The Untold Stories" and "1968: A Folsom Redemption," explore the art of individuals affected by the prison system.
Frustrated with the absence of positive representations of Black people in art, John Wilson responded by providing images of Black dignity while addressing the painful realities of racial prejudice.
The first major U.S. exhibition of Germany’s great Romantic painter is a historic showcase. It’s also a blueprint for how to ...
"The Whole World Is a Mystery" at the Carnegie Museum of Art marks the first retrospective look at Gertrude Abercrombie in ...
"Seen," at the Weisman Art Museum in Minneapolis, pairs together artists living inside and outside of prison facilities.
Los Angeles is a city known for its vast Latino population, and its art scene is reflective of the diversity that exists within that community. Some spaces, like the Cheech Marin Center in ...
Roses had been owned by Dr Gachet, sold off by his son in 1923, then bought by the distinguished Japanese collector Kojiro Matsukata and eventually acquired by the National Museum of Western Art.
He came to New York in 1968 to study psychology and art history at Columbia University and lived and worked in the city for the rest of his life. In 1972, he enrolled in the Whitney Museum of ...
When an iconic painting is in need of restoration, it is usually taken to a studio to be worked on in seclusion.
"Our thoughts are with his family at this time of loss.” De Groft became executive director of the Orlando Museum of Art in 2021 following art museum administration jobs in Jacksonville ...
His latest exhibit, “Indulge Me,” is currently on display at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. In many respect, his exhibit is a retrospective of a fascinating career. Bilal made a name ...