Arts & Culture
Discover the latest public Art installations in NYC, exiting new exhibitions, and more! Pictured here are our partners at Artechouse, a space for innovative experiential Art located in the former boiler room of the Chelsea Market!
The Dressing Room: Drinks and Dresses, Day and Night!
Shopping, cocktails, live music and the Rocky Horror Picture Show, what more could you want? Located on 75a Orchard Street
Doodle Photo Bomb: Brooklyn Bridge
There are two things that mean a lot to me, first, doodling. Putting my Sharpie to paper and letting loose
Young the Giant Takes on Central Park Summerstage
In 2009, Houston’s Free Press Summer Fest debuted as a music festival dedicated primarily to spotlighting Texas-based artists. Since
Monumenta 2012 : Daniel Buren’s Excentrique(s) In Situ at the Grand Palais
French artist Daniel Buren is behind this year’s Monumenta installation, which has been drawing visitors en masse over the
This Side of a Postmodern Paradise: No Longer Empty in the Andrew Freedman Home
The two-month run of This Side of Paradise, the much celebrated exhibit by No Longer Empty, is quickly coming to
Shepard Fairey: Harmony and Discord in Chelsea
I’ve been wanting to meet street artist Shepard Fairey for a while now (two years to be precise). For
Tracking down Rashida Jones’ Gilded Age Grandmother
Author David Freeland, one of our Untapped writers (and one of our favorite people to boot) was recently featured in
Music Review: SF Offside Festival
The inaugural SF Offside Festival was a brilliant cross section of the Bay Area’s thriving jazz scene. Envisioned by
Downtown Doodler: Doodle Ad Bomb
Earlier this year I found out about a contest that Doodler’s Anonymous, an online home for spontaneous art, was
John Jonas Gruen’s 1960s Hamptons Photography at (Art)Amalgamated
Inside, the grainy black and white photographs of smiling people on the beach made us dreamy. Was it the backdrop,
After the Final Curtain: The Abandoned Loew’s Kings Theatre in Brooklyn
Welcome back to After the Final Curtain, featuring the photography and writing of Matt Lambros who documents the neglect of
Neil Goldberg’s Retrospective or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the L Train
If you’re a New Yorker, walking through Neil Goldberg’s retrospective at The Museum of the City of New