Beyond the appropriate awe, this two-part PBS documentary, co-directed by Ken Burns, adds human texture to the hagiography.
Her figures are in a state of unrelenting grief about what it means to be human and to feel powerless about so much that happens to ourselves and others.
Ken Burns’ latest documentary is his first one exploring a non-American subject, telling the story of the live and ...
More than half a millennium after his death, Leonardo da Vinci is still one of the most well-known artists in the world. The ...
Native art has a rich history but young artists want to expand its roots and move things in different directions. What is the ...
People can feel festive and enjoy a series of ‘Get Creative’ workshops in Priory Park's Guildhall next month, thanks to the ...
Warm-fuzzy charm abounds in shopkeeper Katie Hyatt's 1886 Madison home.
It doesn’t get bigger than that." Leonardo’s passions were so varied – from painting to engineering and the natural sciences – that the documentary required thoughtful explorations by art, medicine, ...
The internationally recognized Michelin Guide has come to Texas, and of the state’s dozens of accolades, one has landed in McKinney’s historic downtown. Harvest at the Masonic is one of 20 North Texas ...