The Village Voice reviews an exhibition, “Light Producing Objects,” that offers illumination in the dark days of our times.
A 1963 Village Voice article noted that a new computer system at the Buildings Dept. suffered from a lack of keypunch operators.
The Village Voice notes that the new graphic novel, “Nostalgia,” explores a future featuring musical mind-twists and old-school dissent.
An article from the Village Voice archive reports on a criminal posing as photographer for the paper in order to rob art galleries.
The flayed, bloody flesh, screeching soundtrack, Gothic sets, and elegantly flapping costumes are all on brand for the visionary director. In the 200 years since Mary Shelley first realized her ...
Block party: Jean Foos’s painted block interacting with the public, 34th Avenue and 79th Street, in Jackson Heights, Queens. Public art has often brought out heated controversy, particularly when ...
Every once in a while, a movie comes along that reminds me why I fell in love with movies — why I sit in traffic, amidst honking cars, blank-faced drivers and bumper-to-bumper malaise, then sit in a ...
Who defeated Charles Van Doren? / Which movie won the Oscar for Best Picture in 1955, and why did Herbert Stempel have to pretend that he didn’t know? / What did President Eisenhower call “a terrible ...
With its cheesy boardwalk settings and beatnik ambience — bongo player “Chaino” gets singled out in the credits — writer/director Curtis Harrington’s Night Tide (1961) proves an apt first-time star ...
Gateway drug? Copy of “Junkwaffel” #1, purchased under false pretenses half a century ago. R: Paperback remnant of a stage career cut short. It was sometime in 1974, and I was extremely nervous ...
George Clooney’s drama about straight-shooting newsman Edward R. Murrow exposing Senator Joseph McCarthy’s lies and cruelties draws clear parallels to Trump’s tyrannies. A Republican demagogue ...