On View An Artist Is Launching a Pop-Up Grocery Store in Times Square Filled Entirely With Products Made From Upcycled Plastic At night, artist Robin Frohardt's "Plastic Bag Store" will become the set for an immersive puppet show. By Caroline Goldstein, Feb 11, 2020
On View A New Show Explores How Artists From Hans Holbein to Jenny Saville Have Depicted Pregnancy Over 500 Years—See Highlights Here The show at the Foundling Museum reveals society's ever-evolving relationship with women and pregnancy. By Caroline Goldstein, Feb 7, 2020
On View ‘Every Space I’ve Lived in, I’ve Turned Into an Art Project’: Watch Artist Andrea Zittel Build Art and Design Into Her Daily Life As part of a collaboration with Art21, hear news-making artists describe their inspirations in their own words. By Caroline Goldstein, Feb 6, 2020
On View ‘We Had the Guts to Say Yes to This’: Artists Explain Why They Ignored Widespread Censure to Participate in Desert X’s Saudi Edition Artists participating in the controversial show are striving for a message of unity. By Rebecca Anne Proctor, Feb 5, 2020
On View ‘I Am a Photographer, Not an Artist’: Legendary War Photographer Don McCullin on Why the Distinction Matters McCullin spoke to us about his landscape photographs, on view at Hauser & Wirth Somerset. By Naomi Rea, Feb 3, 2020
On View A Dazzling New Show Reveals How African Artists Are Reinventing Fashion Photography—See Their Work Here The show stresses the ways in which fashion can be an essential part of a person's identity. By Caroline Goldstein, Jan 31, 2020
On View ‘I’m Not Trying to Satisfy an Audience’: Watch Paul McCarthy Transform Historical Depictions of Purity Into Objects of Revulsion As part of a collaboration with Art21, hear news-making artists describe their inspirations in their own words. By Caroline Goldstein, Jan 30, 2020
On View On the 75th Anniversary of the Liberation of Auschwitz, 75 Moving Portraits of Holocaust Survivors Are Going on View in Germany Photographer Martin Schoeller has captured the portraits of survivors of the World War II atrocities. By Kate Brown, Jan 27, 2020
On View Alfred Jarry’s ‘King Ubu’ Inspired Everyone From the Dadaists to the Beatles—and His Fascist Buffoon Is Now More Relevant Than Ever Without the 19th-century French firebrand, we may never have had Surrealism, Dada, or $120,000 bananas. By Menachem Wecker, Jan 26, 2020
On View How Stanley Kubrick’s Vision of the Future in ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ Predicted the Way We Consume News Today The Museum of the Moving Image's show gives a glimpse of headlines from a hypothetical future digital New York Times. By Ben Davis, Jan 26, 2020
On View Museums Have Stumbled When It Comes to Curating Indigenous American Art. These Native Students at Yale Are Modeling a New Way Forward "If we didn't take this opportunity, the show was likely not going to happen," one of the student curators said. By Sarah Cascone, Jan 24, 2020
On View ‘It Helped Me Maintain a Certain Vitality’: Watch the Late Nancy Spero Explain How Collaborating With Fellow Artists Strengthened Her Work As part of a collaboration with Art21, hear news-making artists describe their inspirations in their own words. By Caroline Goldstein, Jan 23, 2020
On View What Happens When an Art Museum Is Conceived to Capitalize on the Experience Economy? Fotografiska New York Is About to Find Out The Swedish for-profit institution is expanding fast. What does its success tell us about the state of museums today? By Zachary Small, Jan 21, 2020
On View Environmental Art Pioneer Agnes Denes Makes Art That Defies Gravity—See Images From Her Overdue New York Survey Here The Shed commissioned a 17-foot-tall pyramid from the 88-year-old artist. By Sarah Cascone, Jan 19, 2020
On View A Revealing New Exhibition in Germany Delves Into the Archive of a Top Art Dealer From the 1960s to Show How Female Artists Were Kept Out The show brights together early letters, notes, and artworks that document the careers of first-generation conceptual women artists. By Kate Brown, Jan 17, 2020