The Nature Art Showcase and Sale will be held Feb. 6-7 at the Barrow Civic Theatre in Franklin. The annual event will feature ...
The Roger Tory Peterson Institute has hired its new CEO, Stacey Otte-Demangate. “The RTPI Board is delighted to welcome Stacey as our new CEO, who succeeds Arthur Pearson and will continue to lead the ...
During the second half of January, there will be lots of classic and new performing arts shows and museum exhibitions ...
Stamford Museum & Nature Center CEO Melissa Mulrooney has announced her retirement effective March 31. Photo courtesy of Stamford Museum ...
Lowell’s art scene is alive and well and thriving despite the cold and snow. The Brush Art Gallery and Studios, 256 Market ...
The Xposure International Photography Festival 2026 has unveiled five new immersive worlds presented through dedicated ...
Chief Executive Officer Melissa Mulrooney's retirement goes into effect on March 31, according to a news release.
An ancient handprint in a cave on an Indonesian island may be the oldest known rock art, created at least 67,800 years ago.
Her human figures emerge as mythic vessels—porous, androgynous and inseparable from the natural and spiritual systems they inhabit.
By recreating the sensation of a pond, where ethereal creatures drift, dissolve and reappear, the installation invites ...
The world’s oldest known example of cave art, dating back at least 67,800 years, has been discovered by researchers studying handprints in Indonesia.