Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum used a new technology to train a computer to recreate the missing pieces of Rembrandt's 'The Night Watch', pixel by pixel in the art icon's signature style.
In his 'Hergé - Hopper' series, Marabout imagined a romantic life for Tintin in the intimate and voyeuristic universe of the famous American painter; describing his work as "strip art."
This seems to be the first art piece sold by a bot and was sold on Nifty Gateway for almost $700,000.
Originally painted in 1887, the work of art has been in the possession by a single French family for more than a century.
Van Gogh's 'Starry Night' just crossed the 10,000 votes threshold on LEGO’s “Ideas” platform, meaning it got enough support to go into production.
In the times of isolation, finding solace in artworks can be quite rewarding, and this was the idea guiding Amsterdam's renowned Rijksmuseum in doubling its collection of art works available for free online.
When a benefactor donates something to an organization like a school or a museum, usually he gets something prominent named after them, but then enters John Waters...
50 years after his untimely death, London's Masterpiece Gallery is commemorating Jimi Hendrix with a special exhibition that includes rare and unseen photos of the rock legend.
In the era of subscription services, we are given unlimited access to a massive library of content, yet we still find ourselves defaulting back to the same ones over and over again. Well, there's actually a science behind this behavior.
Instead of taking the art industry (gallery) standard of 50 percent from any sale, Snark.art takes just 10 percent, and in a month it's grown to include 150 objects by 55 artists from 17 countries.
Recap of our live sit down with rising artist, Dáreece Walker. We discuss the thought process behind the series, some of the techniques used, the public response to the exhibition, the prescience of the series in relation to current events, and more.
Check out our wide-ranging talk with select artists about the current events and conversations being had around the country (and the world) and all things protest/political art.
The Bowie painting originally sold for just less than $5 and is a part of his "Dead Heads" series from the mid-90s.
This doesn't only include the art pieces currently on display, but even those pieces that reside in the vaults.
'Everydays: The First 5000 Days' is a collage of all the images that Beeple has been posting online each day since 2007, and it just set a new high for an artwork that exists only digitally.
The mysterious statement—clearly added sometime after the painting's debut in 1893—was long thought to be added either by a disgruntled onlooker or perhaps the artist himself.
From Fiona Apple to Wim Wenders to Edvard Munch, here's a few examples of art that's relevant (and maybe somewhat comforting) through this garbage fire of a time.
PRIZM Art Fair is dedicated to exhibiting international artists from the African Diaspora, and they have returned with its eighth edition - now available for online viewing.
Banksy's famous environmentally conscious version of Claude Monet's "Water Lily Pond" is coming up for auction at Sotheby's London and is expected to go for up to $6.5 million.
David Byrne's latest entry into his multimedia project, 'Reasons to be Cheerful', has just launched and it tackles division within society through interactive storytelling.
We're back with special guest Benny Bing to talk about his latest art collection titled "BLOOM," his unique art style, commissioning work for Dave Chappelle, re-connecting the African diaspora, and much more.
LEGO has just revealed that the latest addition to their recent "LEGO Art" line will be devoted to The Beatles, along with an accompanying music podcast.
While there are no two ways of coping during difficult times, we could learn a thing or two from artists who thrived in solitude and fortuitously produced their magnum opuses.
The country is on fire with rage, and rightfully so, but we cannot end with only rage and social media postings. We must all do our part before this tears us apart. We'll be donating 50% of all our Black Fathers Matter merch proceeds to Reclaim the Block.