Art
Photographs of Poverty Measure Broken Systems and Lives
Eugene Richards's Below the Line: Living Poor in America isn't about sympathy but something more.
Art
Eugene Richards's Below the Line: Living Poor in America isn't about sympathy but something more.
Art
Wolfgang Buttress's “The Hive” is an environment designed to amplify public awareness of the critical situation of bees.
Art
LOS ANGELES — This week, the J. Paul Getty Museum screens Derek Jarman's meditative movie Blue, Peter Blake opens a solo show of work by Light and Space pioneer Helen Pashgian, REDCAT presents a contemporary dance spectacle, and more.
Art
Women's lifelong struggles find a home in an incredibly moving and poignant anti-war memorial and group exhibition titled Songs for Women Living with War at Pro Arts Gallery.
Art
Philip Haas's fiberglass recreations invigorate the curious, 16th-century portraits with new energy.
Art
Hyperallergic’s horoscopes offer astrological advice for artists and art types, in art terms, every month.
Art
Cecilia Giménez Zueco's botched restoration of a small fresco in Spain looks as entrancingly bad in person as it does in pictures.
Art
This week, New York City welcomes two comics festival, two print fairs, one internet flea market, and more.
Art
The 19th century saw the rise of the posthumous portrait when, through photographs and paintings, people preserved the faces of departed loved ones.
Art
In her solo exhibition at Haus der elektronischen Künste Basel, Addie Wagenknecht boils down the experiences of postinternet life and then alchemizes them.
Art
In 1942, an Allied bombing in Lübeck, Germany, destroyed a famous 15th-century dance of death mural by artist Bernt Notke.
Art
The Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute just reopened in a landmark building that was once a firehouse at 120 East 125th Street, right in between the atria and ventricles at the heart of East Harlem.