Up close and personal with Italian cities during
the Covid-19 pandemic: National Identity and Diversity.
Tribeca’s promising art scene interrupted by Covid-19
Tribeca has long been a home for artists and other celebrities, but it’s only been within the last couple of years that the neighborhood’s storefronts have begun filling with artworks. Now, however, the gallery openings and new shows there have been interrupted by the global pandemic that has put the entire art world on hold.
An Artist’s New Landscape
Skye Ferrante held a one-man vigil in front of the Museum of Modern Art, in Manhattan, to highlight how important it is to remind people that during the pandemic — as institutions, galleries, and art spaces close, and art becomes superfluous, artists face a dire financial future.
The Need for Art in the days of COVID-19
As COVID-19 hit Italy, locally institutions rushed to find solutions to ensure people would still have access to arts. Arts play a fundamental role in providing creative outlook, beauty, and positivity to its viewers.
New York City’s Concrete Art House on Madison
The inverted stack of cement blocks stood over my head in what I felt was a precarious manner; it alarmed me but at the same, it drew me in…