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September 9, 2021 β’ View in browserGood morning. π§οΈ Today, the largest confederate monument in the South comes down, Strike MoMA is launching phase 2, and the visual culture of credibility. β Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief Who Owns the Earth?This group show proposes fresh paradigms of land ownership and art making in contrast to the rugged individualism of much early Land Art. | Louis Bury SPONSORED WHAT'S HAPPENING The contentious statue of Robert E. Lee on Richmond's Monument Avenue no longer stands. (via Flickr) Richmond's Robert E. Lee statue finally comes down. Its reclamation and transformation last year marked a historic moment in the nationβs reckoning with racial violence. Announcing itβs βPhase 2β of protests,Strike MoMA will kick off a week of activities and organizing leading up to a city-wide action on September 17. LATEST IN ART Mulholland Drive, Lushly Captured in PanoramaPhotographer Karen Halverson captures the historic highway in slow, dense detail. | Lauren Moya Ford SPONSORED 80 Works by Andy Warhol Are on View at the National Arts ClubPortfolios and prints by the iconic Pop artist take over the historic Gramercy Park club in New York City. Admission is free. Learn more. What Does It Mean to Exhibit Nature?Like a creeping scent, Sean Raspetβs exhibition works its way through the viewerβs psyche almost imperceptibly. | Caroline Ellen Liou MORE FROM HYPERALLERGIC After a Year Off, Experimental Film Returns to Toronto Film FestWith works about student protests in India, colonialism in South Korea, the history of trains in cinema, and more, this edition of Wavelengths is the festivalβs best in years. | Jordan Cronk How Our Visual Culture of Credibility is Being ManipulatedItβs not just what people say online, however, that matters. How they present themselves contributes to what I call a visual culture of credibility. | Charlotte Kent Photography and Its Hidden PowerPatrick Nathan suggests that capitalism benefits when human relationships are reduced to two-dimensional representations. | Melissa Holbrook Pierson Join Our CommunitySIgn up and join over 5,000 readers committed to sustaining independent arts journalism. Become a MemberFROM THE ARCHIVE Mark Dery writes: βIn its early years, eBayβs hit-or-miss search engine was conducive to close encounters of the absurd kind.β Revisit some of platform's strangest listings and how a French journalist came to own the 1951 address book of Surrealist photographer and painter Dora Maar.Mourning eBayβs Days as the Internetβs Kitschiest, Most Surreal MallThe passing of the old eBay is the last nail in the cyberflΓ’neurβs coffin. | Mark Dery An eBay Purchase That Revealed the Everyday Lives of French SurrealistsReading between the lines of contact information for friends, graphologists, psychoanalysts, and plumbers, Brigitte Benkemounβs Finding Dora Maar reveals a map of a bygone France. | Karen Chernick MOST POPULAR Kaws Is Terrible, But Thankfully ForgettableGraceful, Glistening Photos of Beachgoers on IpanemaΒ‘AdiΓ³s, ColΓ³n! Sculpture of Indigenous Woman Will Replace Mexico Cityβs ColumbusThe Lyrical and Funny Art of Erasing Words From BooksWhat βAll the Rapes in the Met Museumβ Tell Us About Sexual Violence in Art History
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