Weekly There’s been a mini-renaissance of public art in New York City and nowhere has that been more visible than the city’s subways, which have been welcoming many accomplished artists to adorn their bleak walls with tile works. Last week we wrote about the new murals by Marcel Dzama and this week we report about the gorgeous works by Katherine Bradford. It’s been wonderful to encounter these new works that speak to the continuing role of the arts in the life of this great city. Now, in this edition of Hyperallergic Weekly, we asked art critics to write about pandemic TV, a “new” van Gogh has surfaced, and we have reviews of Titian, early American photography, Takuji Hamanaka, Meow Wolf’s new Denver location, the new Bob Ross documentary, and more. — Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief Become a Member Karrie Martin as Anna Morales (left) and Yessika Castillo as Julissa Calderon (right) in Gentefied, featured in Being a Queer WOC in the Art World, as Seen on TV by Alicia Eler In our latest Sunday Edition, John Yau, Seph Rodney, Erin Thompson, Alicia Eler, Dorian Batycka, and Angelica Frey focused their lens on the shows they were watching during the pandemic The critics take on classic series, "trash" Italian television, and expand on themes of queerness, identity, and decolonization in more recent programming. Get started with the introduction by Hrag Vartanian. SPONSORED NEWS THIS WEEK A protester holding a spoon, a new symbol of Palestinian resistance, at a demonstration outside New York's Museum of Modern Art Protesters stormed MoMA with Palestinian flags and spoons during the “Globalize The Intifada” march Friday, September 17. Scientists at Purdue University in Indiana have created the whitest acrylic paint ever known. Ranging from Egyptian artworks to classical sculptures, Sketchfab holds a vast, user-uploaded resource of renderings for 3D printing. A never-before-seen sketch has been newly attributed to van Gogh. ART One of Katherine Bradford's five murals at the First Avenue L Station in New York City [Katherine Bradford's] distinctively whimsical characters give a mirthful welcome to riders at the subway’s entrances, impossible to ignore even during the busiest of rush hours. Takuji Hamanaka’s Spellbinding Prints John Yau on Takuji Hamanaka: Future Recollection at Kristen Lorello Gallery. SPONSORED Romanticism to Ruin: Two Lost Works of Sullivan and Wright memorializes Chicago’s Garrick Theatre and Buffalo’s Larkin Building, which were razed to build a parking lot and a truck stop. Learn more. Titian (Italian, about 1488–1576), "The Rape of Europa" (1559–1562), oil on canvas, 178 × 205 cm. Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston (© Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston) Titian’s paintings are masterpieces, with all the complications of the term, and are based on ancient stories whose brilliant poetry is only matched by their cruelty. Loving them is complicated. When Disney Declared War on Deutschland Tim Brinkhof on The Walt Disney Studios and World War II at the Walt Disney Family Museum. SPONSORED Over 50 years of the artist’s video and media work on how images, sound, and cultural iconography inform representation is on view through December 30. Learn more. ALSO ON HYPERALLERGIC Lady’s blue right eye with dark brow (from Lover’s Eyes: Eye Miniatures from the Skier Collection, courtesy D Giles, Limited) The 18th-century English Craze for One-Eyed Portraits Lover’s Eyes features a richly illustrated cache of over 130 bejeweled, hand-painted, eye miniatures from the Skier Collection. Bob Ross the Dreamer Got a Rude Awakening Hrag Vartanian questions whether Bob Ross: Happy Accidents, Betrayal & Greed digs deep enough into the painter's persona. The Many Problems with Deana Lawson’s Photographs Gwendolyn Dubois Shaw addresses the complexities of consent and the persistence of the White male gaze in Lawson's photography. Required Reading This week, LA's new Academy Museum, the intersections of anti-Blackness and anti-fatness, a largely unknown 19th century Black theater in NYC, sign language interpreters, and more. Hyperallergic is made possible through member support. Become a member and help us continue to publish the art stories that matter. Become a Member IN OUR STORE From stationery featuring work by the quilters of Gee's Bend to the perfect gift for fans of art and astrology, check out the latest update from the Hyperallergic Store. Become a Member |