In 1981, Washington Post journalist Janet Cooke won a Pulitzer Prize for an article she wrote about an eight-year old heroin addict. After capturing...
A bare stage in Poulton Hall is shrouded in darkness. At once, a young man strolls out from stage right and begins speaking to the audience. He asks...
Georgetown is a center of dialogue about art and politics, integrating both of these disciplines through its diverse coursework. The department of art...
Going up the elevator at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Gallery, one cannot help but notice the vibrant, golden art decor that spreads all along the...
The United States is home to millions of people with distinct identities and rich stories to tell. Unfortunately, these stories are sometimes lost in...
Bearing a basket atop her head, Kenyan-born contemporary artist Wangechi Mutu’s newest character marches across the African countryside. In her 2015...
In the 1940s, Frances Glessner Lee, now known as the mother of forensic science, revolutionized crime scene analysis by introducing a novel tool: dioramas....
What is absence made of? How can we materialize absence? Is that even possible?
The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden’s new exhibit, “What Absence...