Town Says Burger Joint's Mural Can't Show Any Burgers
Salina, Kansas, restaurant owner Steve Howard argues in a new lawsuit that the city's sign regulations violate the First Amendment.
Salina, Kansas, restaurant owner Steve Howard argues in a new lawsuit that the city's sign regulations violate the First Amendment.
She also mistook the Adam in Michelangelo's famous painting for David.
The bill is broad enough to target a Saturday Night Live skit lampooning Trump, a comedic impression of Taylor Swift, or a weird ChatGPT-generated image of Ayn Rand.
The unauthorized "Art of Banksy" exhibit includes ads from the street artist's real-life Palestine hotel.
The results are interesting and suggest weird and significant biases.
Futuristically thrilling but aesthetically limited
The libertarian creator of alternative comix Hate and Neat Stuff explains why he's fond of the invisible hand and individualism.
The CEO of Open To Debate wants us to disagree more productively—especially when it comes to presidential debates.
The case could have long-term implications for how broadly fair use can be applied.
His bold new exhibition draws on the work of Steven Pinker, Our World in Data, and Human Progress to document how much life has improved since the good old days.
The legendary graphic designer juxtaposes 18th- and 19th-century paintings with visualizations of how much life has improved over the centuries.
"If there is freedom, private property, rule of law, then Latin Americans thrive," says the social media star.
Copyright law is just one area that must adapt to account for revolutionary A.I. technology.
Turning every streaming service into TikTok is bad for the internet. It'll be disastrous for music.
The U.S. Copyright Office determined that images produced by artificial intelligence cannot be copyrighted, even though they are generated by user-written prompts.
The "interactive artist" inspired by Jack Kirby and Barry Goldwater challenges social media and intellectual conformity.
Artist Dave Cicirelli challenges his audience to create meaning.
A new exhibit at the National Gallery of Art displays how the U.K. changed in the 1970s and '80s.
"My artwork is unapologetic," said the artist. "Sometimes it can be very political. Sometimes it can be very controversial."
Despite an apocalyptic media narrative, the modern era has brought much longer lives and the greatest decline in poverty ever.
The indie artists suing Stable Diffusion may not realize it, but they're doing the Mouse's dirty work.
"Hamline subjected López Prater to the foregoing adverse actions because . . . she did not conform her conduct to the specific beliefs of a Muslim sect," the lawsuit states.
"If Hamline won't listen to free speech advocates or faculty across the country, they'll have to listen to their accreditor," said FIRE attorney Alex Morey, who filed the complaint.
"It's stories and songs and films cut apart and written over, leaving no trace and no remnant of whatever used to be," writes novelist and cultural critic Kat Rosenfield.
The game is one of the greatest pieces of outsider art created in the 21st century, and it just got a lot easier to play.
A website designer asks SCOTUS to let her eschew work that contradicts her opposition to gay marriage.
Friday A/V Club: Sight and Sound revises the film canon again.
The legendary art director talks about the aesthetics of rebellion and his strange journey from Screw magazine to The New York Times.
The legendary art director on Greenwich Village in the '60s, the aesthetics of rebellion, and life at The New York Times.
"Committing vandalism by soup to send a message about climate change may be 'expressive,' but attempting to destroy someone else's work of art crosses moral and legal boundaries."
Rather than being replaced by A.I., humans should plan to work with it.
Friday A/V Club: One cable host's capacity for unearned smugness
A new history, Dirty Pictures, explores how underground comix revolutionized art and exploded censorship once and for all.
Brian Doherty's history of underground comix chronicles how Robert Crumb, Art Spiegelman, and others challenged censorship and increased free speech.
Government officials have declared an Oxford home's shark roof sculpture a protected landmark, against the wishes of the current owner of the house.
Disreputable and censored comix improbably brought the art form from the gutter to the museums.
The Polish-born artist is creating "heroic portraits" of machines and defending individualism and creative expression in Silicon Valley.
"Government restrictions came in, which literally shut us down," says Paul Smith, who co-owns Red Stag Tattoo in Austin, Texas.
An exhibit featuring 19th-century Jewish American artwork was axed after the university objected to two artists who supported the Confederacy.
The artist's Rocket Factory project, which lets users build and own their own virtual spacecraft, is changing how we think about reality.
The Rocket Factory NFT project stands at the intersection of crypto, the metaverse, and persistent human longing for the new frontier.
A virtual collection of 10 artworks made by Ulbricht at various stages of his life was worth $6.3 million at the time of sale.
Countless works of art are locked in museum basements. Why not put them back on the open market?
The applicability of Klaxon v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing -- no, wait! I promise it's important . . . .