Mugen Train’ blends Buddhist impermanence, Shinto philosophy and samurai ethics into a lesson on courage and suffering.
A study found that when people were told to imagine their virtual bodies in pain, their brains resisted the illusion of ownership. Their findings could provide insights into why some people may ...
By Kathy Chouteau An upcoming exhibition at NIAD Art Center in Richmond is welcoming artists who are disabled and ...
Professor Im Joo Rhyu, director of the Korea University Graduate Program for Convergence & Translational Biomedicine and ...
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The diss track reached its peak of cultural prominence at the Super Bowl, when Kendrick Lamar performed Not Like Us, his ...
The pandemic accelerated economic disparity, revealing a disturbing acceptance of mass death. Did we learn nothing?
The artist’s mid-career retrospective at the Barnes Foundation is a testament to her relentless confrontation of the history ...
Here’s how the players rated in the 1-1 draw. Mary Earps - 7 Didn’t have ... This will go down as a lesson in international football for the 21-year-old. She was excellent in the first half ...
How do you bypass your thinking mind to make art? Surrealists played the game Exquisite Corpse to stimulate creativity through collaboration. Players would contribute to a drawing of a figure without ...
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