What to See
“Where I grew up, everybody was supposed to have the same haircut and drive the same color car. Bunny ears had to be pink and roses had to be red. I wanted to defy that.”
The king of the multi-hyphenate, James Franco, is presenting a new performance piece at MoMA PS1 on April 7.
Nayland Blake’s What Wont Wreng is both childlike and perverse.
Shezad Dawood’s imaginative reworking of his feature film adds another language to an already multilingual affair.
A modernist master at the MoMA.
A critically acclaimed exhibition at the British Museum includes 250 objects that together create a powerful narrative of everyday life in ancient Rome.
As if Grand Central Terminal weren’t crowded enough, artist Nick Cave (not the singer) is adding a fanciful new group to the multitude.
Tilda Swinton sleeps inside a vitrine at MoMA for her performance art piece The Maybe.
Japanese art collective Gutai freed the medium of expression from the confines of the gallery.
Poetry and Politics at the Walther Collection presents seventy-five vintage postcards, portraits, and cartes-de-visite from Eastern and Southern Africa.
MoMA PS1’s ambitious Expo 1 initiative.

























































