Darcelle XV, the world’s oldest performing drag queen, died in March, but her spirit will live on
The itinerant artist William Bache’s portraits are contaminated by arsenic, but now the National Portrait Gallery offers easy access
A new exhibition shines a light on the stunning work of Clarice Beckett
A new exhibition of rarely seen images and artifacts chronicles the African American religious experience
Smithsonian podcasts explore the legacy of Executive Order 9066 and the camera that almost didn’t make it to the Juno spacecraft launch
Seven artists compete for a $100,000 purse and an exhibition at the Hirshhorn in this ground-breaking show airing on the Smithsonian Channel
This 19th-century vessel, made to store meat, carries a powerful backstory of Drake's defiance of the laws of enslavement
The Hirshhorn Museum displays dynamic works of Chinese self-expression
The W.F.K. Travers painting hid in plain sight at a New Jersey town hall for 80 years before it was restored and brought back to Washington
Taken a half-century ago, her images strike a contemporary pose
Trips to the 49th state inspired the characters in the writer-illustrator's latest children’s book "Cozy in Love"
A full slate of events honors the painter's life in timing with the 50th anniversary of his death
The award-winning Beninese artist unveils a work dedicated to the president’s “generosity of heart”
The painter’s entire “Fighters for Freedom” series is now on view for the first time in more than 75 years
Smithsonian curators remember the celebrated artist, who died last month at 98, and who viewed humanity with biting realism
Explore the enduring bonds and intimacies of modern love at the National Portrait Gallery
The celebrated architect Hector Guimard was also a passionate advocate for workers’ rights, even as he honed his reputation in the business of luxury
Andrew Parker has produced some of the brightest hues in the world. So, what’s his secret?
A biographical exhibition reveals the profound origins of her intensely engaging art
The legacy of voracious collector Charles Lang Freer, a good friend of James McNeill Whistler, is marked by tension and irony
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