A recent controversy at the University of Florida is highlighting something many artists may not realize: one of the most widely discussed accessibility tools in contemporary art practice originated in
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Disabled Artists Say Government Support Delays Are Forcing Businesses to Close Disabled artists across the United Kingdom are reporting that delays and cuts in government employment support are putting their
“I Need to Be More Than a Lesson You Learned”: Disabled Artists Challenge Performative Inclusion In the art world, the language of accessibility and inclusion appears everywhere. Exhibition catalogs mention
Public libraries are usually places of quiet. Pages turning. Fluorescent lights humming. Someone studying for an exam they may or may not pass. But this week at the Free Library
There are moments when the art world shifts so quietly that you almost miss it, until you realize the floor has moved under your feet and nobody can put it
New York does not lack galleries. It does not lack ambition either. What it has lacked, for a very long time, is a dedicated commercial space that treats artists with
Japan is often thought of as a place where ancient traditions and cutting-edge technology live side by side. What’s less talked about — until very recently — is how that
How artists with disabilities expand what art is and who it belongs to Imagine walking into a gallery where the walls are not lines of dates and names but conversations
When Sight Changes, Art Doesn’t Have To I never stopped being a photographer, even after I lost most of my vision. Photography has always been about light, texture, place, and
There is a quiet confidence that comes from being invited to touch art without apology. No velvet rope. No whispered warning. Just hands meeting form, texture doing what words never