Art

April 5, 2026

Artist Offers Haunting Meditation on the 2025 L.A. Fires for the Whitney Biennial

Early last year, wildfires tore through Los Angeles, burning 57,000 acres of land and destroying more than 16,000 structures. Among them was Kelly Akashi’s home. On the evening of January 7, 2025, the artist evacuated the Spanish colonial bungalow that doubled as her studio, taking her cat and a few keepsakes with her. But by the time she returned to her lot in Altadena, only a brick chimney remained.

Read Article


March 30, 2026

30 Years of KAWS Highlights the “Family” of Work Created by the Iconic Street Artist

Before an exhibition by KAWS opened at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), more than 20 million people had already viewed it. Titled KAWS: FAMILY, the popular show traveled to sites including Hong Kong, Doha, and Melbourne before finally landing at SFMOMA in November 2025. Visitor numbers have undoubtedly climbed higher as the U.S. public enjoys the mononymous artist’s creative output over the past 30 years, through painting, sculpture, and commercial enterprises.

Read Article


March 26, 2026

Street Artist’s Intricate Lace Murals Continue to Bloom Across Cities Worldwide

Polish artist NeSpoon transforms urban architecture into something unexpectedly tender. She paints her signature lace murals across building facades, bridging centuries-old craft traditions with the scale and energy of contemporary street art. After her murals in places like Ploiești drew global attention, she pushed her practice further in both ambition and reach. Her intricate patterns now cover residential blocks, historic structures, and public spaces around the world.

Read Article


March 26, 2026

Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Unveils Digital Archive of the Artist’s Entire Body of Work

In 1940, American artist Georgia O’Keeffe was quoted as saying, “My painting is what I have to give back to the world for what the world gives to me.” Today, that spirit of generosity lives on through the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Sante Fe, which has been working to make every single one of her artworks available to view online via the newly launched portal, Access O’Keeffe.

Read Article