In Brief
Marina Abramović Is "Very Pissed" at Jay Z [UPDATED]
It's been nearly two years since Marina Abramović made her appearance at the shoot for Jay Z's "Picasso Baby" music video, but the events of that day are still fresh in her mind.
In Brief
It's been nearly two years since Marina Abramović made her appearance at the shoot for Jay Z's "Picasso Baby" music video, but the events of that day are still fresh in her mind.
In Brief
Not all surveys of public opinion about visual art are equal.
In Brief
The Hardcore Architecture blog is using addresses to reveal, through Google Street View, the often mundane suburban architecture behind the '80s underground scene.
In Brief
Jennifer Pawluck, the Montrealer who was arrested in 2013 for posting a photo of a piece of street art on Instagram, has been convicted of criminal harassment and, on Thursday, was sentenced to 100 hours of community service and 18 months probation.
In Brief
The Greek government has decided not to go to court to demand restitution of the Elgin Marbles, which the country has been trying to get back from the British Museum for three decades.
In Brief
Have you ever wondered what your name, or the words “Anna Karenina,” would sound like as a sequence of beats?
In Brief
Apparently the price paid for Picasso's "Women of Algiers" (1955) on Monday is not the most obscene thing about it.
In Brief
Orbs of orange paint suggested the light of the lamps past midnight in Vincent van Gogh's 1888 "Le Café de nuit" (The Night Café) and in a new virtual reality take on his painting of the Café de la Gare in Arles, France, they come to life with radiating colors.
In Brief
A recent study conducted by scientists at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill reveals that it is possible to enhance creativity by zapping certain regions of the brain with electrical currents.
In Brief
The new Apple Watch is the pinnacle of technological achievement.
In Brief
The collection of the Nepal Fine Arts Academy (NAFA) is at risk of being lost following the April 25 earthquake that killed thousands and destroyed countless historic and cultural sites.
In Brief
In the 1800s, long before swiping right, there were escort cards: paper cards that men presented to women as an indication of their interest.