It features the work of acclaimed artist, Manash Ranjan Jena, leaving an indelible mark, exploring the unseen, the sacred and ...
Telluride is a Cubist’s rendering of mountains. Overlapping triangles rim the horizon; the valley floor meets the box canyon walls at neat right angles; a few oval abstractions soften the ...
A sale of AI art at famed auction house Christie’s could change how we think about creativity – if it’s not cancelled first.
Louise Riggio is downsizing her Manhattan apartment, which means selling more than 30 works by artists including Mondrian, ...
The president’s obsession with cultural control is evidence of a continued fascist creep, and not just another joke exercise in narcissism.
As Frieze Los Angeles shines a spotlight on art in the city, one community, long facing institutional apathy, calls for ...
Despite a downturn in the magazine industry, The New Yorker with its 1.23 million subscribers is a study in survival, Peter ...
A new exhibition opening next month at the Muscarelle Museum of Art in Williamsburg, Virginia, explores the Italian ...
Jefferson Hayman’s antique-framed photographs and colorful block sculptures have attracted fans ranging from Brad Ford and ...
Following the news that the Pompidou Centre is closing for five years, another famous French attraction is shutting down for ...
Coinciding with the anniversary of "The Gates" is a dedicated exhibition at the Shed, replete with A.R. experience.
The magazine has gained a cult following, partly by branding itself as a beacon of intellectualism. Here’s how it has changed, and stayed the same, over 100 years.