Art
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Arts
The Los Angeles Gallery That Found a Market in Great Experimentalists
Commonwealth and Council started in a one-bedroom apartment. Now their artists are heading to the Whitney Biennial, Venice Biennale and…
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News
Against All Odds, New York’s Artist Buildings Have Survived
New York’s reputation as a beacon for artists was never inevitable. Only after World War II had destabilized Europe was…
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News
Why Artists Rule New York
Unlike, say, Los Angeles or Washington, D.C. — one-industry towns where, more likely than not, you’re either in Hollywood or…
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News
When Artists Can’t Go Home, All That’s Left Is Their Art
Pablo Picasso was among the few who stood beside Chaim Soutine’s grave as his corpse was lowered into it. It…
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Arts
Neil Gaiman on the Collectibles He’s Auctioning
Art by Moebius, a Christmas card by Gaiman and a Swamp Thing cover are among the items.
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Arts
We Have a James Turrell Artwork in Our School. So There.
Manhattan private schools are renowned for their amenities, but having a Skyspace from the acclaimed master of light may help…
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News
Rethinking How We Fund the Arts in America
More from our inbox: The Wrong Approach to the U.S. Steel DealImmigrants Can Help Revive Small-Town AmericaThe No-Victims DefenseA G.O.P.…
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Arts
The Met Aims to Get Harlem Right, the Second Time Around
Notoriously, in the winter of 1969 the Metropolitan Museum of Art opened its first exhibition devoted to African American culture,…
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Arts
Six Artists Reflect on the Legacy of the Harlem Renaissance
A century later, the first African American modernist movement continues to inspire and challenge.
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World
Against a Canvas of Despair, Gaza’s Artists Trace Their Struggle
An exhibition in the Israeli-occupied West Bank features works evoking Palestinian life and protest. But the show is as much…