Faith Ringgold's "For the Women’s House," which sought to inspire female inmates, will be relocated ahead of the jail complex's impending closure
Fans donated thousands of dollars to local animal shelters on what would have been her 100th birthday
In honor of the centennial of James Joyce's 'Ulysses,' a San Marino, California exhibition takes museumgoers on a literary journey
The discovery could complicate long-term space travel, including future Mars missions
A new show in London features 79 watercolors by the British royal
NASA scientists compared the data to chemical signatures of biological processes on Earth and found some similarities to billion-year-old microbes
Makers of the free encyclopedia spar over the categorization for non-fungible tokens, the relatively new phenomenon sweeping the digital art world
The blast, which sent tsunami waves across the Pacific, left thousands of Tongans without access to water and power
A six-year investigation posits that Arnold van den Bergh disclosed the diarist's hiding place to protect his family from deportation
Researchers discover a Roman road, coins, jewelry and evidence of makeup at a dig site near a railway project
The Southern Poverty Law Center’s $50,000 grants will support civil rights museums, a monument to victims of an industrial disaster and other organizations
Researchers created a 3-D model of Earth's galactic neighborhood
In a new study, insects carrying the disease were more likely to survive cold or fluctuating temperatures than their uninfected peers
Regularly check for stretched-out straps, staining and soiling, which can compromise masks' ability to filter viruses like Covid-19
Here’s how to find one of the new U.S. quarters—the first to feature a Black woman
The volume is going on display at Vancouver Art Gallery as part of a new exhibition
The devices—developed by Elon Musk's SpaceX—have a warming feature to prevent snow buildup from disrupting the signal
A new study finds surprising similarities between human and cetacean sexual anatomy
Purchased by an art historian for $90 in 1970, researchers now say the portrait might be the handiwork of the 17th-century court painter Anthony van Dyck
An investigation launched by the New York cultural institution concluded that the 14th- and 17th-century carvings were "unlawfully obtained"
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