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4 votes
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Copenhagen's third annual Light Festival sparked into life over the weekend, with colourful displays from artists and designers
4 votes -
Police have launched an investigation after art thieves in the Swedish capital stole pieces by Spanish surrealist Salvador Dali
4 votes -
The opening of the long-awaited Munch Museum in Oslo has been postponed until the autumn due to delays in the building process
3 votes -
Cut, paste and remix your way through this century-spanning history of collage
3 votes -
A decade ago, a new spirit of tolerance of the avant garde blossomed in Russia. But these days, it’s impossible to know where the lines are—as the country’s most celebrated director discovered
7 votes -
Gloomy Van Gogh self-portrait in Oslo gallery confirmed authentic – only known painting by Dutch master while he had psychosis is unmistakably his work
9 votes -
Big isn't better, it's just better; the restoration of St. Francis
4 votes -
Unknown vandals scrawled 'Free Hong Kong' in red paint on the base of the Little Mermaid statue in Copenhagen
10 votes -
Photographer documents a friendship between a grey wolf and a brown bear
8 votes -
The tragedy of art’s greatest supermodel
10 votes -
2019: A year in The Verge illustrations
6 votes -
Fotografiska breathes life into historic New York landmark – Swedish photography museum's first global outpost is taking shape in the former Church Missions House
5 votes -
The conservation of Salvator Mundi (No, not that one)
3 votes -
Best Illusion of the Year 2019 - Winners announced
18 votes -
Banana duct-taped to a wall has sold for $120,000
11 votes -
Art Basel: Maurizio Cattelan's $120,000 banana eaten by artist
12 votes -
Who are you?
10 votes -
Danish artist Tal R seeks to stop his work being cut up to make watches
8 votes -
Betsey and I Are Out
9 votes -
The Molten Saints Inside Me Do Not Quiet
3 votes -
A piece of kitchen art sold for $26 million. A long-lost painting by Italian pre-Renaissance artist Cimabue had been hanging above a stove in an elderly French woman’s home.
10 votes -
How art created stereotypes of the Arab world
8 votes -
A photographer at the ends of the Earth - Thomas Joshua Cooper risks his life to document the world’s remotest places
7 votes -
How long will I be alone?
4 votes -
The 2018 Nobel Prize for Literature goes to Olga Tokarczuk, and the 2019 Prize to Peter Handke
Short link. Probably more to follow. The Swedish Academy handed out two prizes this year, after they were forced to suspend the prize last year amid a metoo scandal which saw most of the Academy’s...
Short link. Probably more to follow.
The Swedish Academy handed out two prizes this year, after they were forced to suspend the prize last year amid a metoo scandal which saw most of the Academy’s members either resign voluntarily or be forced to resign. There’s been a lot of speculation about how they were going to restore their reputation this year, and they spent a long portion of the press conference explaining their new process, whereas in past years they haven’t felt compelled to do so.
It was expected that at least one of the two prizes would go to a woman, with Margaret Atwood being one of the odds favorites (the bookmakers’ picks never win, so I don’t know whether we should put much stock in them, but they do reflect pre-award buzz). I’m not too familiar with either author, but it’s interesting that they chose Peter Handke. He’s one of Europe’s most controversial authors for his decades-long support of Serbia and Slobodan Milosevic’s actions during the Yugoslav Wars. He once compared Serbians to the Jews during WW2, visited Milosevic in prison when he was on trial for war crimes, and spoke at the man’s funeral. He’s also hailed as one of the greatest living German-language authors. It’s like the Academy decided to throw feminists a bone by awarding a woman the prize, but then couldn’t resist jumping headlong into controversy again right away.
10 votes -
See nature reclaim these abandoned places
3 votes -
Cool Pics -- The fifty finalists in the 2019 Agora photo awards
7 votes -
What's a piece of art or media (film, book, painting etc) that you loved, but would never want to see again?
I have some obvious examples, like the anime Kare Kano, and the movies Lion (2016), It and The Exorcist. What are yours?
16 votes -
Microscopically reweaving a 1907 painting
4 votes -
Norway's Bodø named a European Capital of Culture for 2024
3 votes -
In Helsinki, an underrated arts scene gets its own biennial – set to debut on June 2020
3 votes -
How Chagall’s daughter smuggled his work out of Nazi-occupied Europe
6 votes -
The powerful women whose patronage shaped art history
5 votes -
In 1886, the US Government commissioned 7,500 watercolor paintings of every known fruit in the world
15 votes -
How Matthew Lopez transformed “Howards End” into an epic play about gay life
6 votes -
The scandalous painting that helped create modern art | Édouard Manet's Olympia
3 votes -
The conservation of George Inness' "The Roman Campagna"
7 votes -
How the Daguerreotype started a Victorian black market for pornography in London
7 votes -
Swedish comedian Olaf Falafel has won Dave's 'Funniest Joke of The Fringe' award with the niche culinary pun
7 votes -
Why did Ai Weiwei break this million-dollar vase?
9 votes -
Soviet living: a gallery of 272 photos of ordinary life in the Soviet Union
28 votes -
Thousands of sandcastles appear on Helsinki beach as part of massive public art project
2 votes -
One night wonder: They got their shot on Broadway—and they blew it
7 votes -
Photographers, Instagrammers: Stop being so damn selfish and disrespectful
12 votes -
The people who develop the long-lost camera films of strangers
9 votes -
Where are all the Bob Ross paintings? We found them.
8 votes -
Where are all the Bob Ross paintings? We found them.
8 votes -
A photographic immersion in "The Island of the Colorblind"
6 votes -
Olafur Eliasson returns to Tate Modern with tonne of white Lego – retrospective investigates how we respond to nature
4 votes