Arts News

A wide angle look at literature, architecture, visual art, museums, writing, books and so much more. Visit often – always updated…

Art image: Free Creative Stuff, Creative Commons, Pexels.com

    Oh dear! Our feed will be back shortly...

Hyperallergic Sensitive to art and its discontents


Open Culture The best free cultural & educational media on the web

  • How Frank Gehry (RIP) and the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao Changed Architecture
    by Colin Marshall on December 8, 2025 at 10:00 am

    It felt, for quite some time there, like the age of Frank Gehry would never end. But now that the latest defining figure of American architecture — or technically, Canadian-American architecture — has died at the age of 96, the time has come to ask when, exactly, his age began. Or rather, with which building: Walt Disney

  • “The Matilda Effect”: How Pioneering Women Scientists Have Been Written Out of Science History
    by OC on December 8, 2025 at 9:00 am

    Photo via Wikimedia Commons The history of science, like most every history we learn, comes to us as a procession of great, almost exclusively white, men, unbroken but for the occasional token woman—well-deserving of her honors but seemingly anomalous nonetheless. “If you believe the history books,” notes the Timeline series The Matilda Effect, “science is

  • The Gnostic Gospels: An Introduction to the Forbidden Teachings of Jesus
    by Colin Marshall on December 5, 2025 at 9:00 am

    It would be impossible to understand Western civilization without understanding the history of Christianity. But in order to do that, it may serve us well to think of it as the history of Christianities, plural. So suggests Hochelaga creator Tommie Trelawny in the new video above, which explains the Gnostic Gospels, the “forbidden teachings of

  • George Orwell’s Six Rules for Writing Clear and Tight Prose
    by OC on December 4, 2025 at 11:00 am

    Image via Wikimedia Commons Most everyone who knows the work of George Orwell knows his 1946 essay “Politics and the English Language” (published here), in which he rails against careless, confusing, and unclear prose. “Our civilization is decadent,” he argues, “and our language… must inevitably share in the general collapse.” The examples Orwell quotes are all

  • Did Tintin Creator Hergé Collaborate with the Nazis? A Historical Investigation
    by Colin Marshall on December 4, 2025 at 10:00 am

    The Adventures of Tintin may be a children’s comic series from mid-twentieth-century Europe, but its appeal has long since transcended the boundaries of form, culture, and generation. In fact, many if not most seriously dedicated fans of Tintin are in middle age and beyond, and few of them can have avoided ever considering the question

  • Why Do Filmmakers Call The Battle of Algiers the Greatest War Movie Ever?: Watch It Free Online
    by Colin Marshall on December 3, 2025 at 10:00 am

    Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest film, the loose Thomas Pynchon adaptation One Battle After Another, serves up many a memorable scene. But for a certain kind of cinephile, nothing — not the terrorist attacks, not the chases, not the swerves into askew comedy — sticks in the mind quite so much as the moment in which

  • The Oldest Known Depiction of Human Sexuality: The Turin Papyrus (Circa 1150 B.C.E.)
    by OC on December 3, 2025 at 9:00 am

    Image via Wikimedia Commons With the old joke about every generation thinking they invented sex, Listverse brings us the papyrus above, the oldest depiction of sex on record. Painted sometime in the Ramesside Period (1292–1075 B.C.E.), the fragments above—called the “Turin Erotic Papyrus” because of their “discovery” in the Egyptian Museum of Turin, Italy—only hint

  • The Unlikely Friendship of Mark Twain and Nikola Tesla
    by Colin Marshall on December 2, 2025 at 10:00 am

    Mark Twain was, in the estimation of many, the United States of America’s first truly homegrown man of letters. And in keeping with what would be recognized as the can-do American spirit, he couldn’t resist putting himself forth now and again as a man of science — or, more practically, a man of technology. Here

  • Talking Heads’ David Byrne Performs a Tiny Desk Concert
    by OC on December 2, 2025 at 9:00 am

    If you’ve seen a David Byrne concert in recent years, you know that he performs with a large ensemble of musicians, each carrying their own instruments across the stage, all while moving in intricately choreographed patterns. On his current tour, Byrne and his band stopped by NPR’s studio and played a very different kind of

  • Inside Disney’s Long, Frustrated Quest to Create Artificial Human Beings: A Six-Hour Documentary
    by Colin Marshall on December 1, 2025 at 10:03 am

    For young children today, just as it was for generations of their predecessors, nothing is quite so thrilling about their first visit to a Disney theme park as catching a glimpse of Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, or another beloved character greeting them in real life. Creating this memorable experience requires nothing more advanced than a


Enlightenment in the East of England

Why not visit our other site pages whilst you're here...

Latest Blogs

Lorem ipsum dolor sit ame sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore

May 2, 2023

Digital learning in museums? A European view…

Welcome to this informative booklet on Digital Learning and Education in Museums! This report, created …

Nov 23, 2020

Four misconceptions about art education?

An article from our archive for the New Year… Are you interested in exploring art …

Dec 15, 2022

Powering through the econo-cultural blizzard. Happy Christmas!

Happy Christmas break from the publishing team at conversationsEAST – remaining resilient, generous of spirit …