Ann Rockefeller Roberts, Champion of Native Americans, Dies at 90
The eldest daughter of Nelson Rockefeller, she founded a nonprofit to support Indigenous culture and helped fill two Smithsonian institutions with artifacts.
The eldest daughter of Nelson Rockefeller, she founded a nonprofit to support Indigenous culture and helped fill two Smithsonian institutions with artifacts.
She became a photographer the same year she came out, chronicling the lives of women in same-sex relationships — something most people had never seen.
These buildings and places capture the city’s playful approach to concrete-and-asphalt Modernism.
‘Retrato del doctor Gachet’, vendido en una subasta en 1990, prácticamente ha desaparecido desde entonces y su paradero se ha convertido en uno de los mayores misterios del mundo del arte.
Futuristic architecture rubs shoulders with centuries-old opera houses in this picture-perfect Austrian ski town.
“Vital Signs: Artists and the Body” draws from MoMA’s 20th-century collection to show that identity is broader than physical form. But in skipping social media the show can’t go far enough.
The Smithsonian’s “Making Home” winds up with an uneven mix of beauty, politics and platitudes.
Remarkably well preserved ice age remains like those discovered recently in a yard near Scotchtown, N.Y., are rare — but not as rare as you might think.
Los habitantes de la ciudad han aprendido algunos trucos para disfrutar sin problemas la algarabía navideña. He aquí cómo residentes y visitantes pueden celebrar esta temporada manteniendo el estrés al mínimo.
Naomi Beckwith, who holds a leadership role at the Guggenheim Museum in New York, said she would make navigating crises a central theme of her exhibition.
Picasso paintings. Jasper Johns ale cans. Irving Penn photos. The cosmetics heir created the model for the headline-grabbing donation that museums dream of today.
Cast off by the Nazis, but heralded by curators, the artist’s painting of his doctor, made just before van Gogh’s suicide, has not been seen in 34 years.
Marlon Mullen’s show at the Museum of Modern Art, the first by a developmentally disabled artist, speaks volumes.
The museum’s poet in residence for 2024 is putting poetry by deaf and hard-of-hearing artists on display.
Italy’s culture ministry dismissed experts preparing an exhibition on Futurism and put in its own appointees, who created a show that seems to glorify the Mussolini years.
“In Slavery’s Wake,” at the National Museum of African American History and Culture, looks beyond the United States to tell a global story.
The movie scenes, TV episodes, song lyrics and other moments that reporters, critics, editors and visual journalists in Culture couldn’t stop thinking about this year.
The burial ground at the former American president’s home in Nashville is the latest to be discovered at a presidential site.
The painter Julie Mehretu donated $2 million to the art museum to encourage young people to visit.
Winter — with its famous fogs and reduced crowds — provides breathing room and deepens the mysteriousness of Venice’s narrow passageways and centuries-old buildings.
This was a year whose high points included Joan Jonas’s luminous survey, the extravaganza “PST ART,” and the 24-karat beauty of a show “Siena: The Rise of Painting, 1300-1350.”
Dozens of artworks owned by Marshall Marcell have spent the past century with the Louisiana State Museum.
For the first time, the ancient marbles are traveling out of Europe to the United States and Canada, for a prolonged stint.
Facing crushing throngs and high prices can be as off-putting as a rock-hard bagel. Here’s how New Yorkers enjoy their hometown’s seasonal traditions without much challenge to their patience or pocketbook.
The architect Frida Escobedo has drawn on her Mexican heritage in reimagining the galleries for Modern and contemporary art.
And what the last art fairs of 2024 say about where the art world is going.
Allison Berg has established a foundation to elevate the careers of six emerging visual arts curators, educators and administrators each year.
The slippers, worn by Judy Garland in “The Wizard of Oz,” were stolen from the museum that bears her name in 2005 before investigators recovered them in 2018.
Lessons from the past continue to influence and inspire today’s globalized art world.
The agency’s acting director took offense when a Texas representative questioned him about where he was standing in a photo commemorating the Sept. 11 attacks.
The billionaire Kenneth C. Griffin, who bought the stegosaurus fossil for $44.6 million, is lending it to the American Museum of Natural History in New York for four years.
In her cityscapes, a visionary Manhattan painter created delicate registers of light and shadow, and bravura expressions of abstraction and figuration.
After the Venice Biennale, the members of MAHKU are taking their social mission to Miami Art Basel.
To report on an unclothed visit to an exhibition about social nudism, a Times journalist chose to join the party. Her mother did, too.
The artist, who has supported the protests against the Tate group of museums, won the prestigious British award for an installation that includes a car covered by a giant doily.
An ambitious show at Tate Modern looks at how artists used technology from the postwar tech boom until the dawn of the internet age.
Through paintings, photographs, sculptures, and even bejeweled boxing gloves, the show examines prizefighting as a metaphor for human struggle.
In 2012, Esther Kim Varet founded the gallery Various Small Fires out of her home. It has since gone multinational, and Kim Varet is still pushing the envelope.
The sixth edition of the fair in February will have considerably more attendees from Latin America, Europe and Asia.
Although the fair is a huge attraction, there are many other exhibitions to visit nearby.
The new “Solid Gold” exhibition is a celebration of bling through the ages and around the world. But is eye candy enough?
They are costly, labor-intensive and seemingly dated, but cultural organizations say black-tie dinners remain essential to pleasing donors and paying the bills.
The creative people featured in T’s “Freak City” project share their favorite outlandish artworks.
The fair this year has the largest number of new exhibitors in a decade.
A Danish museum is returning the bronze head of Septimius Severus to Turkey after agreeing that it was probably looted from a shrine honoring Roman leaders.
Ruth Patir refused to display her video installation at the Israel pavilion until a cease-fire and hostage agreement was reached. “(M)otherland” will debut in Tel Aviv.
The Franklin Institute has said a wealthy scion, long vilified for refusing to serve during World War I, gave them a treasured Wright-built plane. His family is challenging that account.
“Harmony & Dissonance” at the Guggenheim Museum is a mood-lifting, masterpiece-studded show that offers an in-depth look at Orphism, which is famous for being unknown.
Egyptians may have used hallucinogenic substances as part of a fertility rite, researchers said.
The descendants of a 19th-century federal official decided to return a prized collection of heirlooms to a descendant of a Lakota leader, Chief Spotted Tail.
Explore lush forest trails, midcentury architecture and tropical flavors in Hawaii’s multicultural capital.
The historic site in Britain’s capital has been a market for centuries. The local authority voted this week to close it.
A museum in Marseille, France, has a show dedicated to the history of social nudity. On a few special nights, visitors strolled around naked, too.
The country is home to thousands of years’ worth of antiquities. Some have already been damaged or destroyed in the war, alarming the conservationists trying to protect them.
He displayed some 10,000 cat-themed artifacts at the American Museum of the House Cat in North Carolina, which welcomed several thousand people a year.
A portrait by the artist had a public debut in Rome on Friday, after decades hidden away in a private collection. Now Italy wants to buy it.
Tired of the featureless white cube, curators and dealers are staging shows in the most personal spaces of all: their homes.
The Museum of Southern History in Florida is selling the flag, which will be auctioned off by Guernsey’s, along with other Lincoln memorabilia.
Cleopatra is not our mother.
The museum said it attracted more local visitors during the past year than it did before the pandemic, but only half the international visitors.
Although attendance remains down from prepandemic levels, the city’s arts groups are having some success getting audiences to return.
Uzodinma Iweala, chief executive of the Harlem institution, will leave at the end of 2024 after guiding it through pandemic years and securing funds.
The pandemic was tough on city centers and cultural institutions. What does that mean for Los Angeles, whose downtown depends on the arts?
Covid brought live performance to a halt. Now the audience for pop concerts and sporting events has roared back, while attendance on Broadway and at some major museums is still down.
A storm, a pandemic, and Black Puerto Rican history pervade his work at MoMA PS 1, with materials sourced from daily life.
Letters on display at a small museum in Brooklyn were sent to the same address in Queens as where the comic book hero lived.
With attendance surging back, the museum wants to offer “a moment of pleasure” — and relieve that Mona Lisa problem.
The tower, next to the 9/11 Memorial & Museum, is doing something right; it's at 94 percent occupancy.
Plus Myanmar gets closer to Russia and a dire climate report.
Projects all over the country include renovations and new wings as institutions continue to bet on bricks and mortar.
Though some small galleries are opening or expanding, the mega dealers have closed shop, a blow to an area with a vibrant artistic history.
Denver has regained its prepandemic vibrancy, with a plethora of new restaurants and hotels, and the return of some old favorites.
After a lengthy recovery, the artist comes back with the most vigorous work he’s made: “It took me a really long time to understand what had happened to me.”
From “anti-monuments” to ephemeral sand portraits, four art exhibitions encourage viewers to slow down and take stock of our pandemic losses.
Broadway enthusiasts, art aficionados and food lovers will find new offerings in and around Times Square and in neighborhoods below 42nd Street, heralding the promise of a vibrant recovery.