Major shows by individual artists have shuttered, but videos and documentaries offer an enlightening alternative.
Art Review
Online videos show that art conservation is part scholarship, part exploration, and part artform itself.
Just because museums and architectural sites are closed doesn’t mean you can’t continue your love affair with Britannia.
Online offerings from top botanical gardens let you watch the world come to life from the comfort of home.
Learning about and practicing Chinese calligraphy is a soothing way to take your mind off coronavirus.
These real-life stories of high-profile heists paint a compelling picture of international crime.
The painter created illusions that seem more real than reality.
Bacon’s troubled life is reflected in his art, which continued to develop even in the twilight of his career.
This exhibition’s thematic presentation burdens a fascinating historical subject with middling contemporary work.
The first exhibition outside Asia devoted to a 16th-century Chinese painter recognized as one of the Four Great Masters of the Ming dynasty and long considered something of an enigma.
An exhibition stretches the definition of ‘self-portrait’ while revealing that the painter was as unsparing with himself as with his other subjects.
Dora Kallmus, better known as Madame d’Ora, was a talented portraitist who found theatrical spectacle in many of her subjects.
The first American Donald Judd retrospective in over 30 years is an ode to material and spatial transformation.
An exhibition reveals the breadth of the movement before it exploded onto the global scene.
A revamped Seattle Asian Art Museum organizes its collection along thematic, instead of geographic, lines with special attention paid to outside voices.
In Washington, the first survey in nearly two decades of the short-lived artist’s quirkily engaging and inventive abstract work.
An illuminating show at the Whitney examines the impact of Mexican muralists on a wide spectrum of American artists.
A selection of photographers’ contact sheets lets visitors see into the minds of the artists, witnessing both failures and triumphs.
Two exhibitions reveal the brilliance of Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, the late-19th-century master of Japanese woodblock prints.
At the recently opened Rubell Museum, visitors are invited to be part of the creative cosmos of art instead of outsiders looking in.