Often Overlooked History
This illustrated guide offers readers a broad and accessible introduction to the evolution of Armenian modern and contemporary art.

Margaret Atwood Protests Book Banning With Fireproof Copy of The Handmaid’s Tale
The fire-resistant copy will be auctioned to raise funds for PEN America.

NEA Awards $91 Million to Over 1,200 Arts Organizations
Funded projects include an exhibition of contemporary and historical retablos and a residency that pairs glass artists with creators in other mediums.

Apply for the MFA Program in Book Arts & Printmaking at University of the Arts
This rigorous, studio-based program in Philadelphia focuses on building unique studio practices that synthesize the disciplines of printmaking, book arts, and papermaking.

There’s No Place Like Court! “Dorothy Dress” at Center of Ownership Suit
Bonhams paused the sale of the rare garment, which was expected to fetch $1.2 million.

Ruben Östlund Satirizes the Lives of the Mega-Rich in Triangle of Sadness
Now playing the Cannes Film Festival, the new film from the director of The Square embarks on a luxury cruise that goes to hell.

Anabel Juárez’s Castles of Wonderment
By enshrining her memories into sculptural form, Juárez celebrates her emotional pilgrimage through the growing pains of childhood to adulthood.
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