The Authentic Source for
Experience the vibrant musical traditions of the Balkans and beyond at Zlatne Uste Golden Festival 2024. Now in its 38th year, the Zlatne Uste Golden Festival is the country’s biggest, most inclusive festival celebrating Balkan music, dance, and the ... read more
Join the third annual Strength of a Woman Festival and Summit (SOAW) as it takes over NYC on May 10, 11 and 12 (Mother’s Day Weekend) featuring an iconic lineup of talent.Created and curated by the iconic GRAMMY award-winning singer and songwriter, M... read more
THC NYC (Multiple Dates and Times)
Bronx Opera presents "Iolanthe" or "The Peer and the Peri," the witty comic opera by Gilbert & Sullivan. Performances May 11 & 17 at 7:30 PM, and May 12 & 18 at 2:30 PM at the Lovinger Theater in Lehman College, 250 Bedford Park Blv... read more
SOCRATES SCULPTURE PARK UNVEILS TRAILBLAZING 2024 SEASON CHAMPIONING RESILIENCE, ENVIRONMENTAL CONSCIOUSNESS, AND MIGRATORY NARRATIVESFEATURING SUCHITRA MATTAI'S FIRST SOLO NYC SHOWLong Island City, New York – Socrates Sculpture Park, establishe... read more
The Westminster Kennel Club, America's oldest organization dedicated to the sport of purebred dogs, returns to Madison Square Garden for its 137th annual event.
One of the most prominent features of art from the late eighteenth century onwards, particularly after World War II, is artists’ tendency to evolve traditional artmaking methods outside the studio’s boundaries. This exhibition will examine the ways i... read more
Seventy-one visionary artists and collectives will participate in the eighty-first installment of the Whitney Biennial, opening March 20, 2024. Tickets are now on sale and Members will enjoy five days of previews, beginning March 14. The artists... read more
Pueblo Indian pottery embodies four main natural elements: earth, water, air, and fire. It is an art form literally of land and place, and is one of America’s ancient Indigenous creative expressions.Foregrounding Pueblo voices and aesthetics, Grounde... read more
Over the course of sixty years, British artist Howard Hodgkin (British, London 1932–2017 London) formed a collection of Indian paintings and drawings that is recognized as one of the finest of its kind. A highly regarded painter and printmaker, Hodgk... read more
The Metropolitan Museum of Art present wthe groundbreaking exhibition The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism. Through some 160 works of painting, sculpture, photography, film, and ephemera, it will explore the comprehensive and far-reachi... read more
This exhibition is the first to examine an intriguing but largely unknown side—in the literal sense—of Renaissance painting: multisided portraits in which the sitter’s likeness was concealed by a hinged or sliding cover, within a box, or by a dual-fa... read more
The Costume Institute’s spring 2024 exhibition, Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion, will reactivate the sensory capacities of masterworks in the Museum’s collection through first-hand research, conservation analysis, and diverse technologies—from... read more
Drawn from the Whitney’s collection, Trust Me brings together photographic works that invite shared emotional experience. The artists in the exhibition embrace intuition and indeterminacy as part of their creative process and recognize that vulnerabi... read more
This exhibition traces the evolution of Harold Cohen’s AARON, the earliest artificial intelligence (AI) program for artmaking. Leaving behind his practice as an established painter in London, Cohen (1928–2016) conceived the software in the late 1960s... read more
“There is design in everything,” wrote Clara Porset, the innovative Cuban-Mexican designer. She believed that craft and industry could inspire each other, forging an alternative path for modern design. Not all of Porset’s colleagues agreed with her c... read more
"I didn’t see a major difference between a poem, a sculpture, a film, or a dance,” Joan Jonas has said. For more than five decades, Jonas’s multidisciplinary work has bridged and redefined boundaries between performance, video, drawing, sculpture, an... read more
In the early decades of the 20th century, when many artists were experimenting with abstraction, Käthe Kollwitz remained committed to an art of social purpose. Focusing on themes of motherhood, grief, and resistance, she brought visibility to the wor... read more
The earliest color films were made around 1895, when new, synthetically produced dyes transformed the nature of color in mediums such as postcards, magic lantern slides, and fabrics. For moviegoers and critics of the period, color added to films shot... read more
How can art draw our attention to models of resistance to environmental threats? For more than a decade, Carolina Caycedo has posed this question through video, performance, and sculpture, investigating the impact of hydroelectric dams and other infr... read more