In John Singer Sargent’s Dashing Gilded Age Portraits, Clothes Signal...
The thrill of “Fashioned by Sargent” is 19th century society portrait painter John Singer Sargent’s dashing skill with a brush. I always think of him as an incredibly sure-handed marksman—each suave...
View ArticleCan You See Into The Soul Of A City Through Its Newspaper?
What can you learn about a community through the eyes of its newspaper? Can you see into its soul? That’s was I was trying to figure out on visits to the exhibition “Above the Fold: The Photographers...
View ArticleThe Children’s Books Of Celebrated Designer Seymour Chwast
In 1954, Seymour Chwast, along with a handful of friends he’d made while studying art and design at Cooper Union, founded the New York design shop Push Pin Studios. With the Beatles and the San...
View ArticleHealing Via Psychedelics And Abstract Painting?
“I was lucky to discover painting and psychedelics at the same time. I was like, ‘This is what I want to do with my life,’” artist James Neville (pictured above) tells me at “Neurogenerative Room” at...
View ArticlePhotos Of Sea And Sand At End Of Plum Island Lay Bare Nature’s Dazzling Patterns
One of the fascinating things about nature is how patterns repeat—the way, for example, the branching of trees can rhyme with the branching of rivers. This repetition can convince some of a guiding...
View ArticleTo Spread God’s Word, Howard Finster Created 46,991 Artworks. New Exhibit...
As the story goes, in 1976, when Howard Finster was 60, the Baptist preacher was painting a bicycle when he got paint on his hand and fell into a vision. “I looked at that finger, after I got the...
View ArticleDirector Ben Proudfoot Discusses Technique Behind Oscar-Winning ‘Last Repair...
The striking intimacy in the film “The Last Repair Shop,” which won the 2024 Academy Award for best documentary, begins with the Interrotron. Developed by Cambridge documentary filmmaker Errol Morris,...
View ArticleIllustrator Edel Rodriguez Is Among Trump’s Fiercest Critics, Exhibition...
Among the fiercest political graphics that appeared during the Trump Administration were Edel Rodriguez’s covers for Time magazine and the weekly German magazine Der Spiegel. In the New Jersey...
View ArticlePaa Joe’s Fantasy Coffins Are Symbols Of Your Life To Carry You Into Death
In 1960, when Joseph Tetteh-Ashong was 15, he began an apprenticeship in coffin-making with his mother’s cousin, Seth Kane Kwei. The training led Tetteh-Ashong, or Paa Joe, as he’s become known, to...
View ArticleRare Look Into Queer Boston From 1970s to ’90s In Photo Exhibit ‘As the World...
Snapshots of the Boston bar Playland taken by bartender Jim McGrath and friends beginning in 1958 and ’59 show a drag queen leaning on a jukebox under clouds of balloons, and men dressed up as...
View Article
More Pages to Explore .....