“Musical Bodies,” a new exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, revels in the blurry boundaries between humans and instruments. By Joshua Barone Visuals by Ye Fan Clap your hands. Tap a foot.
PEOPLE spoke with the artist's ex, Mayte Garcia, ahead of the 10th anniversary of his death in April. The seven-time Grammy ...
The Metropolitan Museum of Art's new exhibit opened two days ahead of the late singer's 68th birthday ...
A meeting of the State Council Commission on Human Resources was held as part of the St Petersburg International Economic ...
In a world fractured by polarization and driven by rapid technological acceleration, Pope Leo XIV’s first encyclical delivers ...
While much of Europe was stuck in the Dark Ages, the spread of Islam led to innovations in math, science, and medicine. These ...
Uncurated, unstructured use of a Large Language Model in the humanities, social sciences, or arts reliably produces exactly ...
Picture a surgical robot that can move, cut tissue, release drugs, grip and store samples, and wirelessly generate heat. You most likely didn't imagine a robot that can fit in your hands. Yet, ...
And while she works, she frequently listens to house music tuned to 432 hertz, a frequency lower than typical concert pitch.
Dental implants have helped tens of millions of people regain a full set of stable, functional teeth, something traditional ...
The Southern African Agri Initiative (Saai) has written to the chairperson of the Southern African Development Community ...
Scispot, the Canadian company behind the AI-native operating layer for modern labs, today announced an $8 million USD Series ...