May 31, 2012, 7:30 p.m., Wilma Theater
N.Y. Export: Opus JazzJune 1, 2012, 7:30 p.m., Pennsylvania Ballet
Artist Michal Golan brings a series of new mosaic works to Philly's Magic Gardens that are stranger than the Magic Gardens gallery itself.
The Clay Studio welcomes the creations of sculptor Andrea Keys Connell, whose struggling figures represent the victims of war, poverty, and natural disastors.
Familiar artists in the fabric-art world, such as Sheila Hicks, return to Philly's culture scene for FiberPhiladelphia.
Do the paintings Van Gogh created in the last few years before he took his own life shed any light on the artist's inner struggles?
The Independence Seaport Museum opens a new exhibit celebrating the history of tattoos, as their contribtuion to the annual Philadelphia Tattoo Arts Convention.
Zaha Hadid's exhibit at the Philadelphia Museum of Art challenges our definition of architecture and motion.
Zoe Strauss' raw, unflinching look at Philly and a few other parts of the country bring a stunned silence to the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Tristin Lowe's newest exhibit aims to inspire visitors to think. Does he succeed or continue to baffle us?
Can our generation even hope to create masterpieces and monuments such as those depicted in the "Vaults of Heaven" exhibit?
Take some time off this fall to visit some of DesignPhiladelphia's cultural events.
"LOOK!" opens on Lancaster Avenue, giving Drexel students a daily dose of culture.
The Pearlstein Gallery opens a new exhibit that offers an intriguing new look at Mental Hospitals.
There’s a reason why Philly is known as the City of Brotherly Love, right? The Mural Arts Program's Love Letter tour shows us love and art in Philly.
Alfred Jacob Miller's artwork helped scenes from the American West to become "vogue," can it continue to fascinate us today?
The art gallery in City Hall may be somewhat unknown but it's worth visiting.
This year's Week of Writing is hosting events that will please all Drexel students.
Can an exhibition on texture and fabric teach us to better appreciate contemporary art?
The Woodmere Art Museum displays work from women in Paris at the end of the 19th century.
Helicopters and grenades replace flowers and animals in traditional Afghan rugs after war devastates the country.
The Pearlstein Gallery proves that even styles from the 1910s aren't too retro.
Marc Chagall helps us understand Philly's need for Paris.
The Kimmel Center works hard to bring every aspect of Parisian culture to Philadelphia, even the language.
Two looks at the Philadelphia Museum of Art's latest fashion exhibit.
Here are some staff picks that highlight the best of the Philadelphia International Festival of the Arts.
Explore what leisure means to you through a display of unique products.
Unique fabrics, which combine modern art with ancient Japanese craft-work, create an interesting vision of textiles.
An art school's part in medical advances toward understanding anatomy.
The Academy of Natural Sciences presents one artist's interpretation of natural history.
ICA's latest exhibit dispels illusions and urges visitors to fearlessly return to nature.
An exhibit of videos tries to convey the trials of the Middle East.
Life-size structures invite exploration of the normally unnoticed geometry in the world.
The PMA exhibits Alessi household items designed to exemplify their philosophy of functional art.
The PMA explores gold's many uses in Islamic art.
Exquisite Japanese art created with only hard work, time, and an exacto knife.
Dutch Structuralist Herman Hertzberger comes to Drexel.
One hundred and thirty years ago, "The Gross Clinic" shocked its audience; after a restoration, it has the power to do the same all over again.
Bringing a reenergized perspective to art that has been stuck in storage.
The Philadelphia Museum of Art hauls out twenty hanging lamps.