Macro or Micro? Test Your Sense of Scale
A geographer and a biologist at Salem State University team up to curate a new exhibition, featuring confounding views from both satellites and microscopes
5 Smithsonian Scientific Research Projects Shut Down by the Shutdown
The federal government shutdown has affected astronomy, paleontology fieldwork and research into animal behavior at the Smithsonian
Former Grateful Dead Drummer Mickey Hart Composes Music from the Sounds of the Universe
Hart teams up with a Nobel Prize-winning cosmologist to translate light and electromagnetic waves into octaves humans can hear
The Muppets Take the Smithsonian
Elmo, Fozzie Bear, the Count, Miss Piggy and 17 other Jim Henson puppets are coming to the American History Museum
Inside America’s Great Romance With Norman Rockwell
A new biography of the artist reveals the complex inner life of our greatest and most controversial illustrator
Remembering an Iconic Era Lost to Time: The Stars and Films of the Silent Pictures
Curator Amy Henderson reminds us of power and influence and glory of the celebrities that pioneered the silent film era
Sonic Bloom! A New Solar-Powered Sculpture
Dan Corson’s latest installation in Seattle—flower sculptures that light up at night—show that solar energy is viable even in the cloudy Pacific Northwest
The Gorgeous Shapes of Sea Butterflies
Cornelia Kavanagh’s sculptures magnify tiny sea butterflies—ocean acidification’s unlikely mascots—hundreds of times
Why David Hockney Has a Love-Hate Relationship With Technology
A new retrospective highlights the artist’s two, seemingly opposite passions
Bust Loose at Chuck Brown Birthday Party at American Art Museum
The museum remembers D.C.’s own “Godfather of Go-Go” with a concert today
Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson and the War That Changed Poetry, Forever
The two titans of American poetry chronicled the death and destruction of the Civil War in their poems
When America Entered the Modern Age
Obsolescence yaps at the heels of every dazzling invention, says curator Amy Henderson as she considers the birth of modernism a century ago
Sharks Made Out of Golf Bags? A Look at the Big Fish in Contemporary Art
Intrigued by the powerful hunters, artists have made tiger sharks, great whites and hammerheads the subjects of sculpture
Landscape Through a Car Window, Darkly
A new exhibition presents 1970s photography that challenged the traditional American landscape
Hurry In! These Smithsonian Exhibitions Won’t Be Here Much Longer
Spend your remaining summer days at the museums, and don’t miss out on the Smithsonian’s soon-to-be-closed exhibits
The End of the World Might Just Look Like This
Artist Ron Miller presents several scenarios—most of them scientifically plausible—of landscapes imperiled and of Earth meeting its demise
What the Handwriting Says About the Artist
A new exhibition by the Archives of American Art examines the handwriting of more than 40 American artists
Smithsonian Displays Its Own AIDS Memorial Quilt Panel
Created by Smithsonian volunteers and staff, the panel will be on view in the Kogod Courtyard one day only, July 17
Minions! Did You See How Much a Movie Ticket Might Cost One Day?
Best way to beat the heat, says curator Amy Henderson, is the summer blockbuster, but are they going the way of the dinosaurs
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