“Mexican Prints” at the Art, Design & Architecture Museum features José Clemente Orozco, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Rufino Tamayo, and fellow artists who shaped 20th-century printmaking.
A fragmented comet that is thought to have exploded over the Earth almost 13,000 years ago may have had a role in the disappearance of megafauna and the vanishing Clovis culture from North America’s archaeological record.
The campus joins with community institutions to provide teachers with troves of Fiesta history as K-12 students reexamine and interpret the annual celebration through fresh eyes.
The Japanese Imperial performance features traditional Gagaku music and Bugaku dance that has been performed for over 1,000 years in Japanese Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines and in the Japanese Imperial Court.
The Art, Design & Architecture Museum joins in the international centennial celebration of the birth of artist Joan Mitchell (1925–1992) with a spotlight exhibition of her work in the permanent collection.
The voice redefining jazz for a new generation, Bronx native Samara Joy brings soulful depth and timeless elegance to the stage, with a sound rooted in gospel and shaped by legends like Sarah Vaughan and Betty Carter.