Tadeusz Rolke, a press photographer, one of the key figures of Polish fashion photography, reminisces about fashion shoots in communist Poland and Lambretta scooters and explains the connection between fashion photography and reportage.
Tucked away on a quiet residential street, far from the commercial buzz of West Hollywood, stands the vestige of a radical mid-century social experiment.
A new exhibition at the Grolier Club examines the verbal and visual qualities of experimental poetry, innovatively presented by publishers of small independent presses.
The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco today announced the 2025 convening of the Museums of Tomorrow Roundtable (MTR), a gathering of international and local museum leaders in the Bay Area for dialogue on the complex challenges.
“The devastation that armed conflict brings to the land lasts for generations beyond the fighting itself,” said Dr. Chris Juergens, Curator at the National WWI Museum and Memorial. “Iron Harvest is a chilling reminder of war’s enduring impact.”
The Memorial Art Gallery (MAG) of the University of Rochester announces the acquisition of several remarkable works of American art, further strengthening its esteemed permanent collection.
A New York judge found that the Art Institute of Chicago’s drawing by Egon Schiele had been looted from an Austrian Jew who died in a concentration camp.
The Turner Prize, established in 1984 and named after the radical Romantic painter JMW Turner, has consistently captured the evolving spirit of British contemporary art.
One of the most important Black British female photographers working in the UK today, Eileen Perrier’s new London exhibition acknowledges the power of representation.