By now it’s come to this: you’ve baked six different kinds of bread; you’ve grown tired of your colleagues’ stabs at humor and their zany Zoom backgrounds; you’ve finally mastered your kids’ remote ...
Hear from artists, writers, and therapists about what happens when art and grief collide.
The designers discuss the process of creating a “typeface with a political purpose” for artist Titus Kaphar’s Redaction project.
Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother —made on the edge of a frozen pea field in Nipomo, California, while she was working for the US government in early March 1936—is arguably the most famous photograph ...
Elizabeth Catlett ’s terra cotta sculpture Mother and Child stands less than a foot off of its pedestal, but it feels much larger. It conveys an expansiveness that comes, to my mind, from the uncanny ...
Older adults take in a Jackson Pollock during a MoMA Access Program. From “For Caregivers: A Guide for Connecting Creatively.” Image description: In a gallery, a group of seven adults sits with their ...
The Learning Tree. 1969. Gordon Parks I saw this film when I was 18 years old, and Gordon Parks was at that time one of my heroes. So to see a film about his childhood in Kansas was so riveting and ...
Do you find echoes of your experience in these stories, or do they feel strange and alien? Perhaps you’ve had a vastly different emotional experience with the same works of art described here. While ...
Louise Lawler’s work looks at the lives of artworks in museums, private collections, gallery backrooms, storage spaces, and auction houses, examining how meaning changes with different types of ...
What does the term “ blockchain ” mean to you, and could you ever imagine it being a part of how you engage with art? Guided by artists working at the cutting edge of technology, and enabled by its ...
Architecture plays a subtle yet vital role in making city residents feel welcome and fostering a sense of community. The first exhibition in MoMA’s new Architecture Now series, New York, New Publics ...
Join Lola Flash and five friends as they reminisce about art and community when the AIDS epidemic tore through NYC in the 1980s and ’90s.