As expected, our Powerless 20 list was a hit, as most of us are exhausted of the status quo of celebrating the powerful, rich, and connected. It really tiresome, isn’t it. This week, Sarah Bond highlights the most important archeological discoveries of the last year, our list of must-see exhibitions in NYC and LA, and reviews of Barbara Kruger, Lubaina Himid, Raúl de Nieves, Norman Lewis, Jonny Negron, and more. And tomorrow (Sunday, January 9), you will receive the first email exhibition by our inaugural Emily H. Tremaine Journalism Fellowship for Curators. Curator Tahnee Ahtone has prepared a digital exhibition that presents images of important Kiowa paintings never bshared with outsiders before now. I hope you’ll spend time with the works and use the opportunity to learn more about Kiowa culture, heritage, and aesthetics. — Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief Become a Member Wool fibers dyed pink-purple hue (image by Dafna Gazit, courtesy the Israel Antiquities Authority) The Top Archaeological Discoveries of 2021 From the earliest material evidence of tea to ancient depictions of ghosts, we've gathered ten fascinating finds that came to light in a rather dark year. SPONSORED NEWS THIS WEEK New US Postal stamps honoring Black and Native American sculptor Edmonia Lewis (courtesy the US Postal Office) On January 26, the US Postal Service will release a new stamp honoring prominent Black and Ojibwe sculptor Edmonia Lewis. Works by Kafka, Hemingway, and Zora Neale Hurston shed their copyright on Public Domain Day. Faith Ringgold’s mural at the Rose M. Singer Center in Rikers Island may head to the Brooklyn Museum, although some question its relocation. A CT scan of the mummy of the Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep I gives us an unusual look at the physical traits and the ornaments concealed within. A Missouri county's painfully redesigned seal is a Photoshop atrocity. SPONSORED Written by authors and digital entrepreneurs Matt Fortnow and QuHarrison Terry, this new book published by Wiley is a guide to creating, selling, and buying NFTs. Learn more. WHAT TO SEE AND DO IN NYC AND LA THIS MONTH There’s plenty to look forward to in Los Angeles this month, including the Underground Museum reopening with what will surely be a knock-out show of Noah Davis’s paintings. In New York, the mood is reflective and inward-looking, as artists consider mirrors and windows, the people we’ve lost, and the punitive and patriarchal systems that were built to fail us. LOS ANGELES LATEST IN ART Barbara Kruger, "Untitled (Truth)" (2013). Collection of Margaret and Daniel S. Loeb (Digital image courtesy the artist) The installations position the audience to perform — you may wonder: Is this one giant set up for Instagram? Are we mice in a maze? Kruger continues to show how the media addiction that characterizes contemporary culture prevents so many of us from fully seeing and understanding the power of what we succumb to. Norman Lewis, "Eye of the Storm" (1973), oil on canvas, 51 1⁄8 x 87 1⁄2 inches (© Estate of Norman Lewis; Courtesy of Michael Rosenfeld Gallery LLC, New York, NY) Black paint has many artistic meanings for modernists… For Lewis, working with black seemed to open up his art. The abstract paintings in Shades of Blackness show the varied ways he incorporated the color. The Getty, Google Arts, & Banana Craze Create Three Online Shows Worth a Visit Seph Rodney on La fiebre del banano (Banana Craze), Mesopotamia presented the Getty, and Klimt vs. Klimt — The Man of Contradictions presented by Google Arts and Culture. Sherman Chaddlesone (Kiowa, 1947–2013), "Kiowa Hand Game" (2007), 24 inches by 26 inches, Kiowa Tribe Art Collection at the Kiowa Casino in Devol, OK (courtesy the author and used with permission) Kiowa Murals Embody Kiowa Language, Culture, and Community Curator Tahnee Ahtone expands on the mural work of artists Parker Boyiddle, Jr., Sherman Chaddlesone, and Mirac Creepingbear and the role of art in the Kiowa culture.The murals reveal the artists’ traditional instruction in Kiowa aesthetics, from calendar-keeping to hide-painting and back to petroglyphs... The murals illustrate our belief that all people have a purpose and how we share an intent to work together. Your contributions support our independent journalism and help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Join Us MORE FROM HYPERALLERGIC From The Matrix Resurrections (2021), dir. Lana Wachowski (image courtesy WarnerMedia) A Return to The Matrix Explores Binary Thinking Juan Barquin reviews The Matrix Resurrections and how it embraces "existing within binaries and embracing multiple facets of life." Characters’ bodies and presentations inside and outside the Matrix now look more alike; there’s less emphasis on code-switching and idealized images, and more interest in showing how people can be their true selves in a realm where their lives are not consistently in danger. The Necessary Art of Leisure Luke Williams explores bell hooks’s perspective on rest as “a dynamic place for creative engagement and imagination of the world.” New York City’s Treatment of the “Fearless Girl” Harms Artist Rights Todd Fine: "By failing to consider the artist’s interests or opinions, the city is setting extraordinary precedents... that blow up custom and fair practice." Required Reading This week, a massive digital version of Rembrandt’s “Night Watch,” academics on Twitter, transgender and nonbinary methods of art history, the immorality of diet culture, and more. OPPORTUNITIES IN JANUARY From Stamps School of Art & Design’s 2023 Witt Residency to open faculty positions at George Washington University’s Corcoran School of the Arts and Design, we’ve gathered a full list of grants, fellowships, and open calls for artists and art writers this month! Become a Member |