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NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Jerry Moriarty, Painter Whose Brushstrokes Elevated Comics, Is Dead at 88
A self-described "paintoonist," Mr. Moriarty created cartoons with spare dialogue that reminded his admirers of poetry or Samuel Beckett's plays.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘Superman' and ‘Heated Rivalry' Alums to Broadway in ‘Three Days of Rain'
A winter revival of the Richard Greenberg drama will star David Corenswet, Yvonne Strahovski and François Arnaud.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

A New Dance Festival Moves Beyond the Same Old, Same Old
The Milly Rock, haunting flamenco and falling bodies: The Lincoln Center Contemporary Dance Festival delivers quality with nary a pointe shoe in sight.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Stream These 5 Movies and TV Shows Before They Leave Netflix in July
Two acclaimed series and two films by the director George Roy Hill are among the notable titles leaving for U.S. subscribers next month.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘The Loved Ones' Review: So Much for That Peaceful Irish Retreat
Sharp performances from Maryann Plunkett and the other cast members lend weight and texture to Erica Murray's play, even when the script becomes predictable.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Robert Townsend on ‘The Bear' and Directing for Television
The filmmaker has lately turned to television, acting in FX's "The Bear," directing episodes of "The Chi" and mentoring Black actors and showrunners reared on his work.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

David Clayton-Thomas, Canadian Singer of Blood, Sweat & Tears, Dies at 84
He was also the key lyricist of the Grammy-winning, genre-blending band, with hits like "Spinning Wheel," "And When I Die" and "You've Made Me So Very Happy."

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

David Clayton-Thomas, Lead Singer of Blood, Sweat & Tears, Dies at 84
He was also the key lyricist of the Grammy-winning, genre-blending band, with hits like "Spinning Wheel," "And When I Die" and "You've Made Me So Very Happy."

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Is Canada About to Enter the Eurovision Song Contest?
As Canada's government looks more toward Europe and less to the United States, its national broadcaster has become a full member of the group that organizes the glitzy singing event.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Some Museums in the UK and France Reduce Their Hours as Heat Wave Sweeps Europe
Institutions with air conditioning or stone buildings can market themselves as a respite from extreme temperatures. But some are reducing their hours.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘Jackass: Best and Last' Review: Johnny Knoxville and Friends Reunite
In what purports to be the final installment of the MTV franchise, Johnny Knoxville and friends reunite to reminisce.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Some European Museums Are Free Havens to Cool Off. Others Can't Take the Heat.
Institutions with air conditioning or stone buildings can market themselves as a respite from extreme temperatures. But some are reducing their hours.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘The Invite' Review: Who's Afraid of a Last-Minute Dinner Party?
In this witty comedy, Seth Rogen and Olivia Wilde star as a millennial couple whose tense marriage gets a wild jolt from their neighbors.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘The Bear': What to Remember Before the Final Season
The stressed-out staff at the Bear is back for one final dinner service and an uncertain fate. Here's where Season 4 left off.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Christopher Nolan on the Anxiety of Filming ‘The Odyssey' in IMAX
Filming entirely in IMAX meant new engineering and actor ingenuity. It was only halfway through the six-country shoot that he felt he could pull it off.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Newbery Medalist Kwame Alexander Starts an Imprint at Sourcebooks
Kwame Alexander is starting up an imprint at Sourcebooks, an innovative publisher that has found success in giving authors larger roles in the publishing process.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

For Gloomy Vancouver Fans, the World Cup Is Glorious
The city has the N.H.L.'s worst team and an M.L.S. franchise that is threatening to leave. But it was able to celebrate after hosting Canada's first victory at a men's World Cup.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

How to Meet 1,500 Artists in 5 Days at Upstate Art Weekend
Upstate Art Weekend , starting Thursday, brings together New York artists and audiences, and offers everything from icebergs to Arte Povera to keep you cool.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘Supergirl' Review: This Glass Ceiling Is Made of Kryptonite
Milly Alcock is naturally appealing in this derivative, if altogether watchable, superhero movie.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘Romería' Review: What Actually Happened to Her Parents?
In this semi-autobiographical drama, a young woman in Spain whose birth parents died of AIDS-related illnesses faces a complicated reunion with her extended family.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘Lucky Strike' Review: Fighting a Battle Behind Enemy Lines
This World War II movie is a nuts-and-bolts survival thriller that recalls a bygone era of Greatest Generation patriotism.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘The Invite' Review: Who's Afraid of a Last-Minute Dinner Party
In this witty comedy, Seth Rogen and Olivia Wilde star as a millennial couple whose tense marriage gets a wild jolt from their neighbors.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘Drunken Noodles' Review: Saucy Encounters
Over two blurred summers, an intern at an art gallery experiences solitude and pleasure with the men he encounters.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘Bouchra' Review: All Too Human
In this 3-D animation, a New Yorker who's also a coyote tries to come to terms with her mother while working on an autobiographical movie.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

‘Couture' Review: No Common Thread
Angelina Jolie plays a woman preparing for a Paris runway show in Alice Winocour's fragmentary look at the rarefied world of high fashion.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Best Sapphic Romance Books, According to Ashley Herring Blake
The author Ashley Herring Blake recommends swoony Sapphic novels that celebrate love between women across eras and genres.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Fox, Bravo and BET Look to Take Microdramas Mainstream
Major networks like Fox, Bravo and BET are translating shows to the short-form video format that last year made $11 billion in global revenue.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

5 Photographs That Shine in National Geographic's New Museum
Visual storytelling is at the core of the National Geographic Museum of Exploration, which opens on Friday in downtown Washington, D.C.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 25, 2026

Jimmy Fallon Teases Trump's Great American State Fair
"There's even a dunk tank with JD Vance and a drunk tank with Kash Patel," Fallon said.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

A Record Sotheby's Auction Thrills London After a Brexit Hangover
British auction sales have declined by nearly half since 2015, but Wednesday's results hint at a return to form for London as an international auction center.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

The Good List: 6 Things to Add Delight to Your Day
Naming the moon, Sometimes Island and laughing in real life.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

A Billionaire's Basquiat Collection Goes Up at Pérez Art Museum Miami
Ken Griffin, the hedge fund manager, looks for artworks with a "wow" factor, never mind the number of zeros on the price tag. Ten of his Basquiats are on loan to the Pérez Art Museum Miami.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

‘Henry VI,' ‘Camping' and 6 More Shows to See Now
New York in June is a bonanza of Off and Off Off Broadway productions. Here's our guide to shows we recommend, many in the city's coziest spaces (and closing soon).

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

A Show for All Seasons: Henry Moore's Art, Reborn in Open Air
At the Kew Royal Botanic Gardens in London, a massive outdoor exhibition reveals a lifelong dialogue in the sculptor's work between nature and human creations.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

‘The Moment,' ‘Daddio' and More Streaming Gems
A pair of unconventional takes to the life of a musician bookend this month's under-the-radar recommendations for your subscription streaming services.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

An Artist Creates Moments for Play, and Solidarity
From the Queens Museum to Times Square, the British artist Sonia Boyce shows art intimately connected to community.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

‘In the Hand of Dante' Review: A Not So Divine Folly
Not even a double dose of Oscar Isaac can rescue this fanciful, oversauced tale of stolen art and spiritual questioning.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

When the World Cup Came to SoFi Stadium, He Got a Backyard View
SoFi Stadium, the $5 billion event venue near Los Angeles, is on global display for the soccer tournament. But for some who live close by, it is just another headache.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

What's Behind Broadway's New Musical Drought?
Hollywood actors in starry plays, skittish investors and gate-keeping theater owners have all contributed to an unusually tough climate for song-and-dance shows.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

The Pursuit of Immortality in The Times
William McDonald, who recently retired as the obituaries editor after nearly two decades, shares how subjects are chosen to be remembered in the newspaper.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 24, 2026

Josh Johnson Muses on the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool
"Hey, kids, remember you wanted to go to Disneyland? Instead, we're going to go see the world's largest kombucha!" Johnson said of the pool renovation as a tourist stop.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Clive Davis and Whitney Houston's Successful and Tragic Story
The record industry titan guided Houston from a young star to worldwide phenomenon. But their story together was not without controversy.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Lin-Manuel Miranda's ‘Warriors' Musical to Hit Broadway Next Spring
Miranda is co-writing the musical — his first since "Hamilton" — with Eisa Davis. It's based on "The Warriors" film and novel.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Lorcan O'Herlihy, Architect of Innovative Urban Housing, Dies at 66
Arguing that architecture is a "social act," he built affordable homes on small lots in Los Angeles and elsewhere, with an eye toward smarter, more equitable design.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

7 Songs That Spun My Head Around
Hear a Rosalía tour highlight, forgotten new-wave from the 1970s and more.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

A New ‘Odyssey' Audiobook Puts the ‘A.I.' in ‘Michael Caine'
The longtime Christopher Nolan collaborator isn't in the director's forthcoming Homeric adaptation. But a new audiobook sets Caine's voice off on its own adventure.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

2026 Jimmy Awards: With Bowen Yang as Host, Teen Winners Are Crowned
Students from Georgia and Arizona won the top prizes at the ceremony, which was hosted by Bowen Yang and celebrates excellence in high school musical theater.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Artist Pulls Work From London Museum After Clash Over Churchill's Legacy
A historian and others said that a video installation had incorrectly blamed Winston Churchill for a famine in colonial India.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Manhattan Borough President Gives $50 Million to N.Y.C. Arts Groups
In allocating the borough's discretionary budget entirely to cultural projects, Brad Hoylman-Sigal said he wanted to send a message to President Trump about the need to keep arts funding.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Can't Stop Second-Screening? Netflix Is Counting on It.
A new game featuring the voices of Zoë Kravitz and Sadie Sink turns a user's phone into a controller in an attempt to combine the first and second screen experience.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Up Late With Botticelli as the Uffizi Gets a Reset
The museum's director, Simone Verde, is working long hours as he tries to remake the institution into a living encyclopedia.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Mourning After the Michael Jackson Movie? It Might Be ‘Michosis.'
Some Michael Jackson fans are experiencing deep, lingering grief after watching the biopic — a potent reminder that he is gone, they say.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

‘The Sound of Music' and ‘A Few Good Men' Are Coming to Broadway
Lincoln Center Theater, basking in the glow of its Tony-winning "Ragtime" run, plans revivals of two more well-known titles this season.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Photos Behind Kennedy Center Tarps Show No Sign of Trump's Name
Images circulated by an activist group reveal bare marble where President Trump's name once resided. The Kennedy Center previously told a federal judge it had been removed.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Would You Let an A.I. Michael Caine Read You the ‘Odyssey'?
The longtime Christopher Nolan collaborator isn't in the director's forthcoming Homeric adaptation. But a new audiobook sets Caine's voice off on its own adventure.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Rare Books on Sex Have Spiced Things Up at a Library Franklin Founded
The Library Company of Philadelphia, created in 1731 by Benjamin Franklin, has received a gift of 1,500 volumes about sexuality dating back to the 17th century.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Charles Hinman, Who Brought New Dimensions to Painting, Dies at 93
Starting in the early 1960s, the New York artist blurred the line between painting and sculpture with his shaped, protruding canvases.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Plays, Musicals and Theater Festivals Across the U.S. Worth Traveling For
Across the country, audiences will find an abundance of Shakespeare, exciting new plays, and musicals and regional repertories in bucolic settings.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 23, 2026

Late Night Dunks on Trump for Hiring Greenwater Services
Jimmy Fallon poked fun at the name of the business under fire for turning the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool bright green: "Nailed it."

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

Clive Davis Knew to Let Patti Smith Have Free Rein
For Patti Smith, the best guidance was something that Davis rarely granted: free rein.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

Carlos Santana, Patti Smith and Other Celebs Pay Tribute to Clive Davis
Davis "treated me with the same respect and kindness as a 22-year-old nobody as he did after all my success," Springsteen said after the music executive's death on Monday.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

YouTube Stars Take Center Stage at Creative Artists Agency
For years, creators were on the fringes at Creative Artists Agency, a Hollywood talent behemoth. Now the agency is putting them center stage.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

Clive Davis, Music Industry Titan Who Signed Whitney Houston, Dies at 94
He rose from a midlevel position at Columbia Records to become one of music's most powerful executives, shepherding stars like Barry Manilow and Whitney Houston.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

11 Essential Songs Shepherded by Clive Davis
The label boss, who died on Monday, had a passion for hits — especially ones he masterminded — during his formidable tenures at Columbia, Arista and J Records.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

Here's What ‘the Most Important Mozart Discovery in Decades' Sounds Like
A newly found notebook documenting the composer's lessons with a student includes seven previously unknown compositions.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

Cannibals, Lobotomies, Lethal Birds: A Tennessee Williams Opera
"Suddenly Last Summer," the composer Courtney Bryan's first opera, adapts Williams's play for Bard SummerScape.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

In the Choreographer Pioneer Winter's World, Every Body Is a Dancing Body
Pioneer Winter's works expand ideas about who gets to be a professional dancer. In "Apollo," his muses are older dancers, who are like living archives.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

The National Trust Names New President
Brent Leggs will lead the preservation organization, which has been in the news recently for challenging the Trump administration's ballroom and Kennedy Center projects.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

Flight of the Conchords and the Perils of Reunions
Bret McKenzie and Jemaine Clement are routinely asked about performing their musical satires again. They always said no, until this year. What changed?

NYTimes Arts
Jun 22, 2026

‘The Bear' and 7 More Shows to Watch on TV This Week
The hit FX series reaches its fifth and final season. The BET Awards are live in Los Angeles.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 21, 2026

‘House of the Dragon' Season 3 Premiere Recap: A Song of Water and Fire
The Dance of the Dragons got into full swing with no shortage of blood, flames and intrigue, much of it at sea.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 21, 2026

Margaret Kerry, Body and Soul of Disney's Tinker Bell, Dies at 97
A film crew and illustrator meticulously documented her pirouettes and pouts, giving substance to a character depicted previously as a spotlight onstage.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 21, 2026

Mark Singer, Longtime Writer for The New Yorker, Dies at 75
He joined the magazine's staff at 23. Among the subjects of his profiles were the magician Ricky Jay and a pre-politics Donald Trump.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 21, 2026

San Antonio Mayor Says Kanye West's July 4 Concert There Should Be Canceled
The mayor's appeal comes after several of the rapper's shows were canceled in Europe. A planned concert in Tampa, Fla., has also raised concern.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 21, 2026

‘Toy Story 5' Fuels Hollywood's Hottest Summer Since 2019
The Disney-Pixar sequel was expected to make $160 million in North America over the weekend, lifting the summer box office to $1.85 billion to date.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 21, 2026

Tom Dreesen, Comic Who Kept Sinatra's Crowds Laughing, Dies at 86
He rose from a hardscrabble childhood to form a pioneering interracial comedy duo. He later spent years opening for Frank Sinatra.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 21, 2026

How Basel Went From Art to Art Basel
Basel's art history predates the world's most prominent art fair by a few centuries.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 21, 2026

With ‘Girls Like Girls,' Hayley Kiyoko Turns Her Teenage Pain Into Art
The once-closeted star has reinvented her song "Girls Like Girls" as a best-selling Y.A. novel and a new theatrical film. It wasn't easy.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 21, 2026

For Heirs of Custer and Sitting Bull, a 150-Year-Old Battle Is Personal
As the anniversary of the Battle of the Little Bighorn approaches, relatives of the two men still grapple with the legacy of a contentious moment in U.S. history.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 21, 2026

The Dad Movie Canon: Films That Define Dad Cinema
What is it about a certain kind of film that appeals to fathers? Our writer took a stab at defining Dad Cinema and rounding up its greatest hits.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 20, 2026

Claude Guillemot, Ubisoft Co-Founder, Is Dead After Plane Crash in France
Claude Guillemot, 69, founded the video game company, which was also known for the hit Far Cry, with his brothers in 1986. He was killed in western France.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 20, 2026

Tyla, FKA Twigs: Songs to Know This Week
Uplift for Juneteenth from Allison Russell, tangled love songs from Tyla and FKA twigs, and more.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 20, 2026

The Newest Wing in the City's Oldest Museum Celebrates Democracy
The New York Historical's expansive Tang Wing highlights the role of protest for America's 250th anniversary.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 20, 2026

A Nearsighted Artist Changed Her View and Found Paradise
A nearsighted artist with a solitary streak stumbled on a world of cultural experiences and authentic connections after years of taking refuge in her bookshelves.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 20, 2026

A Scandinavian Answer to John Singer Sargent Gets Her Due
Dismissed for decades by critics as a mere "fashion portraitist" of high-society ladies, Asta Norregaard is now the subject of a major new retrospective at Oslo's National Museum.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 20, 2026

‘Obsession' Is a Surprise Blockbuster. Who Gets the Profits?
As the breakout horror hit crosses $300 million at the global box office, its art director set off a debate about just compensation for crew members.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 20, 2026

Under a Turtle Shell, a Stunning New Home for Shakespeare
After 38 years in a tent, Hudson Valley Shakespeare opens one of the most spectacular outdoor performance spaces in the country.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 20, 2026

Steve-O Has Beef With Father Time
"It sucks for anybody to get old," the "Jackass" stunt performer says, "but for Steve-O, I feel like it is categorically not OK."

NYTimes Arts
Jun 20, 2026

Why ‘Toy Story' is the Best Franchise Ever
The New York Times film critic Alissa Wilkinson explores how the ‘Toy Story' films leverage layers of nostalgia as a recipe for success.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 20, 2026

How These High Schoolers Are Preparing for the 2026 Jimmy Awards
Each June, students from around the country come to New York for the Jimmy Awards. We tagged along for a day of their intensive musical-theater residency.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 19, 2026

James Burrows, Master of the TV Sitcom, Dies at 85
Beloved by actors, he helped create "Cheers" and directed more than 1,000 episodes of hit shows like "Taxi," "Friends" and "The Big Bang Theory."

NYTimes Arts
Jun 19, 2026

Brian Large, Who Brought Opera Vividly to Life on Film, Dies at 89
In a directing career that included over 70 Met Opera broadcasts, he said his work was "dictated by the music, by key change, by orchestration, by phrasing."

NYTimes Arts
Jun 19, 2026

Five Horror Movies to Stream Now
This month, victims are held hostage by demons, a deranged madman, the elements and a monstrosity named Hoagie.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 19, 2026

With Fresh Marble Fillings, the Parthenon Gets a Partial Glow-Up
Restorers have fixed a gap on the western side of the temple in Athens that had been empty for more than 220 years.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 19, 2026

‘Sugar' Review: Close Encounters of the Noir Kind
Colin Farrell and California are still a winning combination in a new season of Apple TV's sci-fi private-eye series.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 19, 2026

‘House of the Dragon': What to Remember Before the Season 3 Premiere
Nearly two years have passed since the "Game of Thrones" prequel aired, and the many shifting alliances and secret betrayals were complex even then.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 19, 2026

Excited for World Cup? Stream 14 Great Soccer Movies.
The beautiful game is the inspiring setting for films from countries large (Brazil) and small (Cape Verde). Watch them while the World Cup is in full swing.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 19, 2026

Your Pop Music Questions Answered: Taylor Swift, Geese, the Beatles and More
Popcast's mailbag is back and more varied than ever.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 19, 2026

11 New Movies Our Critics Are Talking About This Week
Whether you're a casual moviegoer or an avid buff, our reviewers think these films are worth knowing about.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 19, 2026

These Comics Can Barely Muster the Energy for a Joke. That's Why They're Funny.
Aaron Chen and Dan Mintz specialize in a muted form of stand-up that's actually quite challenging. But they can get laughs just saying hello.

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