Topic: Guggenheim Museum
All Content
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Apple digital textbooks: Can Apple reinvent another industry?
Apple digital textbooks promise to revolutionize education, just as the company revolutionized music. But is the model for Apple digital textbooks too costly to work?
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Chapter & Verse
Apple announces iBooks2, a new textbook program for iPad
Apple's new textbooks for iPad will let students zoom and rotate images, watch movies, and even complete tasks like dissecting frogs
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Ai Weiwei: Can an artist change society?
Chinese artist Ai Weiwei's provocative work spotlights human rights and pushes government boundaries.
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iPad newspaper arrives Wednesday. Can it survive?
News Corp. will likely launch an iPad newspaper today. Reports say "The Daily" will only come on iPads and will cost money to download. Can an iPad newspaper last when so much free news exists online?
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Sculptor Louise Bourgeois plumbed depths of female psyche, made giant freaky spiders
French-born artist Louise Bourgeois, who passed away Monday, was known for her 'confessional' work that explored themes of female sexuality, birth, and death.
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Is it art? For performance artist Tino Sehgal, it's immaterial.
A new interactive installation at the Guggenheim Museum draws onlookers into a conversation that itself becomes part of the art.
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National World War II Museum: Bringing the battle to life
The New Orleans National World War II Museum uses immersive tech to boost teaching power – and also entertain.
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Review: 'The International'
Thriller races around the globe like a scruffy Bond movie but without the moral clarity.
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Cai Guo-Qiang has a blast with explosive art
The Chinese artist, whose pyrotechnics will feature heavily at the Beijing Olympic ceremonies, is the focus of a major exhibition at New York's Guggenheim Museum. His favorite medium: gunpowder.







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