A fountain dedicated to Frank Putnam Flint, the senator who devised the aqueduct supplying LA’s water, makes no mention of the human cost of the project.
October 5, 2017
Palmyra’s Ancient Lion of Al-lāt, Smashed by ISIS, Is Restored and Back On View
The 2,000-year old statue, which for decades greeted visitors to the Palmyra museum before it was smashed by ISIS militants, has been restored in Damascus.
Inspired by Indian Ragas, an Installation of Sound and Light Heightens the Senses
At the MELA Foundation Dream House, Jung Hee Choi’s Ahata Anahata, Manifest Unmanifest XI seduces, disorients, and transforms.
The Smithsonian Conserves Blood Pools and Charred Skeletons from 1940s Crime Dioramas
For the first time all 19 surviving Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death are going on public view, with an exhibition opening in October at the Smithsonian’s Renwick Gallery.
With a Wall of Photos, Bernadette Mayer Evokes a Landscape of Memories
Bernadette Mayer’s installation of a wall of images from 1971 is far too evocative of my own history for me to step back and see it “objectively.”
Artist Vandalizes Virtual Koons Sculpture, Questioning Silicon Valley’s Fake Public Space
Is it truly public space if there’s no opportunity to really disrupt things? Artist Sebastian Errazuriz doesn’t seem to think so.
A Project on the Arctic’s Vanishing Ice Launches with an Olafur Eliasson Talk
The Arctic Imagination project is a collaboration between six international libraries that draws attention to the Arctic’s disappearing ice.
What Planned Parenthood Looked Like in the 1940s
Following World War II, the birth control organization published illustrated pamphlets that provided authoritative guidance on how to best prepare to start a family.
Moroccan Identity and Digital Culture Connect in an Internet-Age Funhouse
Meriem Bennani’s dizzying, discomfiting, delightful installation at The Kitchen.
Taipei’s National Palace Museum Digitizes Its Entire Collection
The National Palace Museum Open Data represents the first time a museum has created such an archive of material from China’s imperial history.
The Historical Failure and Revolutionary Potential of Taking a Knee
When players take a knee in the manner made famous by quarterback Colin Kaepernick, they cut the white emancipator from the frame and thereby create something new: an abolition image.
Where Does an Idea Go When You Lose It?
Sometimes, when an idea disappears, it’s never seen again. More often, it’s gone in search of itself.