Maya Angelou, Sally Ride to Be Among First Women Featured on U.S. Quarters
Between 2022 and 2025, the U.S. Mint is set to highlight up to 20 trailblazing American women
Six Stolen Frescoes Returned to Pompeii
Between the 1970s and 2012, looters stole elegant artworks from two villas neighboring the famed ancient settlement
Haunting ‘Ghost Forest’ Resurrected in New York City
Artist Maya Lin hopes to call attention to one of the dire effects of climate change with an installation in Madison Square Park
Keith Haring’s Famous Friends, From Madonna to Andy Warhol, Left Their Mark on His Fridge Door
The contemporary artist’s graffiti-covered refrigerator panel recently sold at auction for $25,000
New ‘Oregon Trail’ Game Revisits Westward Expansion From Native Perspective
Developers hired three Indigenous historians to help revamp the iconic educational computer game
Baseball’s Leading Lady Championed Civil Rights and Empowered Black Athletes
Effa Manley advocated for Black rights as a Negro Leagues team owner in the 1930s and ‘40s
‘Dracula’s Castle’ Is Now Offering Visitors Free Covid-19 Vaccinations
Bran Castle’s connections to the vampire may be as mythic as the monster himself, but the site remains a popular Romanian attraction
Gas Shortages in 1970s America Sparked Mayhem and Forever Changed the Nation
Half a century ago, a series of oil crises caused widespread panic and led to profound shifts in U.S. culture
Scholars Are One Step Closer to Solving the Mystery of an Enormous Chalk Figure
A new analysis of the 180-foot-tall Cerne Abbas Giant dates the English landmark to between 700 and 1100 A.D.
Rarely Seen Portrait of Renaissance Queen Catherine de’ Medici to Go on View
The 16th-century regent, pictured with four of her children, wielded significant political power during the French Wars of Religion
Meet Four Japanese American Men Who Fought Back Against Racism During WWII
“Facing the Mountain,” a new book by author Daniel James Brown, details the lives of four 20th-century heroes
Interpol’s New App Combats Art Crime and Protects Cultural Heritage
Amateur sleuths, collectors and dealers can use ID-Art to access the international organization’s database of 52,000 stolen artworks
Ancient Norse Elites Buried These Gold Pendants as Sacrifices to the Gods
The 1,500-year-old bracteates—found in a field in southeastern Norway—depict animal and human figures
This Monumental ‘Oracle’ Statue in NYC Subverts Traditional Sculpture
Part of an ongoing exhibition at Rockefeller Center, Sanford Biggers’ newest installation challenges the tropes of classical artwork
Presumed Portrait of Catherine Howard May Actually Depict Anne of Cleves
A Hans Holbein miniature long thought to depict Henry VIII’s fifth queen may instead portray the Tudor king’s fourth wife
1,200 Years Ago, Maya Children Decorated This Hidden Cave With Handprints
Archaeologists discovered the remarkable art about two decades ago but only publicized their findings now
Archaeologists in Italy Unearth Marble Bust of Rome’s First Emperor, Augustus
Researchers identified the sculpture based on the ancient ruler’s signature hairstyle and facial features
Spanish Confectioners Create Life-Size Chocolate Replica of Picasso’s ‘Guernica’
Local artisans undertook the ambitious project in honor of the 85th anniversary of the bombing depicted in the famed anti-war mural
Colossal Bronze Statue of Roman Emperor Reunited With Its Long-Lost Finger
Curators at the Louvre had mistakenly categorized the missing digit as a toe. An eagle-eyed researcher noticed the mistake in 2018
Racist Phrase Found Etched on Native American Petroglyphs in Utah
Unidentified criminals wrote “white power” and obscenities over thousand-year-old Indigenous markings on “Birthing Rock” in Moab
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