What does the future hold for art? What does art hold for the future. There's an intersecting double exhibition at Hedge ...
Peter Jason, a character actor known for his roles in “Deadwood,” “48 Hrs.” and “Prince of Darkness,” along with his many television appearances, died Thursday in his West Hollywood home.
A crime thriller explores the dark underworld of fine art in a dynamic and entertaining stage adaptation. Peter James’s ...
Neerja Chandna Peters, a self-taught artist, gave up her career in medicine to explore the world of abstractionism with colours and fine lines drawn to accurate mathematical measurements.
In Artist Profile Issue 50, Luke Sciberras wrote on the inimitable Peter Kingston. Saddened by news of Kingston's passing, and celebrating his life, we're pleased to share Sciberras's essay from our ...
Fitz Henry Lane, 1804–1865, View of Gloucester Harbor, 1858. Oil on canvas. From the Carolyn A. and Peter S. Lynch Collection at the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College. Peter Lynch, vice ...
Cleveland. The exhibition, now in its 79th year, showcases CIA student work across all manner of disciplines – from visual arts and craft to digital art and design. Stories by Peter Chakerian ...
For artist Sougwen Chung, AI is an opportunity to embrace uncertainty. Many artists worry about the encroachment of artificial intelligence on artistic creation. But Sougwen Chung, a nonbinary ...
At first glance, you would be forgiven for thinking that the work of contemporary Indonesian artist Citra Sasmita was made hundreds of years ago. From afar, her embroideries and paintings could ...
Still, almost despite itself, it points to true art. As a sprawling new exhibit opens in two museums in Amsterdam, the German artist fears that history is repeating itself. Two dozen works from ...
She later moved on to neo-soul and R&B music as a solo artist with albums including “Black Diamond” in 1999 and “Mahogany Soul” in 2001. In a 2020 interview with “The Breakfast Club ...
Sandwiched near the bottom is a self-portrait of the artist from the nose up. Eyes are closed, face exhausted. She’s preparing the sculpture for a May show at the Korea Society in Manhattan.