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NYT > Arts > Art & Design
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Jenny Holzer Shines New Light in Dark Places
Her signboards predated by a decade the news “crawl.” At the Guggenheim she is still bending the curve: Just read the art, is the message.
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Mary Cassatt’s Women Didn’t Sit Pretty
The American painter depicted women caring for children, not posing for the male gaze. New exhibitions and books reappraise her legacy 100 years later.
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Why Handala, a Palestinian Cartoon Character by Naji al-Ali, Inspires Protesters
The character known as Handala, created by Naji Al-Ali in 1969, is making an imprint on art and as a protest symbol.
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Yves Klein’s Leap Into the Blue (With Living Paintbrushes)
A gallery shows works with roots in performance art, and a film that documents their creation.
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The Artist Amalia Mesa-Bains Builds Her Own Legacy
A powerful and overdue exhibition at El Museo del Barrio links Amalia Mesa-Bains’s genre-defying installations for the first time.
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Christie’s Holds Major Art Auctions Despite Cyberattack
Although a cyberattack hobbled its website, the auction house held two major sales, totaling $115 million, on Tuesday night. One expert praised the evening’s “really respectable sales in a difficult environment.”
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LaToya Ruby Frazier is Paying it Forward at MoMA
She may be America’s foremost social documentary photographer, now with a survey at the Museum of Modern Art. “All I’m doing is showing up as a vessel.”
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Steve McQueen, the Film Director, Finds New Depths in ‘Bass’
The artist-turned-film director finds new depths in “Bass,” an immersive environment of light and sound in Dia Beacon keyed to Black history and “where we can go from here.”
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What to See in N.Y.C. Galleries in May
Martha Schwendener covers Tamiko Nishimura’s arresting black-and-white photographs, Tanya Merrill’s playful portraits and Enrique Martínez Celaya’s link to a Spanish master.
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‘Taking Venice’ Offers a Glimpse at Conspiracy Theories Around the 1964 Biennale
The documentary offers a glimpse of how the arts were treated very differently in midcentury America.
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He Bought a 1953 Trailer on Impulse. Here’s How He Renovated It.
The renovation that followed turned his backyard into an upscale version of a campground — complete with a marble shower in the trees.
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How to Plan a Visit to the V&A Museum in London
Paintings, ceramics, photography, fashion, furniture and more: The Victoria and Albert Museum is a treasure trove of art and design. Here’s one besotted visitor’s plan for taking it all in.
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Art Market Seeks Its Footing After Stumbling Sales and a Hack at Christie’s
Declining sales and a cyberattack ignite new worries at spring art auctions.
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Hobbled by Cyberattack, Christie’s Says Marquee Sales Will Proceed
The auction house failed to regain control of its official website on Sunday but said that its spring auctions would go on. Sotheby’s Monday sales topped $267 million.
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A Panorama of Design Products
A look at design-world events, products and people.
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Chen Chen and Kai Williams’s Furniture Collection Reflects Mortality
Chen Chen and Kai Williams’s new furniture collection reflects a deep appreciation of the natural cycles of birth and death.
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Can Wastewater Recycling Systems Solve Water Scarcity?
Circular sanitation systems could be lifelines on a water-stressed planet, but there are big barriers to overcome.
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Christie’s Website Is Brought Down by Hackers Days Before $840 Million Auctions
The auctioneer’s website was taken offline on Thursday evening and remained down on Friday, days before its spring auctions were set to begin.
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Restoring a Chair Is Easier Than You Think. Ask the Brownstone Boys.
Jordan Slocum and Barry Bordelon have a lot of practice restoring brownstones in Brooklyn, so refinishing a chair was no big deal. Here’s how they did it.
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With Its Latest Vessel, Azimut Envisions ‘Conscious’ Yachting
The creators of the latest vessel from Azimut Yachts went to great lengths to reduce its emissions, but even they won’t call it green.
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