Brooklyn Museum

Over the past few weeks, mass layoffs have plagued the country across various sectors— from the National Park Services to 

The Museum of Modern Art in New York shut its galleries unexpectedly on February 10, after hundreds of pro-Palestine protestors began a massive demonstration in the museum.
As years go, 2020 was indubitably a very bad one. Naturally, this raises the question of whether these events will impact art. The Brooklyn Museum attempts an answer with The Slipstream.
Now, at eighty-six, she is getting her due, with a heralded retrospective at the Brooklyn Museum called Both/And, which follows the comprehensive anthology of her writing, Writing in Space, 1973–2019…
Featuring a dynamic combination of graffiti drawings, paintings, sculptures, collectible objects, furniture, and augmented reality projects, KAWS: WHAT PARTY presents a twenty-five-year survey of the…
The groundbreaking designs of Pierre Cardin have been giving us a look at the future for nearly seven decades.
More than just a party spot, Studio 54 changed the cultural landscape of New York City
Museums, foundations race to prop up art world in face of $100 million in projected lost revenue due to COVID-19
African Arts―Global Conversations draws from the Brooklyn Museum’s extensive and renowned collections to assert the importance of African arts within the art historical canon.
A pair of exhibitions–Art after Stonewall at NYU’s Grey Art Gallery and Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art and Nobody Promised You Tomorrow: Art 50 Years After Stonewall at the Brooklyn…
Mexican artist Frida Kahlo’s unique and immediately recognizable style was an integral part of her identity. Kahlo came to define herself through her ethnicity, disability, and politics, all of which…
One of the most recognizable faces in all of art history is making her big debut at the Brooklyn Museum this weekend. The highly anticipated blockbuster exhibit Frida Kahlo: Appearances Can Be…
This spellbinding painting is a true masterpiece and among the very greatest Monet painted during his first and only encounter with Venice.
Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power shines light on a broad spectrum of Black artistic practice from 1963 to 1983, one of the most politically, socially, and aesthetically revolutionary…