Daily Newsletter
No One Was “Picasso’s Woman”
South Africa axes a performance about the genocide in Gaza, the real lives of the women who loved Picasso, the imaginative worlds of Rousseau, and Beer With a Painter.
Daily Newsletter
South Africa axes a performance about the genocide in Gaza, the real lives of the women who loved Picasso, the imaginative worlds of Rousseau, and Beer With a Painter.
Weekly Newsletter
Artists respond to ICE's brutality and the attack on Venezuela, Anselm Kiefer’s rustbelt romanticism, and lessons from David Wojnarowicz.
Daily Newsletter
How protestors are memorializing Renee Nicole Good, an homage to NYC’s MetroCard, an exclusive look at Joiri Minaya's artist film, and our weekly community columns.
Daily Newsletter
Why museums should voluntarily recognize unions, the art dealer guilty of cyberbullying Brigitte Macron, impressions from Guatemala’s Paiz Art Biennial, and more.
Daily Newsletter
Tate Britain's British landscape face-off, influencers apply for artist visas, remembering Kathleen Goncharov, and Ayoung Kim's digital stargazing.
New York Newsletter
From Faith Ringgold’s story quilts to Mayor Mamdani, 2026 in New York starts off interesting.
Daily Newsletter
Responses from Venezuelan Artists to the US attacks, shows to see in Los Angeles and Upstate New York, and someone stole Joan of Arc's sword in Paris.
Daily Newsletter
The role of museums during the US’s 250th anniversary, President Trump sells a Jesus painting, Hew Locke plumbs the history of empire, and more.
Weekly Newsletter
Remembering Cecilia Giménez and "Beast Jesus," Public Domain Day, the art of Fred Wilson, this month's Opportunities, and more.
Newsletter
Another year has come and gone with what feels like record speed. If you’re like me, January is a time to slow down and ease into the new year with quiet reflection, soft music, and silent reading. One of my favorite reads this time of year is A View
Daily Newsletter
This moment marks new beginnings — grounded in the past and prepared for a world we can imagine and build anew.
Daily Newsletter
There are few career paths where a professional mishap leads to great success, but Cecilia Giménez found one. The Spanish artist, who died this week at the age of 94, rose to fame and notoriety in the 2010s for her delightful “restoration” of “Ecce Homo,” a fresco of Jesus in