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December 28, 2022Good morning. π€οΈ What a tragedy it was to watch in real-time as Paris's Notre Dame cathedral went up in flames in 2019. Earlier this year, restoration experts onsite unearthed two mysterious sarcophagi that had been buried beneath the church for centuries. Now the sarcophagi have been opened, and we have details on the identities of the entombed. The researchers cared to note that one of the bodies had βextraordinarily good teethβ while the other had almost no teeth. Our staff reporter Rhea Nayyar has this one. Also today, rarely-seen Norman Rockwell drawings, a primer on Catholic symbolism in Western art history, and an effort to prettify NYC's Kafkaesque Port Authority Bus Terminal with public murals. Sadly, no mural can make Port Authority's restrooms smell any better. β Hakim Bishara, Senior Editor Norman Rockwell's Exceptional Drawings, Revealed for the First TimeExtensively illustrated, Norman Rockwell: Drawings, 1911β1976 is the first book dedicated to the artistβs prolific but largely private drawing practice. | Lauren Moya Ford SPONSORED The Public Theaterβs Under The Radar Festival Lights Up NYC This JanuaryThis adventurous theater festival returns in person with 36 artists and companies from nine countries performing at different venues across the city. Learn more. WHAT'S HAPPENING View of the lead sarcophagus surrounded by 19th-century heating flues (Β© Denis Gliksman, Inrap) Two lead sarcophagi found beneath the floor slabs of Notre Dame belonged to religious dignitary Antoine de la Porte and an unidentified aristocratic cavalier. Nine contemporary artists have taken over vacant advertising spaces at NYCβs aesthetically beleaguered Port Authority. Interested in Opportunities?Learn about the latest grants, fellowships, or residencies you can apply to in our monthly Opportunities newsletter. Update your newsletter settings to subscribe. SubscribeART & MORE How to Crack the Catholic Code of the Old MastersSuzanna IvaniΔ's new book Catholica: The Visual Culture of Catholicism is an essential primer on how Catholicism intersects with art history. | Daniel Larkin Two SWANA Artistsβ Vision for a City of the FutureDahlia Elsayed and Andrew Haik Demirjian imagine βMustaqbaaaahpolisβ as a city free from βextraction, time scarcity, and exploitation.β | Sarah Rose Sharp The Horror and Banality of American RacismChristy Chanβs Whoβs Coming to Save You? makes clear the perpetual nature of American bigotry. | Scotti Hill Support Hyperallergic's independent journalismBecome a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Become a MemberMOST POPULAR Taking Landscape Painting to New HeightsThe Understated Beauty of Decorated PaperβNepo Babyβ Memes Set the Internet AblazeLargest-Ever Vermeer Exhibition Opening at Rijksmuseum in 2023168 New Geoglyphs Discovered in Peru
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