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A new show at Amant, New York explores what its curators call ‘the traumas and forms of violence that are intrinsic to the ...
Discover how Tyme Group's Coen Jonker blends vision and purpose to build a billion-dollar fintech serving millions across ...
Top of the list has to be Kerry's ruthless dismantling of champions Armagh in Croke Park on Sunday, a stunning display and ...
We all know who Sisyphus is: the guy in Greek mythology who was sentenced by the gods to spend eternity pushing a boulder up a mountain. Each time he reached the summit, the boulder would roll back ...
But what if our boulder rolling is different? Sure, many of the maintenance tasks of parenting are incessant, and many of our boulders end up rolling back down the hill.
But what if our boulder rolling is different? Sure, many of the maintenance tasks of parenting are incessant, and many of our boulders end up rolling back down the hill.
Celia Rowlson-Hall’s “Sissy” at the Baryshnikov Arts Center, a dance-theater hybrid featuring Marisa Tomei, pokes at the boundaries between art and life.
Sisyphus appears in several Greek myths, though today he is often associated with just one. In the famous legend, he is punished by Zeus for cheating death and condemned to endlessly push a boulder up ...
But when it comes to the big goals—global stability, a fair economy, a solution for the climate crisis—it can feel as if you’ve been pushing a boulder up a hill only to see it come rolling ...
The boulder would always roll back down before he could reach the top. It teams up six artists whose output asks about whether there is a modern counterpart of Sisyphus, and the rolling stone ...
Consequently, Zeus dispatched Sisyphus to the underworld, where Hades deemed that Sisyphus would eternally push a boulder up a hill, only to watch the boulder roll down the hill so the workout ...