Artists at the Bellagio Conservatory and Botanical Garden have used flowers, seeds and botanicals to create “Hopeful Holidays.”
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Every Halloween, the Garcias convert their backyard into the skeleton-laden set pieces from Pirates of the Caribbean. And their home interior and patio become the Haunted Mansion Holiday.
The experiential entertainment and retail complex finally opens and invites guests in to see what it is for themselves.
For the first time since arriving at The Neon Museum Boneyard, the iconic Moulin Rouge sign has been brought to life again.
Artwork on building offers uplifting Black Lives Matter motifs in hopes of spurring discussion on revitalization.
In a year full of cancellations and postponements, the creative team behind Fright Dome is launching a new experience to preserve the spirit of Halloween.
The complex of experiential attractions will feature art cars, virtual reality experiences, Meow Wolf, restaurants and bars to finally welcome guests this month.
More than three months after closing because of the coronavirus pandemic, the Discovery Children’s Museum in downtown Las Vegas will reopen Thursday.
During the week of Juneteenth, two businesses in the Las Vegas Arts District covered their walls with art installations and murals that support the current Black Lives Matter movement.
They’re proving that the show can go on even if that means meeting audiences from a rooftop, behind a plastic sheet or from outside their vehicles.
TP Finder, by Deep Space Program, is a crowdsourced platform where anyone can view or report sightings of toilet paper in nearby grocery and convenience stores.
City and county personnel stop by UNLV School of Medicine with lunch for the crew doing coronavirus testing.
Homes in the Las Vegas Valley are sporting the outdoor marks of graduating high school seniors whose ceremonies have been scrapped amid the shutdown.
Izaac Zevalking, who works under the name Recycled Propaganda, has donated his talents to designing nine murals for local shops; the one he did on his own shop was stolen.
Ten local artists have paired with 10 small businesses on Main Street and Charleston Boulevard to transform plywood into hopeful works of art.