Art Review
Sculpture in High Relief
By ROBERTA SMITH
Sculpture is enjoying a high-profile moment in New York, thanks to a head-spinning assortment of solo shows.
Cannes declared the Danish director Lars von Trier a persona non grata on Thursday, the same day as the premiere of “This Is Not a Film,” by Jafar Panahi.
Sculpture is enjoying a high-profile moment in New York, thanks to a head-spinning assortment of solo shows.
New York City Ballet performed Balanchine’s “Apollo” and “Sonnambula” and Robbins’s “Afternoon of a Faun” and “Antique Epigraphs” on Wednesday.
Woody Allen, with the help of Paris and the ghosts of its famous dead, has found a credible blend of whimsy and wisdom.
The Frick Collection, a small but sumptuous museum housed in a limestone mansion on Fifth Avenue, has chosen as its next director Ian Wardropper.
A Berlin post in the 1930s was no plum, but William E. Dodd accepted the role of ambassador to Germany, and he and his family offer a glimpse into life as Hitler rose to power.
Mary Hart, the “Entertainment Tonight” anchor, leaves the show on Friday after 29 years, during which she helped usher in a new celebrity television age.
With collections of everything from glass canes to carriages to Impressionist paintings, the Shelburne Museum in Vermont brings new meaning to the word eclectic.
Ben Sisario and Bruce Headlam on the sale of Warner Music Group; Jon Pareles on the muchness of Lady Gaga; new CD releases by Raphael Saadiq, Colin Vallon, and Telebossa. Ben Ratliff is the host.
Get a selection of the listings on your iPhone with The Scoop, The Times’s guide to what to eat, see and do in New York.
The screenwriter Paddy Chayefsky left behind a large cache of his notes for his incendiary, Oscar-winning script for “Network.”
Lady Gaga, the self-described “show without an intermission,” recorded her new album, “Born This Way,” arriving on Tuesday, while on the road.
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