Culture
Latest stories
British Rain Conquers New York

New Yorkers have been queueing in droves -- sometimes in sweltering temperatures -- for the novel experience of walking through rain without getting wet.

The chance comes courtesy of Rain Room, a novel installation by British art collective Random International, at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA).

W140 Full Story
Official: Iraq, U.S. Reach Deal on Stolen Artefacts

Baghdad reached an initial deal with the U.S. on the return of more than 10,000 artefacts stolen from Iraq after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, a senior official said on Friday.

"We have reached an initial agreement... on returning more than 10,000 Iraqi artefacts that are in the United States," by August 2014, senior ministry advisor Baha al-Mayahi told Agence France Presse.

W140 Full Story
Iraq, U.S. Reach Deal on Stolen Artifacts

Baghdad reached an initial deal with the U.S. on the return of more than 10,000 artifacts stolen from Iraq after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, a senior official said on Friday.

"We have reached an initial agreement... on returning more than 10,000 Iraqi artifacts that are in the United States," by August 2014, senior ministry adviser Baha al-Mayahi told Agence France Presse.

W140 Full Story
Giant Blue Cockerel Roosts at London's Trafalgar Square

A huge blue cockerel descended upon London's Trafalgar Square on Thursday, but the artwork has ruffled feathers by putting the symbol of France in a site marking a famous British victory over Napoleon.

Standing 4.7 meters (15.5 feet) tall and colored a vivid ultramarine, the fibreglass rooster was sculpted by German artist Katharina Fritsch and will watch over the famous square for 18 months.

W140 Full Story
Russia Releases Manuscript of Banned Wartime Classic

Russia's security service on Thursday released from its secret archives the manuscript of a classic World War II novel described as the "War and Peace" of the 20th century, over 50 years after it was confiscated by the Soviet authorities.

Vassily Grossman's epic novel "Life and Fate", completed in 1960, was banned in the Soviet Union until the late 1980s but is now considered to be one of the greatest of all Russian novels.

W140 Full Story
More than 3,700 Marilyn Monroe Potos to be Auctioned

More than 3,700 photos of American pop icon Marilyn Monroe will be sold this weekend along with their copyrights, a Los Angeles auction house said Thursday.

The photos -- plus negatives, slides and copyrights -- are part of a collection of more than 75,000 images taken by fashion photographer Milton Greene in the 1950s and 1960s.

W140 Full Story
Archaeologists Find 1.4-Million-Year-Old Flint in Spain

Archaeologists said Wednesday they have found a flint blade dating back 1.4 million years in the caves of Atapuerca in Spain, the earliest sign of a human presence at the site.

The three-centimeter (1.2-inch) blade was found in the so-called Elephant Chasm cave where in 2007 researchers found a human finger and jawbone dating back 1.2 million years -- considered the remains of the "oldest European" ever found.

W140 Full Story
Cartoonist Kash Sends Up DR Congo's Daily Chaos

The headlines out of the Democratic Republic of Congo, which tend to evoke images of bloodshed, rape, ethnic hatred and government corruption, are usually no laughing matter.

But political cartoonist Kashoun Thembo is an expert at wringing humor out of his country's tragedies, capturing the newsmakers and travails of life in DR Congo with a fierce pen that hits home and spares no one.

W140 Full Story
U.S. to Hand Back Stolen Royal Books to Sweden

Two rare books that once belonged to the Swedish royal family and were stolen from the country's National Library are to be handed back here on Wednesday.

New York District Attorney Preet Bharara will present the two books, one of which is 330 years old, over to the library's CEO Gunilla Herdenberg in a ceremony in Manhattan, officials said.

W140 Full Story
Hundreds of Thousands of Catholics Swarm Rio Beach

Hundreds of thousands of young Catholics packed the beach of Copacabana Tuesday for the start of a weeklong religious event in Rio de Janeiro that includes gatherings with Pope Francis.

Rain clouds cleared in time and pilgrims from around the world waved flags, sang and prayed as the archbishop of Rio, Orani Tempesta, led a mass to kick off World Youth Day in the country with the world's greatest number of Roman Catholics.

W140 Full Story