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Long-planned Las Vegas art museum given plot of land downtown

Long-planned Las Vegas art museum given plot of land downtown

The idea for a standalone fine art museum in Las Vegas has been in the making for several decades, but previous schemes never fully materialised.


“Shrek” v. Perry the Donkey

“Shrek” v. Perry the Donkey

Several minutes later, after a detour through the diamond district to pick up some stamps, she was back inside the lobby, standing before a gold letter box affixed to the wall.


An art-world wish list for the next US president

An art-world wish list for the next US president

Generally private enterprise supports art by buying paintings, putting murals in lobbies and commercial projects involving artists.”


Rijksmuseum acquires controversial early botanic book on Suriname

Rijksmuseum acquires controversial early botanic book on Suriname

Maria Sibylla Merian’s 1705 Metamorphosis Insectorum Surinamensium is considered a “high point” of early printing, portraying exotic insects at a time when Western Europeans were keen to explore, name and understand the world.


New London Museum gets ÂŁ50m cash boost in face of rising costs

New London Museum gets ÂŁ50m cash boost in face of rising costs

Described as “one of Europe's largest cultural infrastructure projects”, the new complex is designed by Stanton Williams and Asif Khan in partnership with the conservation architects Julian Harrap.


The Temporary License of Literary Bratdom

The Temporary License of Literary Bratdom

“My First Book” is a rainbow grenade of based waifus and raw-milk-chugging looksmaxxers, of parables about cancellation, of seemingly unedited reflections on status, social media, and how “reality is what we make it.” “Mood Swings,” by Barnet, features animal uprisings and venture capitalists investing in time travel.


From ‘Soho scammer’ to television dancer: Anna Sorokin will compete on Dancing with the Stars

From ‘Soho scammer’ to television dancer: Anna Sorokin will compete on Dancing with the Stars

Sorokin has parlayed her notoriety into various ventures beyond the Netflix series—for which she was paid $320,000, though she was not allowed to keep the money due to a law in New York preventing criminals from cashing in on their infamy.


Out of the Sky

Out of the Sky

The remarkable rise of Elon Musk’s SpaceX, and Russia’s increasing isolation on the world stage, is likely to alter this arrangement soon, but a U.S. astronaut, Tracy Caldwell Dyson, launched off from Baikonur as recently as this past March.


How Natural Are We?

How Natural Are We?

Then, one evening after dinner, my six-year-old son and I biked to the marina to use his remote-control boat—a green plastic vessel about a foot long, with a tiny black propeller, which he’d got for his birthday.


Surreal Watteau painting owned by Britain’s first prime minister gets export bar

Surreal Watteau painting owned by Britain’s first prime minister gets export bar

The work features in A Catalogue of the Right Honourable Sir Robert Walpole’s Collection of Pictures, where it is described as: “‘Watteau—A dream of Watteau’s, Himself asleep by a rock; Several Dancers & Grotesque figures in the Clouds’.”


Van Gogh’s fruitful final two years are the focus of show at the National Gallery in London

Van Gogh’s fruitful final two years are the focus of show at the National Gallery in London

The show’s focus will be on the 27 months in 1888-90 that Van Gogh spent in Provence, initially working in the town of Arles, partly at the Yellow House, and, after mutilating his ear, in the asylum just outside Saint-RĂ©my-de-Provence.


Elizabeth Catlett—the artist who was seen as a threat to the US—gets her due with touring show

Elizabeth Catlett—the artist who was seen as a threat to the US—gets her due with touring show

In addition to giving a wider and more nuanced view of the overlapping political forces that informed Catlett’s life and career—from the civil rights movement in the US to the nascent sense of Black Mexican identity taking root in her adoptive country—the curators hope to recast a dichotomy that has been used to structure exhibitions and texts about her work: the contrast between her decades-long printmaking practice and her commissions for public monuments in the 1980s.