Art
Astrological Aesthetics: March 2016 Horoscopes
Hyperallergic’s horoscopes offer astrological advice for artists and art types, in art terms, every month.
Art
Hyperallergic’s horoscopes offer astrological advice for artists and art types, in art terms, every month.
Art
Jürgen Klauke’s prop-filled, leather-punctuated photographs can stop you in your tracks.
In Brief
A recent decision by trustees of Britain's Science Museum Group (SMG) to transfer around 400,000 photographs from the National Media Museum (NMM) in Bradford to the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&H) in London has received outcry from over 80 top photographers, curators, museum administrators, and oth
In Brief
And the prize for most stylish new wearable tech device goes to: Song Wig, which will make you look like a futuristic Baby Spice.
News
Last month, we reported that a pair of artists scanned the bust of Nefertiti, currently on display in the Neues Museum in Berlin, without the permission of museum officials. Now, many people are raising questions about the authenticity of their work and what that even means.
Announcement
Join the New York Studio School for two or three week Summer Marathons and immerse yourself in perception, experimentation, and formal and conceptual elements.[http://engine.nectarads.com/p/eyJhdiI6NTIzNSwiYXQiOjIwLCJidCI6MCwiY20iOjM2ODUxOSwiY2giOjE5MzAsImNrIjp7fSwiY3IiOjEzNTE0ODIsImRtIjo0LCJmYyI6MT
Art
It was once a common notion that abstract painting was analogous to music.
Art
Enter Transfer gallery and your entire field of vision is instantly taken up by a vast screen, measuring 10 by 10 feet, nearly the width of the room.
Art
SHARJAH, United Arab Emirates — In the words of French philosopher Jacques Derrida, “there is no political power without control of the archive, if not memory.”
Art
Iowa City, a UNESCO City of Literature and home of the renowned Iowa Writers’ Workshop, has a thriving art scene. But, much like the rest of Iowa, this art scene is overwhelmingly, blindingly white.
Art
The internet is awash with bots.
Art
The thunderstorm in the third act of Shakespeare's King Lear will rumble ominously in the Bristol Old Vic's production of the play this summer thanks to 18th-century sound effects.