The Miracles at Canterbury
Born from Thomas Becket’s martyrdom on December 29, 1170, the stained glass in Trinity Chapel at Canterbury Cathedral reveals some of the most fascinating tales of the miraculous.
Read MoreBorn from Thomas Becket’s martyrdom on December 29, 1170, the stained glass in Trinity Chapel at Canterbury Cathedral reveals some of the most fascinating tales of the miraculous.
Read MoreFor the first time in 47 years, the five wooden panels that make up Giorgio Vasari’s “Last Supper” are joined together again to make the artwork whole.
Read More“All space, all beings, and all creation is sacred—but we don’t walk through life seeing it that way. Art offers a transition, helping us leave behind the secular world and move into a sacred place.”
Read MoreOne of the world’s oldest surviving religions, Zoroastrianism played an important role in the history of ancient Persia.
Read MoreA reflection on the Feast of Saint Andrew, celebrated at Canterbury Cathedral.
Read MoreHave a question for the director of the Getty Museum? Ask him! He’ll be on Reddit starting at noon PST.
Read MoreL.A.’s smallest gallery show is currently taking place inside a human ear.
Read MoreTwo pieces brought out from storage complete the story of the Judgment of Paris in a new installation at the Getty Center.
Read MoreOutrageous criminal or misunderstood victim? A new exhibition finds the man behind the scandal.
Read MoreHow do you transform a 19th-century watercolor into a digital logo?
Read MoreVisitors to the Getty Museum’s exhibition The Poetry of Paper reflect on negative space in the drawings on view by writing haiku.
Read MoreNewly acquired portraits tell the unusual story of British banking heir Henry Hoare and the artist who depicted him.
Read More