art

Gaza Man "Cheated" Into Selling Banksy Painted on His Door for $175

Andy Cush · 04/01/15 06:04PM

When Banksy lands in a city and begins a street art-making spree, there's a routine that usually follows. First, the stenciled paintings are ignored, then, after people realize what they are, they are gawked at and occasionally vandalized. Eventually, they are cordoned off and protected from the public, and finally, they are physically removed, and someone makes a lot of money, or hopes to. An extreme version of this complex lottery played out for one unlucky family in Gaza recently.

Museumgoers Think IKEA Painting is Real, Amazing, Worth Six Figures

Jay Hathaway · 03/20/15 02:00PM

Art is whatever people think it is, and what people think it is depends an awful lot on context: For example, whether the work is being displayed in an art museum by a dapper bloke in glasses and a vest, or whether it's sitting alongside other copies of the exact same print in an IKEA, with a listed price of €10.

Dayna Evans · 03/11/15 10:17AM

Several more cultural institutions have taken measures to ban selfie sticks, adding to the growing list of public places where the wand of idiocy will not be tolerated. The Palace of Versailles, Britain's National Gallery, and the Colosseum are among the newest institutions to impose the selfie stick ban.

ISIS Militants Bulldoze and Ransack Ancient City of Nimrud 

Aleksander Chan · 03/06/15 09:07AM

In another assault on Iraq's cultural legacy, Islamic State militants reportedly destroyed the remains of the ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud Thursday, an attack Iraq's tourism and antiquities ministry says "defy the will of the world and the feelings of humanity."

These SWAT Team Teletubbies Will Stare Into the Bottom of Your Soul

Andy Cush · 02/25/15 04:45PM

Today marks the opening of the 2015 Triennial at Manhattan's New Museum, billed as "the only recurring international exhibition in New York City devoted to early-career artists from around the world." From the looks of things, there's a lot of art to wade through, but in the eternal quest for virality, one work has emerged an early standout.

In America, Public Art Is Satanist Muslim Terrorism

Andy Cush · 02/25/15 11:31AM

In America, we love our advertising. So much so that when a vessel that's ordinarily used to assault our eyeballs with neon-colored laundry detergent advocacy suddenly stops trying to sell stuff to us, we immediately assume that the terrorists are finally at our door.

Museums Have Rightfully Started Banning Selfie Sticks

Dayna Evans · 02/17/15 10:48AM

Let's set the scene: the Metropolitan Museum of Art, early afternoon, on a cold winter Sunday. You, an admirer of Impressionism, are taking in a portrait of a woman relaxing by the seashore, painted by French master Renoir. A metal pole and a man in a green Canada Goose jacket appear in front of the painting. He is flashing a dirtbag grin in your direction.

My Gay Uncles

John Reed · 02/07/15 12:20PM

When I talk about my downtown life as a kid, people ask how old I am. Growing up in New York City in the 70s was more like being an urchin of the 30s than a silver spoon of the 80s. I'm more likely to share recollections with a 70-year old—playing stoop, jumping off the piers—than to wax fondly upon the boy bands, cocaine, and angular sports cars of Ronald Reagan's second term.

Art in Money Prison 

Hamilton Nolan · 02/04/15 02:07PM

Art is free to create. Art is free to experience. Art belongs to all of us. Art is, in many ways, the opposite of money. And when you mix art with money, this is what you get: art that is wasted.