A 1982 performance in skywriting by a famed Chilean land artist and poet inspires a new virtual exhibition organized by graduates of the Whitney Museum's Independent Study Program.
A 1982 performance in skywriting by a famed Chilean land artist and poet inspires a new virtual exhibition organized by graduates of the Whitney Museum's Independent Study Program.
As we await the Museum of Modern Art's reopening, a virtual exhibition on its website gathers outstanding works of video art by women including Joan Jonas, Camille Henrot, and Martine Syms.
A two-part exhibition in London highlights the longtime Life magazine photographer's close look at the resilience of Black Americans in the segregated South and elsewhere.
An online venture knits together Los Angeles's sprawling, COVID-challenged gallery scene with timely exhibitions, smart content, and a shot of communal energy.
With works related to her recent Tate Modern Turbine Hall installation, a massive fountain steeped in the history of the transatlantic slave trade, the American artist leads the conversation about controversial monuments.
The debut of colorful permanent installations by the celebrated contemporary artists Jeppe Hein, Sabine Hornig, Laura Owens, and Sarah Sze, in the airport's new Arrivals and Departures Hall, celebrates New York's resilience and the return of air travel.
In her London gallery exhibition and a related online viewing room, the Dutch photographer and installation artist turns a famous Rembrandt group portrait into a convivial social gathering of her own.