Officials Rename Popular Grand Canyon Site to Honor Havasupai Tribe
The National Park Service forcibly removed members of the tribe from the area in the 1920s
Metal Detectorist Finds Medieval Wedding Ring in Near-Perfect Condition
Discovered five inches underground, the rare 14th-century artifact could sell for $47,000
Marie Antoinette's Furniture Is Up for Auction
Two items represent two distinctive stages in the French queen's life
Archaeologists Unearth 2,000-Year-Old Odeon in Crete
The dig at the remote site is the first in more than 50 years
The First-Ever List of Japanese Americans Forced Into Incarceration Camps Is 1,000 Pages Long
The Ireichō contains 125,284 names—and a new exhibition invites the public to honor them
Known as Warhol's Muse, Edie Sedgwick Was an Artist Herself
For the first time, a trove of her previously unseen art is going to auction
Security Stopped Climate Activists From Gluing Themselves to 'The Scream'
As similar protests play out throughout Europe, museums consider how to respond
You Can Rent Jean-Michel Basquiat’s Apartment and Art Studio—For $60,000
The artist rented the space from Andy Warhol between 1983 and 1988
Massachusetts Museum Returns Wounded Knee Artifacts to Sioux Tribes
A ceremony on Saturday marked the conclusion of a long repatriation process
Archaeologists Find 24 Bronze Statues, Preserved in Tuscan Spa for 2,300 Years
The discovery provides insight into the transition from Etruscan to Roman rule
See Inside the Rarely Seen and Newly Reimagined CIA Museum
Off-limits to all but a few in-person visitors, the museum is starting to welcome the public, online at least
Maurice Sendak Imagined More Than Wild Things
A new exhibition, the first of its kind since the artist's death, showcases his extensive but lesser-known body of work
These A.I.-Generated Images Hang in a Gallery—but Are They Art?
At "Artificial Imagination," a new Bay Area exhibition, artworks created by DALL-E 2 go on display
This Record-Breaking Passenger Train Is Over a Mile Long
The Swiss locomotive clinched the world record last weekend
Andy Warhol’s 12-Foot-Tall 'White Disaster' Could Sell For $80 Million
The piece is part of a series exploring death, disaster and the artist’s preoccupation with mortality
Has This Piet Mondrian Painting Been Hanging Upside Down for 77 Years?
Intriguing new observations suggest that it has—but curators are going to leave it the way it is
Lost Rubens Painting, Rediscovered After Two Centuries, Could Sell for $35 Million
A French family found the masterpiece in their collection in 1987
Which of These Historical Dolls Is the Creepiest?
Vote for one of the nine finalists from a Minnesota museum's collection
Reexamining Edward Hopper—and the Woman Behind His Career
“Hopper: An American Love Story” highlights the artist’s relationship with his wife, Josephine Nivison
Archaeologists Unearth 2,700-Year-Old Stone Carvings in Northern Iraq
They found the beautifully detailed marble reliefs while working to restore the Mashki Gate
Page 4 of 6