Celebrating 150 Years of the Metropolitan Museum of Art
An exhibition and a slate of virtual offerings commemorate the history of the iconic New York City institution
Step Into Bob Ross’ Studio With This New, Interactive Experience
An exhibition in Indiana enables art lovers to explore the painter’s refurbished workshop
Scholars Are Finding New Clues to Understanding a Gorgeous Hummingbird Series of Artworks
The 19th-century artist Martin Johnson Heade abandoned his effort to paint his ‘Gems of Brazil,’ but why?
New Research Links Vincent van Gogh’s Delirium to Alcohol Withdrawal
The paper is “unlikely to be the last word on [the] challenging question” of the artist’s mental health, says expert Martin Bailey
The Heiress Who Stole a Vermeer, Witchcraft in Post-WWII Germany and Other New Books to Read
These five November releases may have been lost in the news cycle
The Little-Known Story of 16th- to 18th-Century Nordic Witch Trials
An art exhibition in Copenhagen and a museum in Ribe revisit witchcraft’s legacy in Denmark and neighboring countries
A 12th-Century Mason Created a Hidden Self-Portrait in Famed Spanish Cathedral
Over the past 900 years, millions of pilgrims walked through Santiago de Compostela Cathedral without spotting the secret carving
How Jean-Michel Basquiat and His Peers Made Graffiti Mainstream
A new exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston explores how a network of young artists in 1980s New York City influenced hip-hop’s visual culture
Step Into ‘The Starry Night’ and Other Vincent van Gogh Masterpieces
An upcoming installation at the Newfields museum in Indianapolis will immerse visitors in the Dutch artist’s paintings
Mexico Seeks Apology for Catholic Church’s Role in the Spanish Conquest
In a letter to Pope Francis, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador also requested the temporary return of a number of artifacts
This $22,000 Book Features Life-Size Photos of the Sistine Chapel’s Art
The pricey tome consists of three 25-pound, two-foot-tall volumes
How Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera Defined Mexican Art in the Wake of Revolution
A touring exhibition now on view in Denver traces the formation of Mexican modernism
These Newly Discovered Buddhist Temple Paintings May Be Among Japan’s Oldest
Art historians used infrared photography to identify images that could date to around 685 A.D.
Why a German Museum Is Displaying Fake Paintings From Its Collections
A taboo-breaking exhibition at Cologne’s Museum Ludwig spotlights misattributed Russian avant-garde works
Long-Lost Jacob Lawrence Painting Spent 60 Years Hanging in NYC Apartment
A museum visitor realized she’d seen the missing work—part of the artist’s “Struggle” series—in her neighbor’s living room
Shipwrecked Nazi Steamer May Hold Clues to the Amber Room’s Fate
Divers have found sealed chests and military vehicles in the “Karlsruhe,” which was sunk by Soviet planes in 1945
Spotlighting 500 Years of Women in British Art, From Tudor Portraitists to the Bloomsbury Group
A new show at London’s Philip Mould & Company features works by Levina Teerlinc, Vanessa Bell and Clara Birnberg
Why the Prado’s Show on Women in Art Is Facing Accusations of Misogyny
Critics say the exhibition, centered on the Spanish art world between 1833 and 1931, echoes “the very misogyny it has sought to expose”
Meet the First Black Woman to Represent the U.S. at the Art World’s Biggest Fair
Simone Leigh, whose large-scale ceramics explore black female subjectivity, will exhibit her work at the 2022 Venice Biennale
2,000-Year-Old Nazca Line Featuring Lounging Cat Found in Peru
The enormous glyph is one of hundreds of ancient etchings scattered across the arid region
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