Toilet paper, tissue and cigarette wrappers. Prison inmates use the items most of us toss to create art. Open at the Museum of International Folk Art, "Between the Lines" aims to humanize the ...
In an op-ed, Jordanne Brazie discusses the boundaries of line cutting and the joy of sacrificing one’s comfort for art.
At first, he brushed me off. After nearly three decades in prison, he had seen too many people ask for help without the ...
One of the reasons for that low percentage is that golfers often choose a putter based on what feels comfortable, what they ...
The Amon Carter Museum of American Art is making sure art is truly for everyone. In honor of Color Blind Awareness Month in ...
P ainter Tomashi Jackson traces history’s rhymes. “My mother was in the streets during the Watts Rebellion when she was 12,” ...
If South Africa is a melting pot of cultures, the food we eat on National Braai Day should reflect that. We asked two culinary schools to create Braai Day menus that reflect traditional South African ...
The literary world often seems to stand apart from the working class, but poets like Fish are keeping the tradition of ...
Seraphina Halpern, AB’24, completed her thesis research in anthropology with field work on Prince Edward Island. She received ...
What makes Kumamoto special is how its history is deeply entwined with the samurai, the iconic warriors of feudal Japan. This region played a significant role in the rise and evolution of the samurai ...
Twenty years ago, anti-capitalist activists campaigned against ads posted in public bathroom stalls: too invasive, there needs to be a limit to capital’s reach. Now, ads by the toilet are quaint.