Dutch artists Lonneke Gordijn and Ralph Nauta are the team behind DRIFT, a multidisciplinary group that creates experiential sculptures, installations, and performances, uniting audiences with moments that inspire a reconnection to our planet.

Their installation for New York City Ballet’s Art Series 2023 curates their Shylight into a site-specific, performative sculpture, uniting the movement of industrial motors with silk, multi-layered chalice-like structures that move with the grace of a dancer, into a natural choreography with the goal of finding live emotion and personality in an inanimate material. With custom choreography supervised by the artists themselves, Shylight’s unpredictable, natural-looking movements become an object that feels alive as it descends to blossom in all its glorious beauty, to subsequently close and retreat upward again.

The installation will be on view at three special NYC Ballet Art Series performances on January 27, February 3, and February 9, where all tickets are priced at $38.

Performances are on sale now at nycballet.com/artseries.

Funding and competitive scholarships are available for the MA/PhD in Art History & Criticism as well as for the MFA in Studio Art.

This week, the National Library of France gets an upgrade, finding the enslavers at the US Capitol, the beauty of MetroCards, headsets that kill, a fed-up librarian, and much more.

The loo in question is a former Victorian lavatory that could become one of the National Portrait Gallery’s new exhibition spaces.

Hear directly from Native American photographers who are defining what it means to be Indigenous today. Attend the program in NYC or online.

Mace-Hopkins, who died at age 24 during an artist residency in Scotland, was my partner and collaborator.

What makes Siobhan McBride’s work as a whole interesting is her interest in the ambiguity, suggestibility, and elusiveness of everyday life.

Curatorial Roundtables take place online once a week through April. Don’t miss a special lecture by artist and theorist Hito Steyerl on January 18.

Multiple cultural heritage sites of the Native Calusa people were impacted when the Category 4 storm hit Florida last September.

Strange Clay at the Hayward Gallery demonstrates the conceptual and technical innovation of contemporary ceramics with riotously joyful art.

As the exhibition honoring Black and Brown lives killed by police comes to a close, the Brooklyn art space presents a series of performances and community programs.

Robert Eckert, who led the Lutz Children’s Museum in Connecticut, has been sentenced to 66 months in prison.

Instead of apologizing, the artist mocked a Chinese student who protested the work.