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Ball, a free man of color, opened a one-room photo studio in Cincinnati in 1845, but the business soon folded. He honed his ...
Artnet News team writers pick their favorite art books, from Monet's Garden to Giacometti's studio and Warhol's diaries.
Trisha Ziff’s film is an intimate portrait of the former Sinn Féin president but those expecting fresh revelations will be ...
From Regency-era "fan flirting" to online dating, we decipher the timeless looks, signs and gifts that signal secret love.
Since Edward Burtynsky’s birth in Ontario, Canada, in 1955, the Earth’s population has roughly tripled, and its economy has ...
In “Flashes of Brilliance,” Anika Burgess takes us back to the 19th century to showcase the artists and innovators who developed the revolutionary technology.
Sophie Clarke speaks to the artistic director of Duncairn Arts Centre, Ray Giffen, about cross-border collaboration, creative ...
I knew I was alone,” he observed later, “in a way that no earthling has ever been before.” That quote is immortalized on a ...
Two groundbreaking exhibitions in Chicago explore the shift in portrayals of same-sex attraction. They are being staged at a ...
Review: The summer exhibitions at the Center for Photography at Woodstock challenge viewers to see empathetically.
Nan Goldin’s The Ballad of Sexual Dependency at John Curtin Gallery paved the way for photography as intimate storytelling.
There are some moments in time that are so incredible that they're almost unbelievable. The "receipts or it didn't happen" ...