Researchers found a hidden mathematical rule in tree-like art. Branch thickness follows a predictable ratio, making trees recognizable.
Artist Caroline Kent poses for a portrait at her studio in Humboldt Park. Kent is the talent behind a large, site-specific mural in Union Station and forthcoming exhibitions at the Smart Museum and ...
Galerie Maximillian will host a Valentine’s Day reception from 5-8 p.m. Friday showcasing the new exhibit “Contemporary ...
Michael West, a little-known Abstract Expressionist woman painter, is finally getting the spotlight at New York's Hollis ...
Running until June, the exhibition is West Palm Beach-based artist Jane Manus' fourth exhibition with the Ann Norton ...
The scale invariance in branch diameter dictates how much smaller a limb should be as it branches and how much investment a tree makes in a few thick branches versus many thin ones. Trees have evolved ...
An exhibition at the Hammer Museum shows why. By Siddhartha Mitter A jury found them guilty of conspiring as part of a crew to steal art, sports memorabilia and artifacts from smaller museums.
Grambush’s story is like many of our own: She’d loved the North since she was a little girl, when her parents would load her and her sisters into the car, and they’d trailer the family boat up to ...
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