A Year in NYC Art Shows
Hyperallergic's top exhibitions in the city that never sleeps, turmoil at the Lucas Museum, and the fragile state of funding for media and video arts.
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Hyperallergic's top exhibitions in the city that never sleeps, turmoil at the Lucas Museum, and the fragile state of funding for media and video arts.
The Queens museum will waive entry fees for three years to coincide with its 50th anniversary.
Myles Connor is one of the very few people alive to have come out ahead after lifting an artwork from the wall of a museum, as Anthony M. Amore explores in his new book.
The Drawing Center’s Voice of Space has vast potential, but a lack of strong focus and commanding imagery makes it more earthbound than cosmic.
An overdue MoMA show reminds us that Lam pursued his own dialogue with African and Afro-diasporic visual cultures, even as the Parisian avant-garde exoticized his heritage.
The two-year, tuition-free Master of Design in Communication Design program blends studio-driven research, community engagement, and advanced design practice.
Despite pushback from right-wing leaders, nativity scenes with a humanitarian message are spreading across the country.
Our favorite shows in the city all year, and the events we’ll be attending this week.
But the ripple effects of the abrupt fund withdrawals are still being felt, organizations say.
Our series on painters and their practices is back, this time for an interview with the New York-based artist who creates “paintings in felt” to explore her Irish and Indian family history.
It was a year of surprising pairings and standout exhibitions by artists including Kerry James Marshall, Jenny Saville, and Leigh Bowery
She is the first artist with a learning disability to earn the coveted distinction.
The Universe is filled with “stuff,” no matter where or when we dare to look. Even though the majority of the Universe is dark in the sense that we haven’t figured out how to directl...
Much of the ongoing discourse surrounding AI can largely be divided along two lines of thought. One concerns practical matters: How will large language models (LLMs) affect the job market? How do we s...
The immensity of the Universe fills us with wonder. Artist’s logarithmic scale conception of the observable universe. The Solar System gives way to the Milky Way, which gives way to nearby galax...
Explorer Victor Vescovo has spent years reaching some of the most extreme places on Earth, from scaling the tallest mountains on every continent, diving to the deepest parts of every ocean, skiing to ...
Leaders need to invite disagreement, not just expect it. When the invitation to offer their opinion is not clear, teams will assume you don’t want it. Leaders often don’t realize that their status can...
Arianna Huffington moved to England from Greece at 17, earning a master’s degree in economics from Cambridge University where she was president of its celebrated debating society. Best known as the co...
No matter what it is that humans do — what we think, feel, accomplish, believe, or vote for — our shared scientific reality is the one thing that unites us all. The same laws and rules govern everythi...
One day in 1995, Toshiyuki Nakagaki had an idea. Nakagaki, a soft-spoken Japanese biologist, studies primordial mold and other amoeboid organisms. These creatures, which have been on Earth for nearly ...