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July 16, 2021 • View in browserGood morning. 🌤️ Today, Anthony Bourdain’s impact on the way we see food and travel, ableism and Frida Kahlo, and a major Jean Dubuffet exhibition at the Barbican in London. — Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief Jean Dubuffet’s Highs and (Controversial) LowsCuriously, Dubuffet’s anti-hierarchical approach to art did not translate to similar views on society. | Naomi Polonsky Land Artist Nancy Holt’s Papers Acquired by Smithsonian ArchivesAlso included are plans for two site-specific projects that were never fully realized: “Sky Mound” (1984–) and “Solar Web” (1984–89). | Cassie Packard SPONSORED Craft Ways: Tending to Craft Explores How Collaborative Research Nurtures the FieldTickets are currently available for this virtual symposium co-organized by the Center for Craft and Warren Wilson College. Learn more. FILM & DOCUMENTARYAnthony Bourdain’s Lasting Impact on How We Look at Food and TravelA new documentary is coming out about Bourdain, but one could learn even more about his ethos by looking at the various TV programs he hosted. | Caitlin Quinlan Hong Sang-soo’s Latest Film Probes How People Portray ThemselvesThe Woman Who Ran has a laid-back vibe and relaxingly repetitious structure, but that conceals a complex character study. | Ren Scateni An Eight-Hour Film Captures the Rhythms of Farming Life in Rural JapanThe Works and Days is a quiet epic, using its length to capture the rhythms of rural life and its desecration by urbanization better than any conventional movie could. | Forrest Cardamenis ALSO...Why Visiting a Museum is Like Seeing my Friends in JailInside the museum, the visit is eerily parallel. It’s objects, not people, but they’re still behind glass. We’re still surrounded by guards and security cameras. | Karen Carr Enough with the Ableist Worship of Frida KahloEmily Rapp Black’s new book cuts though self-serving interpretations of disabled bodies like Kahlo’s, which have long emphasized the comfort or pleasure of others. | Sophia Stewart MOST POPULARYour Concise New York Art Guide for July 2021Louise Bourgeois’s Long Relationship With PsychoanalysisPaulina Peavy, the Spiritualist Artist Who Channeled a UFOAn Indigenous Perspective on Frida KahloProtesters Chant “Boycott MOCA” at Museum of Chinese in America ReopeningIN OUR STORE"Lunch atop a Skyscraper" Enamel PinInspired by Charles C. Ebbets’s iconic photograph of ironworkers on break during the construction of Rockefeller Center, this enamel masterpiece brings to mind the many potentials of a “working lunch.” Support HyperallergicYour contributions support Hyperallergic's independent journalism and our extensive network of writers around the world. Join Us
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