Good morning! Today in the news: An artist paints portraits of American peace activists, 14 repatriated Yemeni artifacts are sent to the Metropolitan Museum of Art amid the ongoing civil war, and a community-curated blockchain art show that might surprise you comes to Queens.
Good morning! Today in the news: An artist paints portraits of American peace activists, 14 repatriated Yemeni artifacts are sent to the Metropolitan Museum of Art amid the ongoing civil war, and a community-curated blockchain art show that might surprise you comes to Queens. Also today, Senior Editor Hakim Bishara muses on a recent encounter with the Cubist sculptures created by artist Lee Bul for The Met’s facade commission. Elsewhere in Manhattan, Natalie Weiss visits an exhibition of Dorothea Tanning's otherworldly collages of tissue, ink, and fabric scraps, largely assembled toward the end of her career. |
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Read on for more essential stories, including but not limited to Moo Deng’s art historical predecessors — the hippos who waddled so she could zoom. And we’re excited to invite you to our 15th-anniversary celebration on October 9 at Brooklyn’s Red Pavilion. Grab your tickets to a night of feasting, festivities, drag performances, and more. We hope to see you there! |
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— Lakshmi Rivera Amin, Associate Editor | |
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You’re currently a free subscriber to Hyperallergic. To support our independent arts journalism, please consider joining us as a paid member. | Become a Member |
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| Her sculptures for The Met’s facade commission look like they’ve always been there, Frankensteined in the bowels of the museum’s ethnographic collections. | Hakim Bishara |
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SPONSORED | | | Art Bridges believes art should be accessible to everyone! We provide financial and strategic support to museums of all sizes for collection loans, traveling exhibitions, and community programs that expand access to American art nationwide.
Interested in what we can do for your museum? Learn more today! |
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LATEST IN ART | | The Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History features the work of Baldwin-obsessed artist Sabrina Nelson on the centennial of the famed author’s birth. | Sarah Rose Sharp |
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SPONSORED | | | In these free online events, leading curators and artists from around the world will discuss exhibitions that have transformed their careers. Learn more |
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| Tanning’s practice shows that there is always another door to open, a new world to explore, and that art offers us another possible existence. | Natalie Weis |
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MORE ON HYPERALLERGIC | | “It’s about people with the courage and perseverance to insist that politicians and media tell the truth,” the artist told Hyperallergic. | Maya Pontone |
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| | Just as memes of the viral hippo range from sweet to spooky, art history is rich with terrifying, adorable, and bizarre depictions of the amphibious creatures. | Isabella Segalovich |
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IN MEMORIAM | Bill Beckley (1946–2024) Conceptual artist and art writer|Counterpunch Philomene Bennett (1935–2024) Kansas City painter, ceramicist, and printmaker | KCUR Andrew Hay (1944–2024) Scottish artist who famously depicted the 1984 miners’ strikes | Scotsman Frederic Jameson (1934–2024) Scholar of literature, architecture, film, and history | New York Times Hanif Kureshi (1982–2024) Indian artist who staged public art interventions | Hindu Terence Lane (1946–2024) Curator at the National Gallery of Victoria | Sydney Morning Herald James Magee (1946–2024) Artist known for outdoor installation in Chihuahuan Desert | El Paso Matters Ivan Vukadinov (1932–2024) Bulgarian encaustic painter | Bulgarian News Agency |
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You’re currently a free subscriber to Hyperallergic. To support our independent arts journalism, please consider joining us as a paid member. | Become a Member |
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