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Astonishing Ancient Construction Found In France

Researchers from the French National Institute for Preventive Archaeological Research (INRAP) unearthed the monument while excavating a prehistoric site in the eastern commune of Marliens. - Smithsonian

Art Gallery Of Ontario Strike Revealed A Class Divide

If the union made scant material progress, the strike looks mainly like a huge strategic error on the AGO’s part. -- The Globe & Mail

Climate-Protesting Art Vandals In Paris Arrested Before They Could Vandalize Art

"Two people were arrested on Sunday morning at the entrance of the Musée d’Orsay for being suspected of attempting to damage classified property. … When they were arrested, they were 'in possession of a white liquid – glue and a viscous whitish mixture – and were wearing" t-shirts of an environmental activist group. - ARTnews

Toronto’s Largest Art Museum Reopens After Monthlong Strike

"The Art Gallery of Ontario, which closed to the public on March 26 as more than 400 unionized workers went on strike, (reopened) on April 30. The employees, whose ranks included curators, archivists, designers, researchers, technicians, and front desk staff, … had sought wage increases and protection for part-time workers." - Artforum

Marrying Arts And Tech In The Building So They Can Feed Off One Another

At the new gateway to the campus of the Rochester Institute of Technology the 180,000-square-foot Student Hall for Exploration and Development offers views into two nearly transparent cubes. In one, actors rehearse a theater performance; students are practicing their moves in a dance studio in the other. - Bloomberg

Nigeria’s New Museum Of Yoruba Culture Is Not Like Other Museums

Architect Seun Oduwole: "This museum pops with colour and sound." Curator Will Rea: "It is very different to a European museum, you walk in a soundscape and it’s noisy, it’s performative, you have to move your body the whole time." (It also has a public swimming pool.) - The Guardian

Natural History Museums Get A Redesign

In part, that’s meant to feature the “gateway drug to natural history” - the dinosaur skeletons. - The New York Times

The Rebirth Of King’s Cross In London May Not Be Quite Complete

The changes since 2004 have been dramatic. "It has created, in its 50 new and restored buildings, about 1,700 homes, more than 40% of them affordable, 30 bars and restaurants, 10 new public parks and squares, 4.25m sq ft of offices and capacity for 30,000 office jobs." - The Observer (UK)

Colleges Are Adding ‘Value’ With Massive Museum Expansions

The extreme college workout facility is passé - now it’s cool, newly renovated and/or expanded museums that attract undergrads and their tuition-paying parents. - The New York Times

Today, For The First Time, The Pope Went To The Biennale

“The pope greeted the inmates of the Giudecca prison individually in an inner courtyard. Some gave him flowers, and others pressed envelopes and notes in his hands." - The New York Times

How ‘Shirley Card’ Color Processing Shaped Our Understanding Of Analog And Digital Photos

The Shirley card, which set Kodak color processing values, was intensely racist. - El País English

The Surprising Things The Walker Art Center Did To Its Gift Shop

“‘It’s a shop disguised as an exhibition, or an exhibition disguised as a shop,’ Clark said. 'We kind of built a house, and we blew the roof off,’ Altay added.”- The New York Times

Traditional Museums Are, Finally, Waking Up To Children

At the Clyfford Still Museum in Denver, for instance, an Art Crawl "is held three times a month for newborns through 14-month-old children, who can crawl freely through selected galleries and are encouraged to stop at each work to engage in an interactive activity." - The New York Times

Should The Louvre Move The Mona Lisa To Its Own Room?

"Such a move would give visitors, many of whom visit the Louvre for the famous painting alone, a better experience, Laurence des Cars told the broadcaster France Inter." - Agence France-Press (The Guardian UK)

German University Study Center Named Best New Building In Europe

The architects describe the building as acting like a microchip on a circuit board, a central meeting point connected to all parts of the university campus. There is no front or back, but nine equal entrances all around the 1,000 square metre (10,760 sq ft) building, making it feel like an open hub. - The Guardian

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