Something about 2024 warped our collective sense of time, making it feel like three years jammed into one.
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December 30, 2024

Something about 2024 warped our collective sense of time, making it feel like three years jammed into one. Remember Kamala’s defeat in the US presidential election? Seems like a distant memory, but it happened just a few weeks ago. Trump’s assassination attempt, the Paris Olympics, the Whitney Biennial, and the Venice Biennale? That was all this year, somehow.

Throughout this barrage of events, I got to work with excellent writers on compelling essays and opinion pieces. One of those was Coco Fusco’s story about a sinister letter she once received from Minimalist Carl Andre, who died in January. His death resurfaced the decades-long accusations that he had a hand in the death of his former wife, Cuban-American artist Ana Mendieta in 1985 (he was acquitted in a non-jury trial in 1988). In October, I worked with Haitian-American artists Rejin Leys and Vladimir Cybil Charlier on their uncompromising response to Trump and JD Vance’s xenophobic remarks about their community. More recently, Latin American art scholars Juanita Solano Roa and Blanca Serrano Ortiz de Solórzano wrote a scathing rebuke of banana brand Chiquita’s cynical sponsorship of Art Basel Miami Beach. In a groundbreaking exposé, Moustafa Bayoumi shed light on the dark practice of “atrocity photography” in prisons and black sites across the world. There are many more memorable pieces from this year, including religion scholar Emma Cieslik’s essay on the political nature of the Vatican’s Nativity scenes, lacemaker and art historian Elena Kanagy-Loux's defense of grandmotherly crafts as a legitimate art discipline, philosopher and critic David Carrier’s analysis of what went wrong at Pittsburgh’s Andy Warhol Museum, art historian Pamela Karimi on what she calls the “gestural feminism” of Iranian women, and Sháńdíín Brown and Zach Feuer on the “settler gaze” plaguing the Indian Market in Santa Fe, New Mexico. 

I myself got to write reviews of the 2024 Whitney Biennial, Armory Show, Lee Bul’s Met Museum façadecommission, Jenny Holzer at the Guggenheim Museum, Ai Weiwei in Brooklyn, and more.

And today, we’re proud to present the 2024 edition of the 20 Most Powerless People in the Art World. It’s a list that celebrates individuals and groups in our art community who’ve been left in the shadows of the powerful. And there’s much more, as usual.

Please join as a Hyperallergic Member today to help us keep up the work.  Happy Hanukkah and Happy New Year!

— Hakim Bishara, Senior Editor

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The 20 Most Powerless People in the Art World: 2024 Edition

Our annual list recognizes and celebrates those in our community who are left in the shadows of the powerful.

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Hyperallergic’s 10 Hottest Social Media Videos of 2024

Millions watched our videos this year, which delved into the magical alchemy of Rembrandt’s paint, French tweens pulling pranks with highlighters, protests outside the Met Gala, and more. | Isabella Segalovich

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The legendary heroine was once widely recognized with fried ricotta pancakes during holiday celebrations. What’s responsible for her erasure? | Isabella Segalovich

FROM OUR CRITICS

Ai Weiwei Knocks Down the Building Blocks of Empire

His toy-brick masterpieces are tributes to anyone terrorized and brutalized by the world’s great powers and their proxies. | Hakim Bishara

Making Food Into an Art in Muslim-Majority Cultures

Focused on the SWANA region, The Art of Dining transforms meals into narrative experiences, showing how food connects people not only to their roots, but also to each another. | Tamar Boyadjian

Mary Ann Peters’s Obscured Memorials to Buried Histories

More context could have resulted in greater connections between viewers and the tantalizing glimpses of profound and difficult human experiences in Peters’s art. | Brian Karl

MEMORABLE PIECES FROM 2024

That Time Carl Andre Wrote Me a Letter 

He copyrighted the letter and ended it with “for your eyes only,” as if to say, don’t even think of showing this to anybody. | Coco Fusco

How Do We Haitian?

Despite the venom Trump and Vance direct toward our community, Haitians are not the impoverished, alien invaders they want us to be. | Rejin Leys and Vladimir Cybil Charlier

The Banal Evil of Atrocity Photography

In the dark genre of self-reported atrocity photography, governments take pictures of their crimes and file them away in an act of simultaneous remembering and forgetting. | Moustafa Bayoumi

My Grandma’s Doilies Are Not a Joke

When will art institutions finally pay respect to our foremothers’ artistry? | Elena Kanagy-Loux

Can Santa Fe’s Indian Market Free Itself From the Settler Gaze? 

Despite its role as a hub for Native artists, SWAIA hasn’t entirely moved past its origins in White settler obsession with Native authenticity. | Sháńdíín Brown and Zach Feuer

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