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Hyperallergic Sensitive to art and its discontents
- Brooklyn Museum’s Africa Collection to Get a Brand New Spaceby Rhea Nayyar on March 30, 2026 at 9:24 pm
The new exhibition space will connect the art and historical legacy of Ancient Egypt and North Africa to that of the rest of the continent.
- Thieves Steal Paintings Worth $10M by Cézanne, Matisse, and Renoirby Isa Farfan on March 30, 2026 at 8:10 pm
Italian police are searching for the works after a middle-of-the-night heist at a small museum outside of Parma.
- New Protest Art Lampoons Trump's Gaudy Bathroom Redesignby Emma Cieslik on March 30, 2026 at 7:25 pm
“In a time of unprecedented division,” reads a plaque, “President Trump focused on what truly mattered: remodeling the Lincoln bathroom in the White House.”
- See Photos From New York’s Historic Anti-Trump Marchesby Bella Bromberg on March 30, 2026 at 6:36 pm
“Art is a way that we get to connect with each other, to witness each other, and to give a little bit of a buoy to keep going,” one protester told Hyperallergic.
- A Drama of Two Mastersby Hyperallergic on March 30, 2026 at 6:15 pm
How to survive the age of AI, and a new film tries its best to dramatize the rivalry between two British landscape painters.
- Juan Uslé’s Childhood Shipwrecksby Lauren Moya Ford on March 30, 2026 at 5:48 pm
A new retrospective at the Museo Reina Sofía in Madrid traces Uslé's work from a Spanish shipwreck to its rebirth in New York City
- Mondays at Pratt Institute: Weekly Openings of Work by Graduating Artistsby Pratt Institute on March 30, 2026 at 4:00 pm
Free and open to the public, Pratt Shows celebrate the school’s graduating students. MFA and BFA work is on view this spring in Brooklyn, New York.
- Turner and Constable Hit the Screenby Michael Glover on March 30, 2026 at 3:06 pm
The camera glides smoothly over landscapes of old England in a film that tries hard to dramatize the rivalry between the two masters.
- Talking Raphaelby Hyperallergic on March 30, 2026 at 10:00 am
One-on-one with the curator of a historic Raphael exhibition at The Met, Robert Therrien's oversized furniture, artists against nuclear weapons, and how to save yourself from AI.
- Whitney Biennial, Can You Hear Us?by Hyperallergic on March 28, 2026 at 10:00 am
Fascism is upon us, but a major US art show seems none the wiser. Also, how to make a protest sign, remembering Pat Steir, and more.
Open Culture The best free cultural & educational media on the web
- How Many Lives Does God Take in the Bible: An Investigation into a Surprisingly High Body Countby Colin Marshall on March 31, 2026 at 9:00 am
Whether or not we believe in any god, most of us here in the twenty-first century have the impression of divine rulers overlooking humanity with at least theoretical love and benevolence. They forgive us, they have plans for us, they never close a door without opening a window, and so on. But in the particular
- A Free Course on Karl Marx’s Capital, Volume 1 from Yale Universityby OC on March 31, 2026 at 8:00 am
From Yale professor Paul North comes a chapter-by-chapter study of Karl Marx’s Capital: Critique of Political Economy, Volume 1. According to the description that accompanies the course on YouTube, this “book from 1872 is still the best guide to the predatory economic and social system within which we live. The book solves five basic mysteries
- How Kraftwerk’s 22-Minute Song “Autobahn” Became an Early Masterpiece in Electronic Music (1975)by Colin Marshall on March 30, 2026 at 9:00 am
It takes about five hours to drive from Düsseldorf to Hamburg on the Autobahn. During that stretch, you can listen to Kraftwerk’s album Autobahn seven times — or if you prefer, you can loop its eponymous opening song thirteen times. For it was “Autobahn,” more so than Autobahn, that changed the sound of music around the
- Watch Errol Morris’s Tune Out the Noise Free Online: A Documentary About the Financial Revolution That Transformed Investingby Colin Marshall on March 30, 2026 at 8:00 am
You can’t beat the market. That, at least, is the advice we all encounter early on when first we try our hand at investing. Homespun though it may sound, the idea has academic roots: the Efficient Market Hypothesis, as the economists call it, holds that the prices in any financial market already reflect all available
- When Soviet Youth Bootlegged Western Rock Music on Discarded X‑Rays: Hear Original Audio Samplesby OC on March 27, 2026 at 7:32 am
A catchy tribute to mid-century Soviet hipsters popped up a few years back in a song called “Stilyagi” by lo-fi L.A. hipsters Puro Instinct. The lyrics tell of a charismatic dude who impresses “all the girls in the neighborhood” with his “magnitizdat” and guitar. Wait, his what? His magnitizdat, man! Like samizdat, or underground press,
- An Introduction to Brutalism: The Iconic Postwar Architectural Style That Combined Utopianism and Concreteby Colin Marshall on March 26, 2026 at 9:00 am
The artificial language of Esperanto was conceived with high ideals in mind. In the eighteen-eighties, its creator L. L. Zamenhof envisioned it as the universal second language of humanity, and if it hasn’t achieved that status by now, it at least remains the world’s most widely spoken constructed auxiliary language. One factor complicating its spread
- Meet the “Telharmonium,” the First Synthesizer (and Predecessor to Muzak), Invented in 1897by OC on March 26, 2026 at 8:00 am
Before the New Year, we brought you footage of Russian polymathic inventor Léon Theremin demonstrating the strange instrument that bears his surname, and we noted that the Theremin was the first electronic instrument. This is not strictly true, though it is the first electronic instrument to be mass produced and widely used in original composition
- See the Climactic Ending of Steven Spielberg’s Breakout Duel Recreated Entirely with 3D-Printed Modelsby Colin Marshall on March 25, 2026 at 9:00 am
With his last picture The Fabelmans, Steven Spielberg told a story of his own. Given his long-held stature as more or less the personification of big-screen Hollywood entertainment, there’s only one such story he could have told: that of how he became a filmmaker. The most memorable of The Fabelmans depicts the young directorial surrogate alone
- How the Hoover Dam Works: A 3D Animated Introductionby Colin Marshall on March 25, 2026 at 8:00 am
When it comes to tourist pilgrimage sites in the United States, the Hoover Dam may not quite rank up there with the Statue of Liberty, the Lincoln Memorial, Mount Rushmore, the Grand Canyon, or Disneyland. But that’s not due to a lack of importance, nor even a lack of impressiveness. Proper appreciation of its man-made
- Lynda Barry on How the Smartphone Is Endangering Three Ingredients of Creativity: Loneliness, Uncertainty & Boredomby OC on March 24, 2026 at 9:00 am
The phone gives us a lot but it takes away three key elements of discovery: loneliness, uncertainty and boredom. Those have always been where creative ideas come from. — Lynda Barry In the spring of 2016, the great cartoonist and educator, Lynda Barry, did the unthinkable, prior to giving a lecture and writing class at NASA’s Goddard


















