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A new show, "Infinite Images" at the Toledo Museum of Art, traces the long history of algorithmic art from the 1960s to today ...
Curious about abstract art? This blog breaks down must-know styles to help you understand and enjoy this colorful world of ...
In this app, the layers of the foreground and background shift as I tilt my phone, creating a pleasing parallax effect. If I ...
In a world inundated with literal messaging and constant definition, abstract art stands as a silent but powerful counterpoint. It doesn’t tell us what to see or feel; instead, it invites us to ...
"There's an intellectual part, but then there's this totally emotional part." For Raymond L. Haywood, finding balance in his art is an integral part of his process.
Nanette Carter, detail of “¾ Time #3” (1979), collage etching It’s rare nowadays to find an art museum that nurtures local artists, particularly those who grew up nearby; most institutions ...
An abstract, experimental short that enters the surreal dream world of a puppet. Through a striking visual palette of color, form, texture, pattern, and line, the film explores imaginative inner ...
Researchers at Columbia's Zuckerman Institute found that people's brain activity varied more when viewing abstract art, as compared with representational art.
Columbia's newest mural features a 1921 train conductor and Columbia artist Laura Spong carved in a wall in the Vista center, representing the past and future.
Researchers studying people's brain activity when looking at abstract art have revealed why we interpret blobs of paint on canvas so differently.
The pairing of Amanda Church and Jenny Hankwitz, both longtime practitioners of geometric abstraction, is a stroke of genius for their similarities and differences.