An exhibition of Pueblo pottery seeks to reveal the soul that resides within the art.
Current and coming: A self-taught artist in the internment camps
Takuichi Fujii’s illustrated diary during Executive Order 9066 is on display at the Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens.
Current and coming: William Edmondson at the Barnes
On view at the Barnes Foundation is the work of one of the most famous and least known members of the great American self-taught artists.
Editor’s Letter: July/August 2023
Editor-in-Chief Gregory Cerio discusses the duties and perks of attending art and antique fairs.
Seamless Transition
An excerpt from the book The New Antiquarians takes us into the Maine home of a young clothing designer turned folk art collector and dealer.
Endnotes: Sweet History in Spain
Chocolate is a sugary treat and a historical tool at the Museo de la Xocolata.
Hot Stove League
A gallery of six kitchens in historic American homes across the nation.
Farther afield: Alimentary Athenaeums
A sampler of culinary museums around the world, where food is explored as cultural tradition, as industry, and even as art.
Curious Objects: Textiles don’t get no respect
Henry VII commissioned thirty of these richly embroidered vestments called “copes,” for the English clergy, helping to lay the foundation for that special blend of religion, power, and material prestige that would mark the reign of his son, the notorious Henry VIII.
“Beautiful, Useful, and Enduring”
The story of the estimable arts and crafts silver of the Kalo Shop and the principled, indomitable woman at the firm’s helm: Clara Barck Welles.










