Art comes in many shapes and sizes, whether it's visual, aural or experiential, digital or physical, written or drawn—the ...
In this Q&A, architect Lina Ghotmeh discusses how she’s reimagining the role of museums and cultural institutions through ...
From the grand halls of Kyiv's cultural institutions to small regional initiatives shaping public dialogue, Ukraine's ...
Brain imaging adds a simple reason why pictures work. Seeing a scene and imagining a scene recruit overlapping networks, so daily exposure can prime the mental images that drive mood and attention.
Thom Yorke and Stanley Donwood discuss how, for thirty years, they've crafted the visuals that helped define Yorke’s band, many of which are now on view at Oxford's Ashmolean Museum.
When Art Basel descends upon Miami Beach each December, the entire city transforms into a sprawling gallery where conversations about art dominate every interaction. From medical offices to real ...
Art is funny in the way it finds you. It sort of pulls you in before you even realize you’re searching for it. That’s how the FUZE Caribbean Art Expo at Baha Mar felt. Less like a scheduled stop and ...
Standing inside the Laurelhurst Club in Southeast Portland, Karen Willard said some of her family members believe she’s in a cult. It’s not hard to see why. She and hundreds of others have arrived to ...
The latest Art Basel and UBS Survey of Global Collecting was released during Paris Art Week, pointing to new market confidence. Courtesy of Art Basel HNWIs devoted a significantly larger share of ...
“The Vision” (left) by Joe Nalven and “The Practice” by Jill Rowe. (Courtesy of the authors) When we were already making art, the digital world was still a novelty. Questions abounded on whether and ...
“The Shape of Things,” a play written by Neil LaBute and directed by Emiliano Caceres Manzano ’26, will premiere on Thursday in the Saybrook Underbrook. “The Shape of Things” examines the lives of ...