Aaron De Groft, the former director of the Orlando Museum of Art, who came to national prominence in 2022 after paintings he was exhibiting as the...
Some museums are encyclopedic. Can art fairs be, too? In 2016, the venerable Winter Show at the Park Avenue Armory, which for 60 years was called...
Welcome to the T List, a newsletter from the editors of T Magazine. Each week, we share things we’re eating, wearing, listening to or coveting now....
The children seem like typical kindergartners: Some beam at the camera; some glance coyly aside; others appear lost in reverie. One slim, dark-haired girl in a...
The moment well after midnight when one day slides into the next is usually a lonely time, observed by security guards and nurses, insomniacs and students...
The long ride from the international airport to the city of Yogyakarta on the Indonesian island of Java at least has the virtue of easing a...
The most famous beastly sculpture in the college town of Athens, Ga., is — improbably — not a bulldog. It is an 11-foot-tall welded steel horse,...
The foundation is the accepted authority on Calder artworks, and the lawsuit says that without its imprimatur an artwork’s value is diminished. When Mr. Brodie tried...
Sometime in the 1950s, Zilia Sánchez, a Cuban-born painter, was crying on a Havana rooftop, mourning the recent death of her father, when she caught a...
“Impression, Sunrise,” 1872 Luncheon of the Boating Party Lunch at the Restaurant Fournaise Reveal Manet painted “Still Life with Melon and Peaches” (left) around 1866. Monet,...