The Portrait That Captures the Defining Features of John McCain’s Life and Career
A photograph of the straight-talking Arizona senator goes on view In Memoriam at the Portrait Gallery
Born Into Slavery, Bill Traylor Would Become a Leading Light of Self-Taught Art
A new show at the Smithsonian American Art museum highlights his work
This Culture, Once Believed Extinct, Is Flourishing
A new exhibition explores the cultural heritage of the Taíno, the indigenous people of the Caribbean
Epcot Just Got a New Smithsonian Museum Exhibition
Worlds apart yet sharing so much, the two vacation destinations collaborate to bring scholarship and authenticity to Disney audiences
The Moment That Defines Famed American Composer Leonard Bernstein
The National Portrait Gallery showcases a celebrated conductor as portrayed by the master French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson
How Can Museums Democratize Portraiture?
As the National Portrait Gallery turns 50, it is asking how well its collections represent the people—and where there is room for improvement
Why Curators Killed Hatcher, the 66-Million-Year-Old Triceratops
The popular dinosaur has a new starring role in the upcoming “Deep Time” exhibition—a meal for T. rex
A Sensuous Blending of Style and Speed, This Ducati Is Both Art and Machine
An appreciation for the cognoscenti of motorcycles
This One-of-a-Kind Biplane Embodies the Thrill of Airshow Flight
The Air and Space Museum’s new “We All Fly” gallery will encourage imaginations to soar
These Images From 1968 Capture an America in Violent Flux
A one-room show at the National Portrait Gallery is a hauntingly relevant 50-year-old time capsule
The Topsy-Turvy Worldview of Georg Baselitz
Upside-down paintings are part of a 60-year survey of the German painter and sculptor, who makes a return to the Hirshhorn
Collaborative “Mail Art” Puts the Post in Postmodernism
Letters, envelopes and enclosures take center stage in an intimate new art show
This Artist Dwells in the Clandestine World of Classified Secrets and Surveillance
MacArthur Award recipient Trevor Paglen is launching his own satellite into space this fall—as a work of art
Guatemalan Immigrant Luisa Moreno Was Expelled From the U.S. for Her Groundbreaking Labor Activism
The little-known story of an early champion of workers’ rights receives new recognition
Homecoming King: The Nation’s T. rex Returns to the Smithsonian
The fully assembled skeleton will be displayed for the first time at the National Museum of Natural History in June 2019.
Armenia’s “Tree of Life” Tradition Took Root Thousands of Years Ago, and Has Only Grown Since
The tree adorned in this year’s Smithsonian Folklife Festival will continue to blossom overseas
For More Than Five Decades, the Special Olympics Has Given Marginalized Superstars Center Stage
Founded by Eunice Kennedy Shriver, the games offer intellectually disabled athletes the chance to dazzle an international audience
The Age-Old Tradition of Armenian Carpet Making Refuses to Be Swept Under the Rug
A new generation is emerging to craft the ancient rugs
How a Fallback to Historic Traditions Might Save Catalonia’s Red Shrimp Fishery
The Boquera brothers, two fishermen from the Costa Brava, are part an innovative management plan that combines science with maritime skills and knowledge
For Hundreds of Years, Papier-Mâché Has Lent a Surreal Face to Catalan Culture
Street performers disguised as Giants and Big Heads blend reverence with ribaldry at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival
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