Arts

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fromArtforum
1 hour ago

Distress Signals

This sprawling installation (or in the New York gallery's parlance, "spatial collage") had transformed the Wooster Street space into a warren of rooms and hallways that resembled a series of stage or film sets, including a "clandestine drug lab," a Chinatown basement store, and a pirate radio station. I gingerly navigated through half-destroyed walls and over uneven floors strewn with detritus, escaping with vivid memories of one of the strangest contemporary art experiences to be had in those years.
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fromArtforum
1 hour ago

Alison Knowles (1933-2025)

Alison Knowles was a generous, pioneering Fluxus artist who emphasized intermedia practices, ritualized performance (The Identical Lunch), and meticulous archival care.
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fromMission Local
1 hour ago

What's on now at San Francisco museums, February 2026

Local museums and cultural centers face funding shortfalls while exhibitions and collaborative events proceed, and public donations/support are needed to sustain programs.
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fromArtforum
1 hour ago

Suburban Sublime

SORRAT transformed Neihardt's grief into a cross-disciplinary psychic experiment that merged poetry, ritual, science, and avant-garde art to probe consciousness and the afterlife.
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fromArtforum
1 hour ago

Blame Game

Molière's comedies are being revived in contemporary theater to critique cultural elites and prompt self-reflection within arts philanthropy and performance.
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fromHyperallergic
19 hours ago

Attention, Fascism Ahead

Artists respond to political events in the US with tributes, protests, and critical exhibitions while debates about immigration threaten America's art market dominance.
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fromArtnet News
20 hours ago

The Louvre's Fabled Sculpture Journeys to Rijksmuseum

A Bernini-enhanced ancient marble Sleeping Hermaphroditus, combining a 2nd-century body with a carved bed, arrives at the Rijksmuseum for the Metamorphoses exhibition.
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fromArtnet News
1 day ago

How the Met Opera Turned Beloved Murals Into Financial Tools | Artnet News

The Metropolitan Opera faces financial strain and is considering selling its two Chagall murals, appraised at $55 million, potentially with placement conditions.
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fromArtnet News
19 hours ago

How 19 Contemporary Artists Paid Tribute to John Constable

Bernard Jacobson Gallery is exhibiting the 1976 print portfolio For John Constable by 19 contemporary artists through February 27, 2026.
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fromwww.npr.org
12 hours ago

'Wait Wait' for January 31, 2026: With Not My Job guest Jon M. Chu

Recording in Chicago featured Peter Sagal, Bill Kurtis, Jon M. Chu, and panelists playing games, answering Wicked questions, reading limericks, and making predictions about exploding trees.
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fromwww.npr.org
9 hours ago

'Sanford and Son' co-star Demond Wilson dies at 79

Demond Wilson, known for playing Lamont Sanford on Sanford and Son, died at 79 from complications related to cancer.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Six great reads: Fafo' parenting, what tech does to us, and Patrick Bateman's legacy

Modern technology, shifting parenting norms, artistic contrasts, and nostalgic reflections reveal cultural tensions between connection, emotional warmth, and changing creative and social practices.
fromwww.theguardian.com
20 hours ago

South African artist sues minister for blocking her Venice Biennale Gaza entry

A South African artist is suing the arts minister after he blocked her from representing the country at the Venice Biennale, having called her work addressing Israel's killing of Palestinians in Gaza highly divisive. Gabrielle Goliath filed the lawsuit last week, with Ingrid Masondo, who would have curated the pavilion, and the studio manager, James Macdonald. It accuses Gayton McKenzie of acting unlawfully and violating the right to freedom of expression and demands the high court reinstates her
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#san-francisco-ballet
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fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

The strange journey of the Gelman collection: From the alleged betrayal of Cantinflas to one of Mexico's most powerful families

Banco Santander and the Zambrano family will manage and exhibit 160 works from the Gelman collection, clarifying long-disputed whereabouts.
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fromLondon Unattached
15 hours ago

The Tempest - Sam Wanamaker Theatre, The Globe - Review

Tim Crouch’s candlelit Sam Wanamaker production casts Prospero as a magician and theatre-maker, emphasizing intimacy, conversational staging, forgiveness, and disrupted theatrical boundaries.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
2 days ago

'The Play That Goes Wrong': A deliciously comic, fabulous disaster hits the stage * Oregon ArtsWatch

A staged murder-mystery intentionally collapses into expert, nonstop theatrical mishaps that generate relentless laughter through precisely timed failures.
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fromArtnet News
1 day ago

5 Museums That Map Mexico City, From Ancient Ruins to Reinvention

Mexico City hosts an exceptionally dense, diverse museum ecosystem with hundreds of institutions, major art events, and accessible cultural neighborhoods.
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fromHyperallergic
1 day ago

Claude Cahun's Survival Guide for the Ages

A fragmented memoir reinvents identity through dialogues, sketches, and aphorisms that enact refusal, queer poetics, and surrealist artistic experimentation.
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fromHyperallergic
1 day ago

After the Strike, Will Art Galleries Be Allies?

If deleting the social media post tomorrow would change nothing about how artists are paid or how resources are allocated, the gallery's allyship is disposable.
fromArtnet News
1 day ago

The $500 Apple Check That Launched a Tech Empire Nets $2.4 Million

Leading the sale was the first check the company cut on March 16, 1976. "This is the most important financial document in Apple history," Bobby Livingston, the auction house's executive vice president, said about the check. "It captures Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak's first true business transaction, and the final result shows that collectors recognized its significance above any other Apple material ever brought to market."
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fromArtnet News
1 day ago

A Renaissance Treasure Is Making Its U.S. Debut at Sotheby's

Sotheby's inaugurates Old Masters Week at the Breuer, exhibiting Perugino's Decemviri Altarpiece cimasa and marking Bellini's Pietà U.S. debut at the Morgan Library.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

Catherine O'Hara played drunk better than anyone

Catherine O'Hara transformed drunken characters into vulnerable, precise, and deeply comic performances through keen observation and innate comedic talent.
fromArtnet News
1 day ago

Nicole Young Rethinks Abstraction and Environmentalism Through Medium

From swathes of her own paintings to pieces of reclaimed or recycled fabrics or found canvases, as well as sourcing her own pigments and dyes from nature, Young carefully crops and sews together otherwise seemingly disparate materials into wholly new compositions. Set into natural wood frames, the material nature of Young's work illuminates her longstanding exploration of environmentalism. The climate impact of creative practices is often overlooked and left uninterrogated, but for Young it is situated at the heart of her practice.
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fromHyperallergic
1 day ago

Eugene Atget, Readymade Icon

An ICP exhibition emphasizes Atget's ready-made prestige and glowing peer accolades while minimizing the failures and struggles that shaped his life.
fromHyperallergic
1 day ago

Onassis AiR Opens Applications for 2026-27 Residencies in Athens

After six successful years supporting nearly 250 fellows from around the world, the artistic research and residency program Οnassis AiR has become a container of cross-disciplinary exchange among local and international art practitioners and researchers. Process, research, and experimentation are at the core of the residency: participants are invited to delve deeper into their practice without the pressure of presenting a final work.
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fromHyperallergic
1 day ago

James Castle Was a World Unto Himself

James Castle's found-paper and soot works create transportive, formally radical abstractions that evoke otherworldly, rule-governed visual universes.
fromArtnet News
1 day ago

Andy Warhol Films, Left Undeveloped for Decades, Come to Light | Artnet News

The newly discovered moving image work—totaling over an hour in length—includes eight new Screen Test portraits of Warhol collaborators and unused footage shot for his films Batman Dracula, Sleep, and Couch. The most significant find is several rolls of pornographic footage that shed new light on Warhol's ambitions in the 1960s. They prove that the artist had been capturing explicit scenes on the couch of his famous Factory studio long before making Blue Movie, the salacious 1969 feature that would inspire a "porno chic" phenomenon.
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fromArtnet News
1 day ago

Long-Unseen Artworks by Original Beatle Stuart Sutcliffe Go on View

Sutcliffe, who was born in Edinburgh but grew up in Liverpool, met John Lennon while they were both studying at the Liverpool College of Art. By early 1960, the pair were living together and Sutcliffe joined Lennon, Paul McCartney, and George Harrison 's band in May. Sutcliffe played acoustic guitar and took on the responsibility of booking gigs, but various accounts suggest he was no more than a competent musician. Sutcliffe's real talents lay in his "marvelous art portfolio," according to Lennon's description.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

'Islands' is a spare and satisfying slow-burn thriller

Islands is a spare, slow-burn drama set on barren Fuerteventura that examines alienation and luxury through a broken tennis pro's interactions with a wealthy family.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 day ago

Art Basel Qatar is the latest addition to a grand national plan

Qatar Museums was founded in 2005 by Sheikha Al-Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, the daughter of the former emir of the country. As Qataris like to point out, Doha's engagement with international contemporary art began before that of the UAE and well before that of Saudi Arabia; its I.M. Pei-designed Museum of Islamic Art opened in 2008 and Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art in 2010, while museums elsewhere were still in the planning stages.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

These films took home top awards at Sundance plus seven our critic loved

2026 was an especially notable year for the Sundance Film Festival: it was the first without its legendary founder Robert Redford, who died last year, and it was the last to be held in Park City, Utah. Beginning next year, the fest will relocate to Boulder, Colo. for the foreseeable future. As Sundance said goodbye to its home of over 40 years and honored Redford's legacy, protests continued in Minnesota and across the country due to the escalated presence of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
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fromHyperallergic
1 day ago

Becoming Caravaggio

Marciari brought me to a very different place: the luxurious, languid heat of late-summer Rome, in one of the final years of the 16th century. There, an ordinary boy has been made to hold a heavy basket of fruit for far longer than he'd like in a hot, airless studio, and a young, unknown painter is on the precipice of greatness.
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fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 day ago

Former Swiss president to head new Nazi loot panel

After more than 25 years of debate and delay, we have moved beyond words and into action. This commission is not just a technical body; it is a commitment to historical integrity and a long-awaited bridge to justice for those whose heritage was stolen.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

Meet Mediocre Bunny, the non-Spanish speaker learning Bad Bunny songs

When Bad Bunny hosted Saturday Night Live last October, touting the recent announcement of his Super Bowl halftime show, Niklaus Miller was enraptured. The 29-year-old loved the singer's drapey shirt, flowy pants and self-deprecating jokes. And when Benito Antonio Martinez Ocasio looked directly into the camera during the opening monologue, Miller felt that the mega star was peering into his soul.
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#mfa-boston
fromHi-Fructose Magazine - The New Contemporary Art Magazine
1 day ago

Pedro Pedro transforms The Everyday into Vibrant Inanimate Portraits - Hi-Fructose Magazine

One of the great things about making art is discovering something that sprang from seemingly nowhere. In retrospect it looks logical but in the moment it's an epiphany and suddenly it's exciting to explore it. My studio is across the street from Creative Woodworking and they have a box where they put scrap wood for anyone who wants it and it's irresistible to me.
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fromJuxtapoz
3 days ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Israel Campos "Echoes" @ Charlie James Gallery, Los Angeles

These paintings reveal the layers of history that undergird modern Los Angeles. Yaanga Lies Under the 101 imagines the city's earliest Tongva inhabitants as they made their home on the land that, in the modern day, runs beneath the Hollywood Freeway. Campos's process mimics this archaeological layering: each canvas begins with a screenprinted underlayer that is then painted over in acrylic, and then once again layered with screenprinted details.
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fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 day ago

Venice Biennale: South African pavilion scandal, Marian Goodman remembered, Paul Cezanne in Basel-podcast

The South African culture minister, the right-wing populist Gayton McKenzie, has cancelled the project for South Africa's pavilion at the forthcoming Venice Biennale, proposed by the artist Gabrielle Goliath and curator Ingrid Masondo. Goliath and Masondo have appealed to the country's president and submitted a case to its high court to overturn McKenzie's decision. Ben Luke speaks to Charles Leonard, who has been reporting on this story for The Art Newspaper over the past few weeks.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
2 days ago

Newport octogenarians Sandy Roumagoux, Bobby Flewellyn, and Scottie Howard show art is ageless * Oregon ArtsWatch

The three met in Roumagoux's Thursday morning Open Studio class at Oregon Coast Community College, two hours when a dozen students paint and Roumagoux roams the room sharing the wisdom honed over her decades as both an artist and teacher. "As people started loosening up and telling their life stories, as happens in a good studio class, lo and behold, we told what ages we are," Roumagoux recalled.
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fromLondon Unattached
1 day ago

Julia Phillips at the Barbican Curve - Review

Julia Phillips's Barbican Curve exhibition literalizes 'visceral' through intestinal, pink sculptures and assisted-conception drawings exploring embodiment and human conception.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
2 days ago

February DanceWatch: A quartet of fairy tales, Urban Bush Women, Mike Barber & friends, and much more * Oregon ArtsWatch

February in Oregon presents four classic fairytale ballets alongside socially engaged contemporary dance, juxtaposing timeless themes of power and gender with current sociopolitical expression.
#public-art
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fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 day ago

sustainable ice skating rink occupies palazzo diedo's frescoed banquet hall in venice

A 100-square-meter synthetic skating rink occupies Palazzo Diedo's frescoed hall, combining sustainable ice simulation, sound, and lightboxes to juxtapose Baroque permanence with bodily experience.
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fromianVisits
1 day ago

Get tickets to visit the House of Dreams

An ordinary South London terraced house, the House of Dreams, houses a vividly decorated, immersive art environment by artist Stephen Wright that is open monthly.
#theater
#asian-american-identity
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fromTime Out London
1 day ago

The treasured west London gallery that is reopening next month

Mosaic Rooms reopens February 18 with refreshed galleries, new creative learning and screening spaces, a broadcasting tower, and major exhibitions including Bouchra Khalili.
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fromTime Out London
1 day ago

Immersive theatre town experience Phantom Peak is opening a new venue in London

Phantom Peak will close its Canada Water outpost in February 2026 and relocate to a larger Stratford venue opening summer 2026.
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fromTime Out London
1 day ago

Adrian Lester returns to London's West End to star in 'Cyrano de Bergerac'

Adrian Lester returns to the West End in Simon Evans' traditional-period Cyrano de Bergerac at the Noël Coward Theatre, June 13–Sept 5.
#museum-leadership
fromHyperallergic
2 days ago

Required Reading

Marah Al-Za'anin, an 18-year-old Palestinian artist, has transformed a tent in Gaza City's Al-Rimal neighborhood into a studio. Al-Za'anin can't have been more than 15 or 16 years old when the genocide began, but she continues to pursue her passion for art and uses her brother's phone as a light source while she paints and draws late into the night. (photo by Saeed Jaras/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)
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fromArtnet News
2 days ago

This New Advisory Wants to Help Artists Master Their Money | Artnet News

Artist Money Matters provides tailored financial tools and advisory to artists, covering cash-flow, pricing, contracts, taxes, grants, budgeting, and studio sustainability.
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fromHyperallergic
2 days ago

Michelle Segre's Impermanent Worlds

Michelle Segre's Nebula collapses sculpture and painting through unconventional, perishable materials, challenging permanence while requiring close, 360-degree engagement.
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fromwww.npr.org
2 days ago

More staff shakeups at the Kennedy Center

Two senior staffers left the John F. Kennedy Center, including Kevin Couch who resigned after less than two weeks, and Sarah Kramer who was fired.
fromColossal
2 days ago

Regina Silveira Pieces Together an Evolving Narrative of Latin America

Regina Silveira has spent the better part of three decades considering the relationship between media and meaning, particularly as it relates to Latin America. First presented in 1997, "To Be Continued..." features 100 black-and-white reproductions of photos, newspaper clippings, propaganda, advertisements, and more. Silveira nests each image into an oversized puzzle piece, which cuts off faces and scenes to leave fragments of pop culture icons, flora and fauna, and even the occasional mugshot spliced next to one another.
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fromArtnet News
2 days ago

Art SG Attendance Climbs, JD Museum Announced, and more

Art SG wrapped its fourth edition on Sunday, reporting 43,000 visitors during its four-day run, up from last year's 41,000. The S$250,000 ($197,000) SAM Art SG Fund, backed by patrons Carmen Yixuan Li, Pure Yichun Chen, and Pierre Lorinet, acquired works by Mona Hatoum (from White Cube) and Lotus L. Kang (from Commonwealth and Council) for Singapore Art Museum 's permanent collection. Some dealers said they made satisfactory sales, mostly for five or six digits.
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fromHyperallergic
2 days ago

Will Trump Ruin the Art Market?

Proposed US requirements for Visa Waiver travelers to surrender digital and family data will deter international visitors, damaging the American art market and cultural exchange.
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fromArtnet News
2 days ago

An Infamous Rembrandt Makes a Cameo in the New 'Knives Out'

Wake Up Dead Man briefly shows a reproduction of Rembrandt's stolen Christ in the Storm, reflecting the Knives Out series' taste for notable art cameos.
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fromHyperallergic
3 days ago

How Trump Is Jeopardizing the US Art Market

Expanded US entry rules would force visitors to surrender extensive digital, biometric, and family data, risking deterrence of international artists and collectors.
fromArtnet News
2 days ago

To Understand the Gulf's Growing Art Market, Leave Old Assumptions Behind | Artnet News

The Gulf has become an art market hot spot, but insiders say the biggest challenge facing its newest arrivals isn't how to tap the region's wealth, it's how to unlearn assumptions that they may bring with them, particularly concerning the area's money, power, and cultural depth. With Art Basel Qatar debuting next week, the region is no longer a peripheral scene but a new axis of influence for the trade.
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fromHyperallergic
2 days ago

A View From the Easel

Artist balances painting, drawing, embroidery, and large-scale scroll work in a vineyard-side studio, managing herniated discs by alternating tasks, drawing inspiration from sunrise and sunset.
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fromColossal
2 days ago

February 2026 Opportunities: Open Calls, Residencies, and Grants for Artists

Monthly listing of open calls, grants, fellowships, residencies, and competitions for artists and designers with application details, fees, prizes, and deadlines.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
2 days ago

Plans for Trump hotel in Belgrade collapse after Serbia's culture minister indicted

Affinity Global Development, a company linked to Jared Kushner, the son-in-law of the US president Donald Trump, has withdrawn from the project. The decision came soon after Serbian prosecutors indicted Nikola Selaković, the country's minister of culture, alongside Slavica Jelača, a secretary at the ministry of culture; Goran Vasić, acting director of the Republic Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments; and Aleksandar Ivanović, acting director of the Belgrade City Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments.
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fromArtnet News
2 days ago

A Darkly Spellbinding Booth at the Winter Show | Artnet News

French and Company's Winter Show booth centers on dark-themed Old Master paintings, dramatic Victorian objects, and high-priced standout works including a $1.5M ceramic peacock.
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fromArtforum
3 days ago

Expo Chicago Names Exhibitors for Slimmed-Down 2026 Event

Expo Chicago returns April 9-12 at Navy Pier with a smaller, curated presentation of 130+ galleries, new OPC sections, and new director Kate Sierzputowski.
fromColossal
2 days ago

Drawn to Synbols, Michael McGrath Conjures Uncanny Narratives

Disembodied heads, eyes, and hands meet spindly trees, dragonflies, and vibrant blossoms in the folk-art inspired works of Michael McGrath. Based in Rhinebeck, New York, McGrath melds a variety of media-most pieces contain a mixture of graphite, ink, and oil and acrylic paints-into dynamic compositions suffuse with mystery. Recurring symbols and objects lend themself to a distinctive visual language that captures both the wondrous and puzzling.
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fromSan Francisco Bay Times
2 days ago

BEACONS at Queer Arts Featured Highlights Castro Theatre Blade and Other Iconic Neon Works - San Francisco Bay Times

Nathaniel J. Bice's BEACONS solo exhibition showcases large studio paintings of neon signage from San Francisco's iconic queer spaces, on view Feb 6–Mar 29, 2026.
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fromJuxtapoz
4 days ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Akea Brionne: Time Bends for the Tender @ Lyles & King, NYC

Portraits depict Black women's interior lives using vivid domestic spaces, color masking, and Afro-surreal distortions to explore survival, identity, and emotional reclamation.
fromItsnicethat
2 days ago

Visual Stimulation is a lean, mean zine from Hattie Stewart that puts sensuality over sexuality

For those who are in desperate need of stimulation, this zine delivers - its visual language is razor-sharp and packed with colour, each page feels like a porno magazine that has vomited everywhere. Hattie calls it a "frenetic deluge", a collection of themes that circle the drain of "online fatigue", a way to process an excessive amount of information in order to create meaning and seek comfort.
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from48 hills
2 days ago

BIG WEEK: Edwardian Ball, Pivot Festival, Miss Kittin, A Harvey Milk sandwich.... - 48 hills

FRI/30-SUN/1: PIVOT FESTIVAL The 11th annual installment of this incredible boundary-pushing music festival has enlisted Andy Meyerson of the excellent Living Earth Show duo to curate-and boy is he bringing it. (If you haven't grokked Living Earth's terrific Roar Shack venue, hop to it, btw.) The weekend fills Herbst Theater with hyper-San Franciscan sounds, with performances by vocalist Tanner Porter, San Francisco Ballet dancer- choreographer Myles Thatcher, and Bay Area ensembles Bucket List (featuring composer-creator Mark Applebaum),
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fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
2 days ago

thousands of recycled CDs form reflective vertical sculptures in tara donovan's stratagems

Tara Donovan presents Stratagems at the Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco (ICA SF), at the Transamerica Pyramid Center, installing a group of vertically oriented sculptures made entirely from thousands of recycled CDs. On view until July 31st, 2026, the exhibition is installed within the transparent Annex space. Stratagems enters into a deliberate exchange with the Transamerica Pyramid itself. The sculptures echo the skyscraper's verticality and reflective skin, while their recycled material introduces a counterpoint to the monumentality of the building.
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fromwww.amny.com
2 days ago

Dreams full of voltage: Karina Lumiere's abstract works electrify the art scene amNewYork

Karina Lumiere paints like someone who trusts color more than language. Her work does not whisper its intentions. It glows, pulses, seduces. This is abstraction born not from theory, but from devotiondevotion to intuition, to sensation, to the unapologetic power of hue as an emotional instrument. Her path to abstract expressionism was never academic. It unfolded in solitude, shaped by meditation and spiritual practice, where listening became more important than learning and presence eclipsed instruction.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Robert Crumb review sexual deviancy elevated to an art form

Robert Crumb's transgressive, confessional comics expose deep neuroses through filthy, angry, and darkly humorous self-portraits and exaggerated female figures.
#curatorial-appointment
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fromUntapped New York
1 year ago

Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel Comes to Brookyln - Untapped New York

Life-sized high-definition reproductions of Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel frescoes are exhibited in Brooklyn, offering viewers five-times-closer, brushstroke-level detail and multilingual audio tours.
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fromSlate Magazine
2 days ago

It Was Mocked as Cringe Resistance Liberalism. A New Generation of Activists Has Embraced It as an Anti-ICE Symbol.

Knitters nationwide are producing red "Melt The ICE" hats, inspired by Norwegian resistance caps, raising substantial funds and overwhelming local red yarn supplies.
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fromNew York Daily News
2 days ago

7 things to do in NYC this weekend, Jan. 30 to Feb. 1

Family-oriented performances and theater events in New York include Disney On Ice at Barclays through Feb. 1 and a ten-minute-play festival at The Apollo through Jan. 31.
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fromLondon Unattached
2 days ago

Paul Taylor Dance Company at the Linbury - Linbury RBO - Review

Paul Taylor Dance Company returns to the UK with an exuberant triple bill that celebrates Taylor’s legacy while showcasing new choreography and vibrant performances.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
3 days ago

Public officials discuss fate of Keller Auditorium in private * Oregon ArtsWatch

City-appointed panels are privately analyzing the future of the Keller Auditorium while the mayor and City Council will decide after public meetings.
fromKqed
2 weeks ago

San Francisco's CounterPulse In Turmoil After Layoffs, Labor Dispute | KQED

We have a 35-year history of serving this city, and an incredible legacy of audience and artists and community members who want to see it thrive, and a building that we own,
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