News

A new study argues that the pharaoh’s statues weren’t destroyed out of revenge, but were ‘ritually deactivated’ because of ...
Humans and our ancestors have been creating tools, art, and everyday objects for millions of years, and each unexpected ...
Gospel music legend Marvin Sapp is set to perform at Independence Mall on Friday, June 27, at 7 p.m. as part of the Wawa ...
LACMA gets ready to show its new David Geffen Galleries, reviews of 'Queer Lens' at the Getty and 'Parade' at the Ahmanson.
A carved panel found at Nimrud depicts Assyrian soldiers swimming across a river and using inflatable goat skins as floaties.
The miracle of the modern State of Israel is that we fully understand what we are up against — and still, we forge ahead.
In the center of the relief stands Ashurbanipal, the last king of the Assyrian Empire, who ruled from 669 to 631 B.C. He is flanked by the ancient Mesopotamian gods Ashur and Ishtar, and they are ...
Written by Gadgets 360 Staff A 2,100-year-old temple has been unearthed at Athribis near Sohag, Egypt. Reliefs show King Ptolemy VIII making offerings to the goddess Repit and her son Kolanthes.
Inside, a square chamber features a shallow shaft in the eastern part that leads to a small burial chamber. One of the most significant finds in the tomb is a rectangular limestone stela with a curved ...
Now “David Smith: The Nature of Sculpture,” at the Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park here, examines the multifaceted relationship of Smith’s work to the natural world, especially ...