Hanging Fire at the Asia Society is the first U.S. museum exhibition to focus on contemporary art from Pakistan.
Hanging Fire at the Asia Society is the first U.S. museum exhibition to focus on contemporary art from Pakistan.
See the new exhibit, a gathering of over 200 of Madeline Albright’s personal pins and brooches, at the Museum of Arts & Design.
Installed in the balcony galleries of the new American Wing in an integrated chronological sequence, the silver display includes the work of such familiar names as Paul Revere, Jr., and Tiffany & Company.
See the Met’s new collection of over 250 pieces of American ceramics from 1876 to 1956 on the new mezzanine of the Charles Engelhard Court.
Check out afterparty, an outdoors installation created by MOS, which won the tenth annual MoMA/P.S.1 Young Architects Program competition, and the YAP 10th Anniversary Review.
The Morgan Library & Museum showcases the highly important bound collection of Oscar Wilde’s letters and manuscripts, the whereabouts of which has been unknown to scholars for over half a century.
As part of the Museum’s “Getting By” tour, Rosa and Rodolfo Baldizzi’s struggle to survive the Great Depression is revealed through records, family artifacts, photos and recordings of Josephine Baldizzi’s oral history.
Stage Pictures presents a selection of designs for dance, theater, and opera from MoMA’s drawings collection, spanning a century of visual experimentation on the stage.
Fifty artists from twenty-five countries, all under the age of 33 are presented in “Younger Than Jesus,” the first edition of “The Generational,” the New Museum’s new signature triennial.
This exhibit at the Asia Society in New York examines the intersection of history, international relations, personal relationships and art collecting through a rich display of more than eighty exceptional objects.