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Biographer Brad Gooch's "Radiant" reveals how much life and creativity artist Keith Haring packed into 31 years before he died of AIDS.
In the 1980s, Haring's cartoon-like images were everywhere — his figures of dancers, hearts, babies and dogs remain pop culture motifs. A new exhibition celebrates the artist who died in 1990 at 31.
Keith Haring arrived in New York City in 1978. Bowled over by the sounds and sights of the city and its burgeoning hip-hop scene, he created a street-art aesthetic that brought him success in just ...
The wide-open generosity of spirit in Keith Haring’s vivacious work is seen in the Broad's deft show, which culls together about 120 works that he created between 1982 and 1989.
Keith Haring, “Untitled” (1982). A solo exhibition of the artist’s work will go on view at the Broad in May, 2023.
In 1986, Keith Haring was offered an Amiga personal computer by Timothy Leary. The psychedelic pioneer-turned-software developer was then devising a video game adaptation of William Gibson’s ...
In 1977, Haring chanced on a retrospective of Pierre Alechinsky, a Belgian artist who had been heavily influenced by Japanese calligraphy. The show, at the Carnegie Institute’s Museum of Art ...
But “Keith Haring: The Political Line” re-envisions the artist not as a post-Pop graffitist gone mainstream but as a sort of editorial cartoonist of American culture as he encountered it.
If you’re into Keith Haring’s colorful artworks, listen up: Ruggable’s collection is for you. The washable rug company is known for durability and quality, and as of Jan. 27, it’s ...
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