It seems every week, a new classic work of art is targeted by climate protesters. From Van Gogh, Monet, and now Vermeer, these protests have certainly garnered international shock, but are they effective in their messaging?
Looking at the artwork of feminist artists of the 1970s and that of Cox in a 2022 frame, are we still shocked? More importantly, is the thought-provoking art of the past concerned with addressing social justice issues still being created today?
Brown Art Review curates student show
A group of Iranian artists left their signature on the Guggenheim’s iconic atrium in protest of the killing of Mahsa Amini by Iran's “morality police.”
This season, Sotheby’s presents four sales focusing on post-war and contemporary art in its New York location.
In a monumental court case, the E.U. has overruled a decision pronouncing Banksy’s trademark on his spray-painted apes “invalid in its entirety,” allowing the international art icon and activist to maintain his anonymity.






