Nation
World
Politics
Sports
Business
Entertainment
Life
Tech
Science
Opinion
Crime
Health
Oddities

Senga Nengudi, known for evocative found-object art, wins Nasher Prize

Por: The Boston Globe Life September 25, 2022

thumbnail

The Nasher Sculpture Center announced Wednesday that Senga Nengudi, an artist whose uncanny sculpture—incorporating nylon pantyhose and other found objects—has been displayed in such museums as the Museum of Modern Art and the Baltimore Museum of Art, is the 2023 recipient of the Nasher Prize. Nengudi is the first Black woman to receive the honor, which was established by the Dallas museum in 2015 as a way to “honor a living artist who... + full article



Similar News

We’re Witnessing the Birth of a New Artistic Medium

The Atlantic USA Tech September 28, 2022

thumbnailExpect AI art to go the way of Warhol.Wikimedia; The AtlanticSeptember 27, 2022, 4:20 PM ETCreative artificial intelligence is the latest and, in some ways, most surprising and exhilarating art form in the world. It also isn’t fully formed yet. That tension is causing some... + más

Teen interest in long-lasting birth control soars after Roe | Portland Press Herald

Nebraska judge: Birth certificates can't name 2 mothers | ABC News


Art Walk Project puts public art on the map with free, self-guided tours

The Boston Globe USA Life September 27, 2022

thumbnailAs winter approaches, it’s easy to feel cooped up. But after two-plus years of isolating and social distancing during the pandemic, digital artist Julia Swanson has figured out ways to keep herself entertained and inspired. When she needs a dose of creativity, she goes for a... + más

Destiny 2: How to Get Map Fragments | Newsweek

Kayak outfitters forced to stop tours at Blue Spring: ‘I’m watching my livelihood disappear’ | Orlando Sentinel


Q&A With Javier Peres, Founder Of Peres Projects Art Gallery

Forbes USA Life September 25, 2022

thumbnailWith making its debut in the French capital at the Grand Palais Éphémère from October 20 to 23, 2022, I sit down with Javier Peres, founder of established in 2002, which currently has locations in Berlin, Milan and Seoul, to find out his thoughts on the very first Parisian... + más

Art Walk Project puts public art on the map with free, self-guided tours | The Boston Globe

Create a gallery wall for less than $100 with this 12-piece frame set | WPTV


Asteroid simulators show what could happen to Earth without NASA's DART

Newsweek USA Tech September 24, 2022

thumbnailAs NASA's asteroid-deflecting DART mission approaches its target, simulators show what could happen to Earth in the event of an impact—and demonstrate the importance of research into planetary defense protocols.On Monday, the DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test)... + más

NASA's asteroid-smashing spacecraft is just days away from hitting its target at a speed faster than a bullet | CBS News

NASA spacecraft to crash into asteroid on Monday. Here's how to watch. | 10 WBNS


MIT professor shares in $3 million Breakthrough Prize for quantum computing discoveries

The Boston Globe USA Tech September 23, 2022

thumbnailAn MIT professor who studies quantum computing is sharing a $3 million Breakthrough Prize.MIT math professor shared in the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics with three other researchers, David Deutsch at the University of Oxford, Charles Bennett at IBM Research, and... + más

How the CHIPS Act supercharges the US quantum industry | The Hill

Alibaba pledges $1 billion to cloud computing customers to reignite growth | CNBC


The perpetual motion of Alex Katz at Colby College Museum of Art

The Boston Globe USA Life September 20, 2022

thumbnailWATERVILLE, Maine — What to make of Alex Katz, the great misfit painter lost between the various houses of American art lo these past seven-plus decades? Very soon, the world can decide for itself. In October, the Guggenheim Museum in New York will open “,” his first... + más

Billie and Ella in West Baton Rouge, lots of theater tickets and fiber art at Glassell Gallery | The Advocate

Flooded with AI-generated images, some art communities ban them completely | Ars Technica


Flooded with AI-generated images, some art communities ban them completely

Ars Technica USA Tech September 19, 2022

thumbnailNavigate Filter by topic Settings Front page layout Site theme Comment activity Sign up or login to join the discussions! Sign up to comment and more - Sep 12, 2022 4:36 pm UTC / An assortment of robot portraits generated by Stable Diffusion as found on the Lexica search engine.... + más

Artists begin selling AI-generated artwork on stock photography websites | Ars Technica

Have AI image generators assimilated your art? New tool lets you check | Ars Technica



About iurex | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer |