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“Amongst all the sadness around AIDS,” artist and activist Lola Flash states, “there’s so much joy in the community that has held me.” Revisiting the first two decades of the AIDS crisis often means ...
In late April 1919, as the sun began to warm after the long dark winter, artist Hilma af Klint ventured out into the fields and forests near her home and studio on the island of Munsö, not far from ...
Hear from artists, writers, and therapists about what happens when art and grief collide.
Abandon sleep, all ye who enter here: the entrance to The Clock, where I would be spending the next 24 hours.
War compels three Ukrainian artists to rethink their approach to photography.
On the occasion of the exhibition Vital Signs: Artists and the Body, we spoke with art historian Cyle Metzger about Forrest Bess, an artist central to Metzger’s work on the trans history of art in the ...
Immediately following the invention of Cubism in the early 20th century, paintings, drawings, and sculptures made in that trailblazing new style were often displayed in dense installations—stacked ...
The famed architect’s model of a four-square-mile community was truly utopian in its utter impracticality.
The artist talks about Claude Monet, the muscle memory of painting, and why he’s packing a tube of orange paint for his summer in Maine.
Members of the original Loft community in New York City describe how the glorious, ongoing party moves them.
Kristen Radtke is the author of Seek You: A Journey Through American Loneliness (2021) and Imagine Wanting Only This (2017). Her work has been nominated for a PEN/Jean Stein Award, an Eisner Award, ...
Ghosts of the 20th century recur across this year’s Doc Fortnight program. From jazz and Cold War geopolitics in the Congo to testimonies from the Bosnian War that changed international law, the ...
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