News
Her sculptural “drawings" mark the distance between what we see and how we name it, drawing connections across time and space.
The artist mines archives of conquest and imperialism in her native Turkey to produce multifaceted displays that entangle violent histories with personal narratives.
Jordan Troeller’s book about the Bay Area sculptor and her artist-mother community shows us how reciprocity and caretaking ...
Residencies, fellowships, grants, and open calls from Foundwork, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Princeton University, ...
At the Brooklyn Public Library, an exhibition on queer Finnish artist Tove Jansson's beloved characters reminds visitors of ...
Daniel Giordano’s eccentric installations, Lynne Tobin’s indomitable linework, Brandon Thomas Brown’s masterful humanity, and ...
A number of cultural figures decried the actions of the demonstrators, who graffitied and smashed the glass facade of the ...
Ken Weine is the Senior Vice President and Chief Content Officer at The New York Historical. Trained as a community organizer ...
Mari Carmen Barrios Giordano is a writer and art historian based in Mexico. Enter the code sent to your email. Hyperallergic ...
One of several global events marking the late American artist’s centenary, “Life Can’t Be Stopped” will reunite over a dozen ...
Abstraction and representation bleed into one another in the same way that memories momentarily coagulate into images before ...
Marisa J. Futernick creates fictions inspired by the Catskills, a vacation destination for midcentury Jewish families.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results