How Artificial Intelligence Completed Beethoven’s Unfinished Tenth Symphony
On October 9, the work will be performed in Bonn, Germany, and a recording will be released
What Secrets Does This 1,800-Year-Old Carved Stone Hold?
The Tuxtla Statuette illuminates an endangered Latin American culture
‘Band of Brothers’ Stars Reflect on the Epic Miniseries’ Evolving Legacy
HBO’s beloved World War II drama premiered 20 years ago this month
Inside the Growing Movement to Share Science Through Quilting
The classic medium allows researchers, students and artists to tell stories about science, technology, engineering and math
The Arc de Triomphe Is Wrapped in Fabric, Just as the Late Artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude Planned It
Beginning September 18, the pair’s posthumous work will be on full display in Paris for 16 days
The Art of Remembering 9/11
Learn about five artworks in SAAM’s collection and the stories they tell us about 9/11
A Lesser-Known Photo of an Iconic 9/11 Moment Brings Shades of Gray to the Day’s Memory
On the 20th anniversary of the attacks, photographers who immortalized the famous scene reflect on what their images capture and what remains out of frame
Seven 9/11 Memorials to Visit Across the United States
These lesser-known monuments honor the lives lost in the terrorist attacks 20 years ago
The Heart-Wrenching History of the Breakup Album
From Joni Mitchell’s ‘Blue’ to Olivia Rodrigo’s ‘Sour,’ love and loss has an ever evolving soundtrack
At 40, MTV Is Officially Over the Hill
Born in 1981, the network soon grew to include reality TV and the VMAs. But nothing compares to its glory days of 24/7 music videos
Smithsonian Displays Bullet-Riddled Sign That Documented Emmett Till’s Horrific Murder
A month-long exhibition invites conversations addressing ongoing racism in America
This Teenager Is Developing a Video Game That Assesses Your Mental Health
Rasha Alqahtani, an 18-year-old from Saudi Arabia, is determined to help her peers learn about their anxiety—in the wildly popular setting of ‘Minecraft’
More Than 80 Cultures Still Speak in Whistles
Dozens of traditional cultures use a whistled form of their native language for long-distance communication. You could, too.
Chronicling Hip-Hop’s 45-Year Ascendance as a Musical, Cultural and Social Phenom
The groundbreaking box set “Smithsonian Anthology of Hip-Hop and Rap” features 129 tracks, liner notes and an illustrated 300-page compendium
The Audubon Mural Project Brings Threatened Birds Back to New York City
From purple finches to whiskered screech owls, artists are expanding a colorful flock of public artworks in Upper Manhattan
The Secret Codes of Lady Wroth, the First Female English Novelist
The Renaissance noblewoman is little known today, but in her time she was a notorious celebrity
Twenty Years Later, First Responders and Families Remember the People They Lost on 9/11
These portraits of resilience recall the day when loved ones, friends and colleagues perished in the terrorist attacks
Groundbreaking Archaeologist Ann Axtell Morris Finally Gets the Cinematic Treatment
Nearly a century after Morris excavated ancestral Native lands, filmmakers return with an inclusive approach that brings Navajo Nation onto the big screen
Imagining a Different History for Africa Through Art
Toyin Ojih Odutola conjures a world that might have been
The Lost Art of Molding Ice Cream Into Eagles, Tugboats and Pineapples
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, ice cream makers used metal casts to create fanciful desserts
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