Since 1788, every four years Americans have voted to elect their president. We look at this age-old tradition and at this year’s election campaign, fought between incumbent president Donald Trump and the Democratic nominee Joe Biden.
The winners include Gairloch, a Scottish museum housed in a converted nuclear bunker
In 1920, women obtained the right to vote in the United States. It was the outcome of a long and hard struggle that involved overcoming many obstacles and prejudices. Some of these can still be seen today in important aspects of our societies and even in our language.
Research, events and a photographic exhibition to chronicle how the capital has changed over the last 15 years
A rich and inclusive programme tells the story of the Pilgrim Fathers’ crossing from different angles
On Wednesday, 8th June 1870, Charles Dickens was working on his novel, Edwin Drood, in the garden of his country house near Rochester, Kent, when he suffered a stroke.
Online concerts and theatre performances, virtual festivals and tutorials: artists are looking for ways to stay connected during isolation
Lethargy, irritability, frustration, impatience: during the current lockdown, millions of people around the world are experiencing the effects of a strange condition called ‘cabin fever’. Luckily it can be ‘cured’ and turned into an opportunity for self-improvement and for re-connecting with others in a meaningful way.
The Victoria & Albert Museum in London is presenting the editorial project “Pandemic Objects”, a reflection on everyday objects that have taken on new meaning under the outbreak.
Melbourne’s National Gallery of Victoria offers a virtual tour to explore the work of two of the most significant artists of the 1980s