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Writing
fromArtforum
1 week ago

Pat Steir, Whose "Waterfalls" Dazzled, Dies at 87

Pat Steir, renowned for her 'Waterfall' paintings, passed away at 87, leaving a legacy as a pioneering artist and feminist advocate.
Arts
fromColossal
1 week ago

Get 'Super/Natural' Inside Judith Schaechter's Stained Glass Sculpture

Judith Schaechter's installation 'Super/Natural' invites reflection on nature and human connections through a secular sanctuary of beauty.
Remodel
fromArchitectural Digest
1 month ago

In This Ohio Tudor Revival, Saris Cover Sofas, Hand-Painted Murals Abound, and There's a Little Gothic Drama Too

Darren Jett transformed an 8,000-square-foot Tudor Revival into a layered, family-centered home blending Indian heritage, spiritual symbolism, bold pattern, and consolidated layout.
Agriculture
fromAnimals Around The Globe
1 month ago

Why 19th-Century Farmers Painted Their Animals Larger Than Life

Nineteenth-century farmers used exaggerated livestock paintings as visual marketing to signal abundance, prestige, and profitability at agricultural fairs.
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

A Landscape Artist in Winter

The British artist Andy Goldsworthy moved to Penpont, a village in southwest Scotland, in 1986, when he was thirty. The area's initial appeal was twofold. Property was cheap, which meant that Goldsworthy and his wife at the time, Judith Gregson, could acquire an unrenovated stone building that had likely once stored grain. This structure could serve as a workspace and, for a while, as a rough-and-ready home.
Environment
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
2 months ago

Remembering Joanne Wilkens, teacher, writer, restorer of historic barns

Joanne Wilkens, beloved wife, mother and grandmother, passed away peacefully on Nov. 27, 2025, at the age of 84, surrounded by her loving family. Her lifelong connection to her family and to her cherished Gilmanton farmhouse was there to the very end; she was tending her wood stove and making breakfast in her warm kitchen when she suffered a severe stroke.
Books
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

Philadelphia Art Museum Says Goodbye to "PhAM"

There was no good reason to rename it, and in the end, I think the fundamental logic that went into that decision didn't withstand scrutiny or deeper analysis,
Arts
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Philadelphia Art Museum Might Rebrand Its Botched Rebrand

Philadelphia Art Museum may reconsider its PhAM rebrand as it parts ways with CMO Paul Dien and forms a task force to evaluate public reception.
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Anselm Kiefer's Rustbelt Romanticism

"Spirit is Life. It flows thru the death of me endlessly like a river unafraid of becoming the sea." -Gregory Corso ST. LOUIS - At 2,340 miles, the "mighty" Mississippi River borders no fewer than eight American states. Missouri is among them, where the city of St. Louis has been the site of both tenacious (and pugnacious) expansionist gusto and, in the wake of midcentury de-industrialization, precipitous decline.
Arts
Arts
fromArtnet News
1 month ago

"Photorealism in Focus" Reframes a Movement at the Rose Art Museum

Photorealism captures photographic-level detail in painting, remains vital today, and expands across genres and generations through multidisciplinary exhibitions.
Arts
fromArtnet News
1 month ago

Philadelphia Museum of Art Walks Back Controversial Rebranding | Artnet News

The Philadelphia Museum of Art is reverting to its original name, dropping the 'PhAM' acronym while retaining the new griffin logo and restoring PMA branding.
fromAnOther
1 month ago

Georg Wilson's Uncanny British Landscapes

Like half-remembered dreams, her curious pastoral visions displace familiarity in search of wilder fantasies, where humans are nowhere to be found. Against Nature, the London-based artist's second solo show at Pilar Corrias, establishes Wilson at the helm of a flourishing artistic engagement with the para-pastoral in contemporary painting. Hers is an altogether strange, uncanny variant of the British countryside that resists the canonical entrapments of a bucolic idyll.
Arts
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
2 months ago

Winslow Homer's mountaineer and Bob Ross's valley view: our pick of the January auctions

Winslow Homer, who began as a Civil War reporter artist, later became known for depicting the US's growing culture of leisure as expanding transportation networks enabled more people to visit the country's natural landmarks. A Mountain Climber Resting is a quintessential example, showing a mountaineer resting after an ascent and admiring the view. The composition closely resembles a drawing in the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum.
Arts
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