At Large

If art is your passion, there are innumerable ways to scratch that itch from home, for the craft and non-crafty alike. Here are five recommendations.
Call it Kismet. That may be the best way to describe the Visions of India exhibit created from the Pizzuti Collection in Columbus, Ohio.
Using matches to represent people, this California-based visual artist has gone viral with his video illustrating the importance of social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic. As…
What do we mean when we call an artwork a MASTERPIECE? Who decides which art becomes one? And what artists make them?
From Coachella and Burning Man to Berlin, Patrick Shearn and Poetic Kinetics are spreading wonder through awe-inspiring art installations.
At over fifty years old, Levi’s Trucker jackets are the rare fashion statement that is both timeless and contemporary.

The so-called father of conceptual art, Marcel Duchamp’s influence on modern and contemporary art…

The multi-talented designer is often overlooked in art and design history. The Cooper Hewitt, which has a large collection of her eclectic works, has sought to change that.
The William Blake Gallery is only the second-ever gallery devoted to the artwork of the radical, visionary printmaker from the Romantic period, William Blake (1757-1827).
Corrie and Nat discuss the Bayeux Tapestry which, spoiler alert: is not even really a tapestry! Listen to this Art History Babe Brief to learn more about this unique depiction of the Norman Conquest…
Conspiracy theorists are citing Georgia O’Keeffe as an example of the so-called Mandela Effect.
The award-winning documentary filmmaker brings Robert Mapplethorpe to life in the first feature-length film about the provocative artist.
The ancient world was actually really colorful. Learn the history behind how we came to think of ancient statues as being white.
The Allentown Art Museum is reporting that their Portrait of a Young Woman (1632), long attributed to the workshop of Rembrandt van Rijn, is, in fact, a true Rembrandt.
As museums increasingly question the practices of the colonial past, human remains that were once prized collectibles are increasingly an anachronistic embarrassment.