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Rare arabian book collection offered for €275,000

Rare arabian book collection offered for €275,000
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New Haven s Art Scene: Always Excellent, and Now Reopening

New Haven’s Art Scene: Always Excellent, and Now Reopening This city of 130,000 has always punched above its cultural weight. Now as its museums come back to life, visitors can see works by van Gogh, Rothko and Hirst anew. The Yale University Art Gallery, which reopened on May 14, includes works by Winslow Homer and Jean-Michel Basquiat.Credit.Jessica Smolinski By Brett Sokol NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Call her mood one of anxious joy. As the Yale Center for British Art prepares to reopen June 4, its director, Courtney J. Martin, said she is thrilled to finally flip the lights back on. Recalling that somber moment in March 2020 when the center joined art institutions across the country in abruptly closing, she said, “We left to an unknown — we didn’t know what we were going home to, we didn’t know when we would return.”

Aesthetica Magazine - Architecture as Philosophy

Architecture as Philosophy In a 1944 lecture, Estonian-born American architect Louis Kahn (1901-1974) described “monumentality” as “a spiritual quality inherent in a structure which conveys the feeling of its eternity, that it cannot be added to or changed.” Whilst the scale and heft of his buildings is often associated with Brutalism, this quote gestures towards a more humanist and spiritual approach – one which places him in the company of the world’s most important architects. A new book from Prestel, The Essential Louis Kahn, uses Turkish photographer Cemal Emden’s beautiful, light-filled images to accompany a meditation on Kahn’s practice.

Murals keeping New Haven streets vibrant during a difficult time

Murals keeping New Haven streets vibrant during a difficult time FacebookTwitterEmail Walking the streets of the New Haven, you never know what’s around the next corner. Chances are it’s something beautiful. Bright, cheerful, thought-provoking or simply joyful murals have been springing up throughout the city, unslowed by the COVID-19 pandemic. In fact, the pandemic may be bringing more artistic vision into the open air. “There has been this renaissance of public art and murals coming up in the city,” said Adriane Jefferson, director of arts and cultural affairs for the city. “I think these murals do a lot culturally during a time when people feel very disconnected from the world.”

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