How Man Ray Made Art of Math and Shakespeare

How Man Ray Made Art of Math and Shakespeare

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While advanced math and Shakespeare combine to make a nightmare curriculum for some students, for artist Man Ray, one of the most intriguing minds of 20th century art, they were “such stuff as dreams are made on,” or at least art could be made from. A new exhibition at The Phillips Collection reunites the objects and photographs with

Facing African-American History Through African-American Art

Facing African-American History Through African-American Art

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When the Philadelphia Museum of Art purchased Henry Ossawa Tanner’s painting The Annunciation in 1899, they became the first American museum to acquire a work by an African-American artist. That purchase announced a new era of recognition of African-American art and artists just as much as the painting itself announced a new style of art moving away from

What Does Football Really Teach Us?

What Does Football Really Teach Us?

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Football replaced baseball as the “national pastime” long ago (despite some arguments to the contrary). The hoopla surrounding the upcoming secular American holiday of Super Bowl XLIX Sunday testifies conclusively to that fact. The trickle down effect of that passion inspires younger and younger people to put on the pads and crash into one another as well as

Madame CĂ©zanne: The Case of the Miserable Muse

Madame CĂ©zanne: The Case of the Miserable Muse

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If Mona Lisa is the smile, Madame CĂ©zanne is the scowl. Hortense Fiquet, Paul CĂ©zanne’s model turned mistress turned mother of his child turned metaphorical millstone around his neck, endures as a standard art history punch line—the muse whose misery won immortality through the many masterpiece portraits done of her. Or at least that’s how the joke usually