The New Yorker, now celebrating its centenary, has defied media trends by giving an unusual amount of control to the artists behind its conversation-starting covers.
The magazine has gained a cult following, partly by branding itself as a beacon of intellectualism. Here’s how it has changed ...
ScreenRant is proud to exclusively debut the Mickey 17 ScreenX poster, showcasing every version of Robert Pattinson's ...
From glow-in-the-dark rosary beads to St. Christopher dashboard statues and Pope Francis bobbleheads, a tribute to the ...
Mark Zuckerberg repealed fact checking on Meta's platforms. Is it good news for artists? Performance artist Harriet ...
A new online trend has indie developers posting 15-second clips that briefly (sometimes) explain their game, and my Steam ...
The Bald Archy is a parody of the Archibald Prize, and invites artists to poke fun at or satirise a significant figure or significant moment from the past 12 months. Heavily featured among this ...
In “Winter Carnival: A Century of Dartmouth Posters,” author and design historian Steven Heller commented that the artistic evolution of the posters reflects the different eras in which they were each ...
Given that their Fauve works in German museums had been seized by the Nazis, sold for cash or possibly destroyed in a bonfire of degenerate art, were they and their works then banned in France? This ...
Zenshu continues to be, secretly, the best new anime series of the season. It's a satire with a real point of view instead of the usual power fantasy isekai. It's a satire on the anime industry ...
As a well-practised procrastinator, I was most amused to see a poster saying, “I’m a black belt in Partial Arts” — that kind of describes me completely. I hardly ever finish what I am doing. One of ...