Drawing
Visit Frida Kahlo’s Recreated Garden to See the Plants That Influenced Her Art
The New York Botanical Garden is showing rare paintings and drawings alongside the types of flora Kahlo herself once cultivated
Before Instagram, Memorializing Asia’s Most Traveled Roads
From Moroccan postcards to Japanese scrolls, the Sackler Gallery explores five centuries of travel around the Asian continent
Do We Doodle Because We Speak?
Scribbling and sketching aren’t just practices to idle time away, but a more fundamental indication of our need for language
These Sculptures of Giant Tomatoes Are Ripe For the Picking
What physical traits do humans find desirable? Artist Jessica Rath looks in her grocery store's produce section for answers
This Riveting Art From the Front Lines of World War I Has Gone Largely Unseen for Decades
During WWI, the War Department sent American artists to Europe. The Smithsonian recently digitized the captivating artwork
Sharks Were Once Called Sea Dogs, And Other Little-Known Facts
Centuries-old illustrations of sharks show just how much we've learned about the fish since our first sightings of them
Rare and Imaginative Drawings Reveal an Untold Chapter in European Art History
A new exhibit in Santa Fe showcases 132 drawings and prints from Spain—some of which have never been on display before
Science Comics Rule the Web
Where do Schrödinger's cat and lolcats collide? On the science-themed web comics that appeal to our inner nerd and inner child at the same time
Degas and His Dancers
A major exhibition and a new ballet bring the renowned artist's obsession with dance center stage
Masters of the Quick Guffaw
Gag writers and cartoonists are good pen pals as long as they can get a laugh in seven seconds (tick, tick . . .)
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