In our 1959 summer and autumn issue, Jonas Mekas, the then editor of the American magazine Film Culture, reports from the inside, as it were, on new trends in the non-Hollywood American cinema.
Initially written by Alex Chilton for what’s known as Third – the unfinished third album by Big Star – Kangaroo was ...
an improvisation that cannot be duplicated.” The presentation will be given via Zoom and guests will be able to watch and ask ...
Wayne Shorter was a key figure in popularizing the soprano saxophone, recording indelible albums for Blue Note Records.
Tom Stockley, also known as T.S. Idiot, is a poet, artist and filmmaker who recently published their debut collection Back to the Fuchsia (Arkbound) after a successful crowdfunder.
George Condo’s forthcoming two-part exhibition — opening at Sprüth Magers and Hauser & Wirth in New York City —exclusively ...
A unique exhibition Dancing in the Light is blending light-inspired artworks with dance performances, thanks to the ...
Marlon Mullen’s show at the Museum of Modern Art, the first by a developmentally disabled artist, speaks volumes.
This painting shaped the way modern society envisions the ancient Roman gladiator. But was it historically accurate?
Weekly from 1956 to ’63, a charismatic painter named Lorser Feitelson filled America’s living rooms with the first televised ...
Steps to achieving this cool hand painting illusion ...
Tamara de Lempicka’s art deco paintings — beloved by Madonna, celebrated in a musical and a major show in San Francisco — are immaculate and artificial.