Research shows millennials and Gen Z have a taste for artsy alt investments — and they might be onto something.
The recent discovery of an unfinished mural by an unknown World War II soldier in a former Camp Crowder building represents a rare opportunity to preserve a work from the military's Camp Art Program.
A famous piece of history is now on display at the USS Midway Museum. An F4U-4 Corsair, a fighter-bomber which mainly flew in ...
Arthur “Art” Nystrom was just 18 when he enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps after graduating from Crosby-Ironton High School ...
A new exhibition spotlights a trio who pushed the boundaries of American art and illustrated the experiences of World War II ...
During the Franco-Prussian War and the ensuing civil war, many artists fled to other French cities or London. However, ...
Salina Art Center CinemaThe award-winning world of Raquel Jaramillo Palacio's Wonder returns in White Bird, a powerful WWII drama directed b ...
A recent addition to the shelves (and online, see below) is a WWII-themed version of the board game Clue. Jackie DeBlieux, ...
Don Rossi Nuccio the president of Latino Art Beat, Inc., a national not for profit arts organization ... a nine-year-old boys ...
Frank Auerbach, who fled Nazi Germany for Britain as a child and became one of the major artists of the 20th century, has ...
The Neosho Arts Council is on a mission to preserve a rare piece of World War II history discovered in a former Camp Crowder ...
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT) - In 1945, the world was at war, and 17-year-old Alexander Dumas was about to play his part. Almost 80 years later, he’s still serving his community.