You are one of 165,000 people receiving this email. Yes, you read that right, 165,000 people receive Hyperallergic's Weekly email every Saturday. It's a milestone we're proud of as the publication prepares to celebrate our lucky 13th anniversary this fall. Thank you for continuing to support us through your membership, subscriptions, commenting, and sharing articles and podcasts online. It's because of you we can do this work. This week, Sarah Bond writes about newly discovered ancient gladiator tombs in present-day Turkey. The find is notable because it is rare to unearth such cemeteries and there were 68 tombs, including one of a woman (did you know women also fought as Roman gladiators?). A fascinating story. Make sure to check out John Yau's review of Philip Guston, Jane Chin Davidson's close look at the work of Theresa Hak Kyung Cha at the Whitney Biennial, and Nancy Princenthal's review of the paintings of Joan Semmel. And this weekend, the SWAIA: Native American Art Market is taking place in Santa Fe, New Mexico. We have a number of stories from the last few months about some of the participating artists at the market, including Dallin Maybee, Amber-Dawn Bear Robe, Patricia Michaels, Denise Wallace, and Hollis Chitto. The event is the largest marketplace of American Indian art and crafts. Definitely worth checking out. — Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief Possible gladiator tombs were found during excavations in the ancient Roman city of Anazarbus (modern Anavarza) in Turkey (photo by Ozan Efeoğlu via Anadolu Images) If positively identified as a gladiator cemetery, Anazarbus would be only the second city in Turkey and one of only a handful of known gladiator burial grounds across the Mediterranean. Screenshot of a viral video showing insects inside of a Bernd and Hilla Becher photograph at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art (courtesy BBC Persian via Instagram) Become a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Philip Guston, “Painter’s Forms II” (1978), oil on canvas. (© The Estate of Philip Guston, courtesy Hauser & Wirth; courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston) As impressive and engaging as are a number of the paintings from before the late 1960s, I feel that Guston became a truly great painter after he abandoned the hooded figures, and all that haunted him spilled out onto his canvas. Joan Semmel, “Centered” (2002), oil on canvas (courtesy the Green Family Art Foundation and Adam Green Art Advisory; photo courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York) The exhibition’s emphasis is on the various points of view Semmel has taken on herself — and, briefly, on others too. Jamie Okuma (photo by Tira Howard Photography for SWAIA) Indigenous Fashion Takes the Stage in Santa Fe Jordan Eddy highlights how curator Amber-Dawn Bear Robe brings together historic and contemporary Native clothing designs at Santa Fe Indian Market.“The one overarching element, the one solid thing across Canada and the United States, is that Native American design is the original design of this land,” said Bear Robe. “Killing a seal, cleaning the intestines, and sewing them together to make a waterproof jacket — you don’t get any more haute couture than that.” From The Sandman (courtesy Netflix) The show has an uphill fight here; the page is an unlimited canvas for one’s imagination, with a reader’s mind working in tandem with the artist’s pen. On the screen, though, we are inured to spectacle. Collage of Sad Beige posts (courtesy Hayley DeRoche) Is Bleak the New Look for a TikTok Childhood? Isabella Segalovich expands a TikTok persona taking on the bleakness of Werner Herzog to address class aesthetics in parenting trends.Hayley DeRoche’s goal is not to critique parents themselves. “I’m much more interested in the way we market this stuff, and how class aesthetics are so much a part of the marketing. I’m not trying to critique individuals — I’m trying to critique the system.” Required Reading This week, award-winning nature photography, reviewing Jared Kushner’s new book, Smithsonian NMAAHC hires a new digital curator, Damien Hirst plans to burn paintings, and more. Made in collaboration with Yayoi Kusama, these bone china mugs are the perfect vessel for beverages as you and a companion pass the time discussing art, the universe, and everything in between. Shop our Kusama collection! |