Posts
Korean writer-director Kogonada’s meditation on life and how it’s lived is dreamy, haunting, profound, and deeply moving.
Each month, our arts critics — music, book, theater, dance, and visual arts — fire off a few brief reviews.
Markus Friedrich, a professor of early modern history at the University of Hamburg, has written a scholarly but immensely readable history of the order that will appeal to an audience beyond the Catholic tradition.
Sankofa Danzafro’s Accommodating Lie, is a bold work of art that delivers an indispensable history lesson.
If you are not familiar with Wadada Leo Smith as an artist or as a thinker, you could start with The Chicago Symphonies and know that you are engaging with some of his finest work.
Senorita 89 isn’t an easy watch because of its stinging depiction of misogyny, but it’s a powerful one.
Matt Reeves’ The Batman features villains who lose their shit when faced with an African American politician whose campaign slogan is centered on “Change.”
Visual Arts Commentary: Reordering Design Priorities Through Biometric Research
The cognitive architecture approach espoused by the Human Architecture and Planning Institute is applying a welcome new paradigm that responds in a fresh way to the built environment.
Read More about Visual Arts Commentary: Reordering Design Priorities Through Biometric Research