Sydney Sweeney’s Immaculate Is an Art Film at Heart

[ad_1] Sydney Sweeney, however, is spectacular as a pregnant nun suffering the tortures of the damned. Photo: Neon Immaculate is probably too tasteful and elegant to qualify as “nunsploitation,” which could be a blessing or a curse, depending on your point of view. Directed by Michael Mohan, the film stars Sydney Sweeney as Sister Cecilia,… Continue reading Sydney Sweeney’s Immaculate Is an Art Film at Heart

How Keith Haring’s art transcended his untimely death

[ad_1] Book Review Radiant: The Life and Line of Keith Haring By Brad GoochHarperCollins: 512 pages, $40 If you buy books linked on our site, The Times may earn a commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support independent bookstores. I began reading Brad Gooch’s biography of Keith Haring with the last chapter, on Haring’s untimely death… Continue reading How Keith Haring’s art transcended his untimely death

Korean art of the ’60s and ’70s at the Hammer Museum: review

[ad_1] Seoul is the latest major city to establish itself as a significant international hub for new art. With that distinction comes the expected propagation of ambitious museum exhibitions seeking to articulate, illuminate and cogitate over its local history of modern art, which is little known. “Only the Young: Experimental Art in Korea, 1960s-1970s” is… Continue reading Korean art of the ’60s and ’70s at the Hammer Museum: review

Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego to sell downtown buildings

[ad_1] Two years after opening a $110-million expansion project in the tony seaside enclave of La Jolla, the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego has put its downtown exhibition facility on the market. The property, at 1100 Kettner Blvd., two blocks from the piers at San Diego Bay, consists of two structures, which opened to… Continue reading Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego to sell downtown buildings

The Art of the Robocall

[ad_1] “Lennox Mutual,” a one-on-one immersive theatrical experience, raises questions about performance, A.I., and corporate culture. [ad_2] Source link

Michael Imperioli Knows Art Can’t Save Us

[ad_1] Michael Imperioli was onstage last week when a performance of “An Enemy of the People,” in which he stars, was interrupted by protesters. “I wasn’t sure if the director kind of planted them there,” he told me not long afterward. The play was written by Henrik Ibsen nearly a hundred and fifty years ago,… Continue reading Michael Imperioli Knows Art Can’t Save Us

Los Angeles Latino art institution Self Help Graphics names new director

[ad_1] Since the 1970s, Self Help Graphics & Art has combined community, collaboration and activism, all centering on Chicanx and Latinx art. What started in the East L.A. garage of Sister Karen Boccalero has turned into a cornerstone art movement in Los Angeles — a place that has nurtured some of the city’s most successful… Continue reading Los Angeles Latino art institution Self Help Graphics names new director

AI-Generated Art Can’t Be Copyrighted, Judge Rules

[ad_1] Paintings of Ai-Da Robot, the first AI-powered Robot Artist. Photo: Johannes Simon/Getty Images for Aidan Meller Go on, make all the generative AI artworks you want, but it will not be protected under copyright law. A federal court ruled on August 18 that AI-generated artwork cannot be copyrighted on the grounds that copyright law… Continue reading AI-Generated Art Can’t Be Copyrighted, Judge Rules

This art festival has brought over 100 murals to Long Beach

[ad_1] The first sweep of spray paint left the can and landed on the white wall of Renaissance High School for the Arts in Long Beach. A hissing sound filled the air as Rex Richardson, the mayor of Long Beach, added a final touch of paint to the stencil. Four days later, artist Stevie Shao… Continue reading This art festival has brought over 100 murals to Long Beach

Ukrainian sculpts art from war debris and rage against Russia

[ad_1] ODESA, Ukraine —  Ukraine’s best-known sculptor, Mikhail Reva, was once famous for his whimsical works — playful, outsized creations found in parks and plazas across the country, and scattered throughout his southern hometown of Odesa. Russia’s war on Ukraine changed all that. His genial features obscured behind a welder’s mask, the 63-year-old sculptor gestures toward… Continue reading Ukrainian sculpts art from war debris and rage against Russia