Discover NYC's truly underground art scene with our featured Foursquare list this week, Subway Art in NYC, featuring artwork that Untapped contributor Kristin Gaylord explores in depth in her Transit Talk column.
From June 21st to July 10th, Soho gallery Hotel Particulier will host a rotating exhibition called UNCOLLECTABLE, named both for the art it will showcase that explores collection, and for the site-based work that can't survive beyond the environment it's installed in and thus resists collection.
This week's #untappedcities Instagram "pic" of the week goes to @amusepro for this dazzling shot. "Fuerzabruta" is a type of circus, widely compared to Cirque de Soleil, and is currently taking the United States and Europe by storm.
As we springtime arrives in Paris, events start to bloom as well, so here's a list of events and things to do for the month of March. Cinema, art exhibits, poetry festivals: take your pick.
The Paper Architecture exhibit at Cité de l'Architecture et du Patrimoine amazes with art made completely out of paper.
Chase away the winter blues with these February events happening in Paris: pay homage to Icelandic music, visit a language fair, and join the festivities of Chinese New Year and the Paris Carnaval!
The intricate, magical snow art of Simon Beck, who works alone in the mountains of Savoy, France using snowshoes. An interview and photographs with the artist.
Events happening in Paris this January: visit the circus, listen to some tango electro, buy some vinyl, and see some headless animals!
In 2010, the City of Austin asked the self-dubbed “Junk King,” to dismantle the construction of found art in his backyard, dubbed the Cathedral of Junk. The mere asking to take it down equated to the chipping away of what keeps Austin weird.
The Morgan Library experience is an incomparable walk through time, rich with art, literature and history. The banking mogul's collection encompasses original artworks by artists such as Rembrandt, Rubens, writers such as Dickens, Twain and music from the likes of Mozart as well Beethoven. Equally as impressive as the collection it houses, is the architectural mastery of the museum.