NYC’s Longest-Running Photo Fair Is Back, and Packs a Punch

Even the world's most proliferated images appear novel when they're blown up on glossy paper at the Photography Show presented by AIPAD. Read more

Palestine Solidarity Shines at the New York Art Book Fair

This year’s show is an imaginative and openly political space that flies in the face of the commercial book sphere. Read more

Post-War and Contemporary Art From Iowa Business Leaders To Be Sold at Christie’s Spring Sales

The collection includes works by post-war and contemporary luminaries such as Bruce Nauman, Agnes Martin, and Ad Reinhardt. Read more

What’s Behind the Recent Wave of New York Gallery Closures?

From pandemic-related economic blows to technological evolutions, dealers share why they’re shuttering their physical spaces. Read more

Nadya Tolonnikova Headlines American Folk Art Museum Benefit Event

Recent artworks by the co-founder of Pussy Riot will be featured in a pop-up exhibition, along with an artist Q&A and performance, on May 16 in NYC. Read more

Art Takes Center Stage at Growing Student Protests for Palestine

Visual arts faculty, alumni, and staff are standing in solidarity with students as “art corners” and other creative initiatives dominate the encampments. Read more

Marie Watt Creates Care Through Collage

At the core, all of Watt’s work shows a devotion to care and closeness, a desire to make tangible the layers of relations that bind and make us.  Read more

Pratt’s MFA Photographers Indict the “Perfect Body”

Chloe Scout Nix and Lena Smart challenge the distorted body images that prevail in mainstream media. Read more

Arshile Gorky’s Gaze

Across the street from the painter's former studio in Manhattan's Union Square, 20 trees had been planted to honor the 1.5 million victims of the Armenian Genocide.  Read more

Painting at the Periphery of Language

Mary Lum is interested in the deeply rooted human desire to make meaning out of everything, while recognizing that language is a slippery phenomenon. Read more