SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — When people hear the name Ed Hardy, they likely think of the flashy, tiger- and skull-emblazoned clothing that rocketed to popularity in the 2000s, appearing on the likes of Paris ...
Given San Antonio photographer Al Rendon’s high profile and decades-long career of capturing breathtaking images, it seems odd that he’s only now having his first retrospective show. Nonetheless, the ...
Respected for his hungry mind and his ceaseless experimentation—but perhaps never fully given his due—Whitten is the subject of his first comprehensive retrospective, opening March 23 at the Museum of ...
Sep. 6—CHAMPAIGN — Krannert Art Museum at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is presenting the first retrospective of the work of contemporary artist Millie Wilson, who uses photography, ...
Pomellato founder Pino Rabolini hailed from a long line of goldsmiths. In 1967, however, he broke from tradition to test his hypothesis that a playful pret-a-porter approach and avant-garde eye could ...
Dial, who was born in 1928 in Emelle, Alabama, and died in 2016, in McCalla, Alabama, was a pioneering vernacular artist known for using discarded materials and found objects to create sculptures and ...
The Film Society of Lincoln Center is honoring filmmaker John Waters with the first retrospective of his films in the United States. Over the course of ten days, they’ll be screening all twelve of his ...
"Investing in innovation for underserved populations saves lives." October 19, 2021 -- In 2014, Dr. Umut Gurkan, associate professor in the Case Western Reserve University School of Engineering, ...
L.A.-based, Venezuela-born artist Magdalena Suarez Frimkess’ new show at LACMA is nearly a century in the making. By Michael Slenske “I’m a survivor,” says Magdalena Suarez Frimkess. “Since I was a ...
In 1970, 24-year-old Pacita Abad left her home in the Philippines, fleeing political persecution after leading a student protest against the Marcos regime. She was planning to study law in Spain.
“When my paintings cease to be challenging, I will simply find something else to do,” Jack Whitten wrote in a 1988 letter to the artist and eminent scholar of African American art David Driskell.