Girl Who Eats Art on MSN
3 shocking artworks that changed modern art forever
In this short video, I break down three of the most controversial artworks in modern history and explain why they caused such ...
Long-awaited museums, record-breaking skyscrapers and a soaring Catholic basilica — these architecture projects are worth a ...
Halafian pottery shows that early agricultural societies practiced advanced mathematical thinking through plant-based art long before writing.
Preliminary ratings were low for the awards, but the telecast makes an attractive bauble as it heads to market.
The National on MSN
Sixteen of UAE's most memorable exhibitions this year, ranging from intricate tatreez to colossal chandeliers
Time Heals, Just Not Quick Enough… was a group exhibition curated by Ose Ekore. It featured works by five contemporary artists: Samuel Fosso, Aida Muluneh, Kelani Abass, Abeer Sultan and Sumayah ...
DAY 21 Retired Staff Sergeant, actor and Springs Ensemble Theatre president found out the hard way that his father had his back all along As an actor, director and president of Springs Ensemble ...
The team of archaeologists led by Dr. Alexander Tamm (FAU, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg) and Prof. Dirk Wicke (Institute of Archaeological Sciences, Goethe University Frankfurt) ...
Hongkonger Thomas Chan initially saw photography as a way to preserve the memories of his travels. For the avid explorer, photos became a visual diary. But he wanted to delve deeper into his craft. “I ...
Big winners at Sundance 2025: An Iraq War satire, profiles of Black farmers, a true-crime dissection
Park City • A satire about preparing for war, a chronicle of Black farmers, a love story from India, a profile of a trailblazing Iranian woman and a dissection of America’s true-crime obsession were ...
Two University of Dayton students created a digital exhibit about notable 20th century Assyrian women this summer for the Syriac Heritage Museum in Iraq. The exhibit by Charlotte Capuano and Erin ...
It is precisely because the Mosul Museum director Zaid Ghazi Saadallah seems so composed during “Returning to Babylon” that his pain seems all the more acute, his anger just barely repressed.
"There were a lot of us who were feeling very helpless and silent in our opposition to the war [with Iraq]," director of The Trojan Women Virginia Johnson said. The play will be performed this ...
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