“The Stars We Do Not See” at the National Gallery of Art tells — and muddies — one of the most fascinating stories in 20th ...
In 1770, a ship called The Endeavour made land in a lovely cove not yet called Botany Bay, observed by Gweagal men. Spears were waved on one side; shots fired on the other. An Aboriginal man was ...
On September 17, the Asia Society in New York will open a unique exhibition showcasing the rich history of Aboriginal Australian bark painting. “Maḏayin: Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark ...
The British Museum’s highly contentious exhibition on Aboriginal Australian art, which opened yesterday was panned by critics, the Sydney Morning Herald reports. Curated by the Aboriginal Australian ...
Imagine you’re in south-east Cape York Peninsula, heading north from the tiny town of Laura – population 133. You’re in a dusty four wheel drive, bumping over a rough gravel road to a remote location ...
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — In 1971, at a remote government settlement in Australia’s Northern Territory called Papunya, a group of elderly Aboriginal men painted designs from ancestral creation stories onto a ...
An exhibit of contemporary Aboriginal art opens this month at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum at Cornell University. WEISLOGEL: We were alerted about the exhibition by the collector who assembled the ...
Archaeologists exploring the waters near Western Australia’s Murujuga are finding ancient sites a short dive below the sea’s surface Clare Watson, Hakai Magazine Archaeologists exploring the submerged ...
I just started reading Toure’s Post Blackness: What It means to be Black Now, which features a number of black artists in America today. Race and identity is a concept that fascinates me to no end.
Angelina Hurley does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond ...