The Long and Winding Road of Yoko Ono’s Art
A Hirshhorn exhibition of four works opens the same week Ono is credited, 46 years later, as a co-writer of the chart-topping ballad “Imagine.”
The Ceramicist Who Punched His Pots
Influenced by avant-garde poets, writers and Pablo Picasso, Peter Voulkos experimented with the increasingly unconventional
A Member of the Little Rock Nine Discusses Her Struggle to Attend Central High
At 15, Minnijean Brown faced down the Arkansas National Guard, Now Her Story and Personal Items are Archived at the Smithsonian
The Day a Bunch of Billionaires Stopped by the Smithsonian
A new effort to study the history of philanthropy is announced and a number of significant charitable contributions are recognized
How One Artist Learned to Sculpt the Wind
Artist Janet Echelman studied ancient craft, travel the world and now collaborates with a team of specialists to choreograph the movement of air
How Crystal Meth Made it Into the Smithsonian (Along with Walter White’s Porkpie Hat)
The wildly popular television show, depicting the dark side of the American Dream, reflects on the struggles of a recession-era middle class
What Do One Million Index Cards, Stacked Atop Each Other, Look Like? Artist Tara Donovan Does It Again
The artist's looming installation recalls the volcanic fairy chimneys of Turkey’s Cappadocia region
For 50 Years, Days of Our Lives Has Made History. Now, It's a Part of the Smithsonian
The show's iconic hourglass is among a host of donations the show's producer and cast members made to the American History Museum
Why Milo's Sunrises Are a Symphony of Color in The Phantom Tollbooth
Author Norton Juster says one boon to his magical writing is that he was born with synesthesia and hears colors
Page 1 of 1