Bow, who also serves as inspiration for a new Taylor Swift song, was one of Hollywood's first starlets
The final painting, dramatized on Netflix's "The Crown," was secretly burned in the middle of the night
The Fort Collins library waived the fine, which totaled over $14,000 when adjusted for inflation
The winning photographs capture moving moments in the midst of tumultuous global events
Scrabble Together, now available in Europe, is the first major update to the game in more than 75 years
Its signature 184-foot spire collapsed, but rescuers salvaged some of the valuable artworks inside
At a Florida museum, "Ask Dalí" allows visitors to speak with the Surrealist artist via a lobster telephone
Officials have given artists until June 1 to rewrite material that does not fall within the accepted range
Found in an ancient dining hall, the artworks depict characters associated with the Trojan War
The Harlem-born painter, who died this week at age 93, elevated the everyday lives of Black Americans and fought for representation in major museums
After discovering the stunt, the Pinakothek der Moderne fired the staffer and reported the crime to the police
Shababeek for Contemporary Art was the last established visual arts center still standing in the enclave
McCartney was inspired to write the song after hearing about the battle to integrate Little Rock Central High School in 1957
An original copy of 1938's "Action Comics No. 1" sold for a record-breaking $6 million at auction
Fernando Sánchez Castillo employed historical resources and image-generation technologies to reimagine "Expulsion of the Moriscos"
The handwritten manuscript he produced is going to auction, where it could become the most expensive item associated with the mystery writer ever sold
Titles with LGBTQ themes dominated the American Library Association's newly released list
The acclaimed biopic of the Manhattan Project's leader has been met with mixed reviews by Japanese audiences
While they urge caution, researchers think an artist may have traced a stingray in the sand some 130,000 years ago
A new exhibition at the Met is the first to examine the tradition of covered 15th- and 16th-century portraits, which were designed to be interactive and often portable
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