Today in the news, a mock student encampment for the set of the TV series FBI: Most Wanted at a New York college campus draws outrage for its derisive portrayal of the protests for Gaza.
Today in the news, a prop student encampment for the set of the TV series FBI: Most Wanted at a New York college campus draws outrage from pro-Palestine activists who say it mocks the student movement for Gaza. Maya Pontone has the story. Meanwhile, authorities in Egypt detain a political cartoonist who was critical of the government’s electricity cuts amid record heat, and a free, online catalogue raisonné of the whimsical work of American modernist painter Florine Stettheimer is announced. Also today: Erin L. Thompson reviews a new book on the illicit trade of human remains online and Julia Curl unpacks the history of product photography, now the subject of an exhibition at the Met Museum in New York. — Hakim Bishara, Senior Editor | |
|
|
|
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 |
|
|
|
| Students and activists denounced the set for FBI: Most Wanted, which features tents, climate signage, and deliberately misspelled words. | Maya Pontone |
|
|
|
LATEST REVIEWS | | Damien Huffer and Shawn Graham’s These Were People Once mines the illicit online sale of human remains and the social media algorithms that enable it. | Erin L. Thompson |
|
| | The Real Thing at the Met Museum shows that the advertising tactics of commercial studios were in dialogue with avant-garde art in the 1920 and ’30s. | Julia Curl |
|
|
|
SPONSORED | | | Taking place both online and in person, the auction provides additional support to artists selected for the Golden Residency Program. Learn more |
|
|
|
ALSO ON HYPERALLERGIC | | The artist is celebrated not only for her compositions exploring the opulence and culture of NYC, but also for proudly breaking down social barriers. | Rhea Nayyar |
|
| | Ashraf Omar had published several cartoons that took aim at Egypt’s electricity cutbacks and the government’s economic strategy. | Maya Pontone |
|
|
|
FROM THE ARCHIVE | | We shouldn’t need a law explicitly declaring “No one can own dead people,” though perhaps that would help. We need enforcement of the laws that we do have. | Shawn Graham and Damien Huffer |
|
|
|
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 |
|
|
|
Hyperallergic, 181 N 11th St, Suite 302, Brooklyn, NY 11211, United States
|
|
|
|
|