News
150 Artists and Activists Take Their Trump Protest to Ivanka's Doorstep
Over 150 artists, writers, curators, gallery workers, and other activists showed up outside Ivanka Trump's Manhattan apartment in a protest organized by Halt Action Group.
News
Over 150 artists, writers, curators, gallery workers, and other activists showed up outside Ivanka Trump's Manhattan apartment in a protest organized by Halt Action Group.
News
In a performance at the British Museum, the theatrical protest group BP or not BP? marked the final weekend of a BP-sponsored exhibition and responded to the election of Donald Trump.
Opinion
The argument that "post-election pain" is good for art is cold comfort.
News
The For Freedoms artist-led super PAC is riling people in Mississippi with a billboard that combines Donald Trump's campaign slogan with a Civil Rights-era photo.
In Brief
Sean Hannity claims he will gift conservative artist Jon McNaughton's iconic 2010 canvas "The Forgotten Man" to the president-elect.
News
The day after the election, the art collective T.Rutt was informed it would no longer get to show its anti-Trump bus and flag works at the Red Dot Fair in Miami.
Art
Since the election, many people have called for a return to business as usual and pledged their support for the president-elect, but these attitudes are dangerous for artists, arts workers, and many, many others.
In Brief
The American Institute of Architects' post-election memo promising to work with President-elect Trump has been met with messages of protest from its 89,000-strong membership.
Art
Over 170 caricatures of Richard Nixon offer an instructive precedent for artists struggling to overcome political and creative blocks in one leap.
News
The shock after Donald Trump's election has turned to anger and determination, a galvanizing desire to fight for change and a better world than the one the President-elect plans to create.
Opinion
What do we do now as artists, writers, curators, and other members of a community that was so vested in one candidate?
Art
As voters head to the polls, the hashtag #electionbooks is offering a literary and punderful outlet for the frustrations of an exhausted electorate.