Among our stories and reviews today: rare portraits of Japanese Kabuki actors at the Art Institute of Chicago, a new documentary following the work of New York City psychics, and more.
Among our stories and reviews today: rare portraits of Japanese Kabuki actors at the Art Institute of Chicago, a new documentary following the work of New York City psychics, the shortcomings of a recently released primer on contemporary feminist art, recommended exhibitions in Washington, DC, this fall, and a one-on-one conversation with Indigenous artist and choreographer Tanya Lukin Linklater. In the news, a Columbia University sculpture is doused with fake blood, while across town Cooper Union college surprises its students with free tuition. And there's more! — Hakim Bishara, Senior Editor | |
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| This season in the nation’s capital offers poignant portraiture by Félix González-Torres, an archive of James Baldwin, Rosemary Feit Covey’s organic forms, documentary photography, and more. | Murat Cam Mengüç |
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SPONSORED | | | The Rabkin Prize celebrates the creative and intellectual contributions of today’s arts writers and comes with a $50,000 unrestricted award. Learn more |
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LATEST NEWS | | Protesters drench Columbia University’s famous “Alma Mater” statue in red paint, setting the tone for another year of protests demanding the school to divest from Israeli military interests. New York’s Cooper Union announced that tuition will be free for all graduating seniors over the next four years. A California man has been sentenced to three months in federal prison for illegally importing a Roman Empire-era mosaic looted from Syria. |
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FROM OUR CRITICS | | Mothers of Invention tells the story of how the movements, media, and styles of the past 50 years were inspired by feminism — through mostly White artists. | Bridget Quinn |
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SPONSORED | | | The first museum exhibition for the Sacramento-based photographer showcases his bold, campy, colorful photographs. Learn more |
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| Uninterested in proving anything definitively, this film instead asserts the complicated humanity of psychic healers, their clients, and the practice itself. | Eileen G’Sell |
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MORE ON HYPERALLERGIC | | An exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago features over 30 of Tōshūsai Sharaku's rarely shown ukiyo-e prints exemplifying the classic Japanese theater genre. | Isabella Segalovich |
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SPONSORED | | | This show at China Institute Gallery in NYC provides a rare opportunity to view excavated treasures from 1,600 years ago, on view for the first time in the US. Learn more |
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| The Alutiiq/Sugpiaq multidisciplinary artist and choreographer communicates Indigenous movement systems and forms of knowledge through dance. | Erin Joyce |
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FROM THE ARCHIVE | | “You left us with an invitation to love and live harder, to be one with nature and the cosmos, and to commit to the struggle holistically,” writes Shirine Saad in a letter to the late Lebanese-American painter and poet. |
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IN MEMORIAM | Ofra Bikel (1929–2024) Documentary filmmaker who focused on criminal justice | New York Times Trudi Dicks (1940–2024) South African artist known for etchings | Namibian Kip Gresham (1951–2024) Pioneering printmaker who collaborated with artists | Guardian Veronika Kozhushko (2006–2024) Ukrainian ink and graphic artist | Kyiv Independent Tao LaBossiere (1968–2024) Hartford muralist and creator of public sculptures | Connecticut Public Maria Tippett (1944–2024) Art historian known for biographies of Canadian artists | Times Colonist Jackie Winsor (1942–2024) Sculptor who used industrial materials | Artnews |
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