Posts

What’s on TV Saturday: ‘S.N.L.’ and the Kids’ Choice Awards

A Shelter for Art Caught in the Crossfire

A Japanese Mogul Collects Art as a Form of Giving Back

Improving Medicine With Art

How to Get the Brain to Like Art

At the Museum of Tolerance, Holding a Mirror to Visitors’ Biases

At Museums, Maybe It’s Time for ‘De-growth’

How Diverse Is African Art? A 54-Volume Encyclopedia Will Try for an Answer

A Golden Age for Museums in the Persian Gulf

Cast the Trump Mini-Series: Who Should Play the Donald?

Paul Taylor Opens With Humor Intact, but Poetry Missing

Los Angeles’s Thriving Jazz Scene Produces Four New Albums

White-Hot Aria, Engulfing Bass: This Week’s 8 Best Classical Moments

The Greatest Trick Ed Sheeran Ever Pulled Was Convincing the World He’s an Underdog

Review: John Adams Wrestles the Ghosts of His Musical Fathers

The Playlist: Nicki Minaj Strikes Back, and Fleet Foxes Return With a Folky Epic

In This Ballet, a Sweetly Disturbing Confection From Alexei Ratmansky

Review: In Documentaries on Syria, Much Despair and a Dash of Hope

Kids Are Getting Older Quicker. And Disney Tries to Adapt.

‘Cries From Syria,’ on HBO, Is a Grim Look at That Nation’s ’s War

The Artist Jimmie Durham: A Long Time Gone, but Welcomed Back

10 Things to Do in NYC Now

The Hills Are Alive With the Sound of Julie Andrews and Henson Puppets

Julia Bullock and Sarah Connolly Offer Enchantments New and Old

A Tribe Called Red and Clap! Clap! in a Cross-Borough Double Bill

True North: ‘Marsden Hartley’s Maine’ at the Met Breuer

When Japan Had a Third Gender

Emily Coates’s ‘Incarnations’: Quantum Leaps, When Physics Meets Dance

Spicer’s Briefings, Cringe TV for an Audience of One

In London, a Ferocious ‘Virginia Woolf’

Jimmy Kimmel Would Pay to Watch Trump and Cruz Eat Together

What’s on TV Friday: ‘Love’ and ‘The Vampire Diaries’

Kurt Moll, German Basso Profundo, Dies at 78

Howard Hodgkin

Howard Hodgkin, Whose Paintings Were Coded With Emotion, Dies at 84

Events for Children in NYC This Week

Art and Museums in NYC This Week

Review: ‘American Crime’ Fixes on Migrant Dreamers in the Fields

‘Steve Wolfe: Remembering Steve’ Speaks Volumes About an Artist

Dolley Madison and Her Peers Ran Their Own ‘Pussy-Hat’ Brigade

Dance in NYC This Week

Comedy in NYC This Week

Classical Music in NYC This Week

Pop, Rock and Jazz in NYC This Week

What to See in New York Art Galleries This Week

From Alexei Jawlensky, Abstract Faces at Full Intensity

A Dutch Master’s Surreal Visions

A Soothing Skyline and a Weimaraner, ‘the Most Architectural of Dogs’

Vermeer Bottleneck at the Louvre Prompts a Walkout

How Much Watching Time Do You Have This Weekend?