Guggenheim

2019-10-18T03:26:50.868Z
Tear gas. Colonial theft. Money connected to the opioid addiction crisis. These are not stakes one might typically associate with art museums, but all have been implicated by recent protests at the Guggenheim and Whitney, among other global art institutions.
... 
2019-01-29T05:29:59.913Z
Sitting atop the used mid-century style chair in the corner of her sitting room, Erica Baum, BC ’84, recounted how she went from her liberal arts education at Barnard to donning the walls of the Guggenheim with her artwork.
... 2016-08-06T16:00:02Z
Picture this: It's the 1940s, and Mary Sharp Cronson stands daydreaming at the School of American Ballet when she spots Vera Zorina out the window. Entranced by the glitz and glamour of George Balanchine's second wife—who doubles as a ballerina and Hollywood starlet—an adolescent Cronson falls in love with the beauty and sensationalized identity of Balanchine's New York City Ballet.
... 2016-05-27T08:00:04Z
The paintings consist only of a monochromatic background with the date they were painted overlaid in white letters. But despite their minimalism, the works on display at an upcoming Guggenheim exhibit on On Kawara are more complex than they seem. The exhibit is meant to be a comprehensive overview of Kawara's art, well represents the modern sentiments of repetition and anonymity that influenced much of his work.
... 2016-03-04T18:56:08Z
Midterms are looming, the sun is shining, and the weekend is right around the corner. Put your books aside and get ready for three days packed full of nearby events. Spectrum's got you covered with everything from great deals on drinks to can't-miss school sporting events.
... 2015-10-15T16:38:12Z
"Alberto Burri: The Trauma of Painting," is the Solomon F. Guggenheim Museum's largest retrospective on Burri and the first in more than 40 years.
2015-06-12T17:00:02Z
Six Columbia professors were among the recipients of this year's John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowships.
... 2014-10-20T09:05:03Z
In 1957, Otto Piene and Heinz Mack founded the artist group ZERO, the name of which Piene later said represented "a zone of silence and of pure possibilities for a new beginning, as at the countdown when rockets take off."
... 2014-09-18T21:25:52Z
Among the many things I missed while I was away from New York this summer, one was the chance to see Kara Walker's monumental sugar sphinx at the Domino sugar factory. Instagram reminded me of this pretty relentlessly, as every New Yorker I follow gradually made their way to Williamsburg to take a picture of the statue, tag their location, and produce a caption that at least tried to distinguish itself from all the captions that had come before it. That went on for most of June. By July, they were being phased out, and everyone's photos of the Jeff Koons show at the Whitney had begun to take their place, all shiny and inflated and phallic.
... 2014-04-03T13:07:03Z
Amplifying the utopian zeal of the 20th-century avant-garde, Italian futurism marched its way into modern art with a revolutionary project and the brazen machismo to back it. The launch of this incendiary crusade against the bourgeois past and the flight toward the technological future led to a radical and chaotic period of production, presented for the first time in full force at the Guggenheim Museum's monumental exhibition, "Italian Futurism, 1909-1944: Reconstructing the Universe."
...