These Archaeologists Set Out in Search of Animal Fat. Instead, They Found the Oldest Blue Pigment Ever Discovered in Europe
Blue residue on a 13,000-year-old stone artifact, long believed to be an oil lamp, may paint a new picture of Paleolithic art and culture
A Free Outdoor Sculpture Park Dedicated to Pablo Picasso Is Coming to Paris
The Picasso Museum will build the open-air park by 2030. The nearly $60 million expansion will also include a new wing designed to house temporary exhibitions
This 17th-Century Female Artist Was Once a Bigger Star Than Rembrandt. Why Did History Forget About Johanna Koerten and Her Peers?
A new exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts spotlights 40 women who found fame in the Low Countries between 1600 and 1750, including Koerten, Judith Leyster and Clara Peeters
The Mystery of the Small Dog in Rembrandt’s Monumental Masterpiece ‘The Night Watch’ Has Officially Been Solved
When a curator spotted a strikingly similar image of a dog by a lesser-known Dutch artist, she wondered if it could have inspired the pup in Rembrandt’s famous 1642 painting
This Tiny Museum in Coastal Denmark Just Surpassed the Louvre in One Big Way
Following its latest acquisition, the Nivaagaard Collection has become a global leader in Renaissance and Baroque-period female painters
A 3,000-Year-Old Bracelet Belonging to an Ancient Egyptian Pharaoh Has Been Stolen, Sold and Melted Down for Gold
After the artifact went missing from Cairo’s Egyptian Museum in early September, authorities began carefully tracking down its whereabouts
Rare Gold Nuggets Worth $700,000 Stolen From Paris’ Natural History Museum in Brazen Heist
Discovered in their pure metallic form, the specimens were taken by “an extremely professional team,” the museum’s director said
The Louvre Stops Renting Out Nintendo 3DS Consoles, Which Helped Visitors Navigate the Massive Museum for 13 Years
Available since 2012, the handheld gadgets are being retired in favor of a new system—but so far, the Paris museum hasn’t revealed any details about the replacement
Fiji’s Ants Are Struggling. Scientists Say They’re Part of the Broader ‘Insect Apocalypse’
New research finds that 79 percent of Fiji’s endemic ant species—those that are native to and only found on the archipelago—are in decline
London’s National Gallery Will Officially Begin Collecting Artworks Created After 1900
The decision ends a longstanding agreement between the National Gallery and the Tate concerning what kinds of art each museum will target
The Best-Preserved Viking Ship in the World Just Survived Its Treacherous Final Journey
For more than ten years, experts have been painstakingly planning to move three 1,000-year-old vessels—the “Oseberg,” “Gokstad” and “Tune”—about 115 yards to their new home in Oslo
A Blockbuster Trove of Dada and Surrealist Masterpieces Arrives at the Met
Donated by a billionaire trustee, the Bluff Collection features key works by artists like Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp
Curator Rediscovers Tenth-Century ‘Portrait’ of a Viking With an ‘Unusual, Ornate Hairstyle’
First unearthed in 1797, the small gaming piece was kept in storage at the National Museum of Denmark for more than 200 years until curator Peter Pentz found it
Africa’s Oldest Mummy Is a Toddler Who Died 5,400 Years Ago, Nearly a Millennium Before the Egyptians Started Mummifying Their Dead
Libya’s civil war has placed the Uan Muhuggiag mummy at risk. But negotiations are underway to transport the rare artifact from Libya to Rome, where it will undergo restoration and scientific analysis
The Tiny New York Town Where Mediums Give Voice to the Dead
Lily Dale is home to about 40 mediums who connect thousands of spiritual seekers with their deceased loved ones
Traveling Along the U.S. Civil Rights Trail
The Gun Linked to Emmett Till’s Murder Is Now on Display at a Museum in Mississippi
The weapon is thought to have belonged to J.W. Milam, one of the two men who kidnapped, tortured and killed the Black teenager for whistling at a white woman in a grocery store in 1955
French Official Rules That 1,000-Year-Old Bayeux Tapestry Isn’t Too Fragile to Travel to London
The 230-foot-long medieval tapestry is scheduled to go on view at the British Museum next year, but critics worry that transporting the delicate artifact is too risky
Watch as Experts Preserve a 249-Year-Old Gunboat That Sank During the American Revolution
Badly damaged during the Battle of Valcour Island, the “Philadelphia” is now the focus of a new exhibition at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History
A Sweeping Transformation Is Underway as the Grand Egyptian Museum Prepares to Officially Open and the Giza Plateau Braces for a Record-Breaking Influx of Visitors
The Egyptian government is making changes to enhance the visitor experience around the pyramids, but are these modifications threatening the livelihoods of local communities rooted in generations-old tourism practices?
A 2,000-Year-Old Sun Hat Worn by a Roman Soldier in Egypt Goes on View After a Century in Storage
The felt cap—one of only three surviving examples of its kind—was recently conserved by a museum in England
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