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April 14, 2022 • View in browserGood morning. ☁️ Today, two major New York museums are lifting their mask requirements, the New York Public Library is making banned books available across the country, and reviews of Elliot Green, Thomas Bayrle, and Sergei Loznitsa’s Donbass film, which will finally get a proper theatrical release in the US. — Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief Become a member today to support our independent journalism. Is It an Artificial Paradise or an Artificial Hell or Both?Elliott Green seems to be espousing that landscapes are living forms governed by rules we cannot fathom — they appear to be welcoming us, but we might be wrong. | John Yau SPONSORED .ART Wants Artists to Thrive in Digital ChaosMore than 200,000 community members use .ART domains to ground their online identities, innovate, and find focus on an internet full of distractions. Learn more. LATEST NEWS A visitor a the 2022 Whitney Biennial (Hrag Vartanian/Hyperallergic) The MoMA and the Whitney Museum in NYC no longer require visitors and staff to wear masks or show proof of vaccination for COVID-19. At the British Museum, activists protest BP’s sponsorship and the government’s controversial plan to build a road near the Stonehenge site. The New York Public Library will make four banned books available to anyone in the country with its new “Books for All” program. DALL-E, a new artificial intelligence system in pre-release from OpenAI, can convert simple text prompts into digital illustrations. SPONSORED Washington University in St. Louis Presents MFA in Illustration & Visual Culture Thesis ExhibitionThe Sam Fox School’s 2022 MFA-IVC graduating class will exhibit their work at the High Low gallery in St. Louis’s midtown arts district. Learn more. VIEWS & REVIEWS An Artist's Monument to the Monotony of ImagesBayrle creates an art gallery version of computer reproductions of unreality. His art inhabits a world composed of repeated ready-made images. | David Carrier Is Touching Sculpture Sexier After Zoom Fatigue?The sensation of touching isn’t the point. It’s the yearning — heightened during quarantines — that lives on in these sculptures. | Daniel Larkin SPONSORED Cal State Summer Arts Offers Two-Week Intensives for Emerging ArtistsUndergraduate, graduate, emerging artists, and advanced practitioners are invited to apply. The application deadline for the 2022 program is May 27. Learn more. Pissing on Faces or When Women Behave BadlyWhen Sophia Urista urinated on an audience member onstage, her act was framed and understood in a particularly gendered way. | Betsy Huete FILM Years After its Release, a Film about Ukraine’s Donbass Region Seems Relevant AgainInitially released in 2018 but never getting a proper run in the US, Sergei Loznitsa’s Donbass now finally comes to theaters. | Dan Schindel In The Girl and the Spider, Voyeurism Is Both Comical and CreepyEverybody seems to be infatuated with everyone else in the film, locking eyes with an intensity that could shame a tantra guru. | Eileen G’Sell IN MEMORIAM Mira Calix (1969-2022) Doris Derby (1939-2022) Delfina Entrecanales (1927-2022) Nan Melville (1949–2022) MOST POPULAR British Museum Denies Request to 3D Scan Parthenon MarblesMarina Abramović Is Suspended Between Self-Sacrifice and SpectacleLynn Hershman Leeson Thinks It’s Time That Her Work Is RecognizedListen to the Music That Shaped Jean-Michel BasquiatMan Finds “Priceless” Napoleon Memorabilia Stolen in Museum Heist — on eBay
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