The Delaware Art Museum returns visitors to the 1920s during “Jazz Age Illustration,” the first major exhibition of popular ...
Works by Philip Guston and Trenton Doyle Hancock suggest the possibilities — and limitations — of satirical art.
With a paintbrush in one hand and a camera in the other, Gatekeeper Adrian is on a mission to reimagine what it means to be ...
In 1975, Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes laid down a melodic mandate that applies to our times: “Wake up, everybody / No more ...
A new exhibition spotlights a trio who pushed the boundaries of American art and illustrated the experiences of World War II ...
The Ringling highlights photographs by Danny Lyon and Roy DeCarava who captured different aspects of Black life in mid-20th ...
Three African-American women in Harlem during the Harlem Renaissance in 1925 NOVEMBER 13 1839—The Liberty Party—the nation’s ...
I get chills recalling the sheer power of art that I felt in this room at the National Portrait Gallery, as if the genius loci of Washington, D.C. was standing next to me like a ghost.
At pickup basketball games, one of Portland artist Jeremy Okai Davis’s friends would shout “thick gravy” when he hit a shot.
When British author Ekow Eshun felt what he called “a harsh time of unbridled racism” in his native London, he turned his ...
s installation “We Are All Kinda Floating” consists of vibrant, monumental textiles sewn from hand-dyed fabrics that center ...
A Romare Bearden print served as a starting point for the American playwright's 1987 drama, which follows a Black family's ...