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Krzysztof Wodiczko was born in 1943 in Warsaw, Poland, and lives and works in New York and Cambridge, Massachusetts. Since 1980, he has created more than seventy large-scale slide and video ...
Krzysztof Wodiczko discusses his 1999 project, Hiroshima Projection, which involved projecting the hands of atomic bomb survivors onto the Hiroshima Peace Memorial, one of the few structures still ...
In the Welsh village of Hay-on-Wye, where sheep outnumber people and books spill onto the streets, a quiet revolution began. Antiquarian and academic Richard Booth inadvertently launched a global ...
Krzysztof Wodiczko discusses how he began creating video projections, and his work’s relation to architecture, spectatorship, and beauty. ART21: How did you decide to create the video projections?
The nonfiction and novels we can’t stop thinking about. Credit...The New York Times Supported by By The New York Times Books Staff We’re more than a third of the way through 2025 and we at The ...
A Million Lives Book Festival? More like "A Million Lies," according to some attendees. A romantasy book festival recently held in Baltimore has left some attendees feeling like they experienced ...
Tina Knowles launched her nine-city book tour, "Matriarch: An Evening with Tina Knowles, Family and Friends," on April 30. The event featured special guests like Michelle Obama and Ledisi ...
Check out this list of our favorite books published in April across genres. Sometimes, when times are hard, we search for books that will make us feel comforted about the state of the world.
The book, published in December, was described as “a crucial book for understanding how control is currently exercised not by repressing truth but by multiplying narratives, making it impossible ...
Find Your Next Book Thrillers N.Y.C. Literary Guide Nonfiction Summer Preview Advertisement Supported by Fiction A new novel considers the perplexing life and times of G.W. Pabst, the Austrian ...
Find Your Next Book Thrillers N.Y.C. Literary Guide Nonfiction Spring Preview Fiction Spring Preview Advertisement Supported by Nonfiction Craig Thompson’s new book revisits his upbringing on a ...
In their new book, the “We Can Do Hard Things” crew admit they don’t have the answers. But it helps to savor the moments that don’t suck. From left, Glennon Doyle, Abby Wambach and Amanda ...