OctoberΒ 20, 2022 β’Β View in browserΒ Good morning.Β π€οΈΒ You can try to ignore it, but AI is becoming an inevitable part of art-making today. In some ways it's exciting, and in others, it's frightening. Today we report on how AI learning machines can finish your artwork for you or let famous artists like van Gogh and Hilma af Klint paint your hometown with convincing results. You can expect more coverage of these quickly developing technologies and the ethical problems they bring up. And speaking of van Gogh, Rebecca Zorach writes in an op-ed today that critics of the activists who threw tomato soup at his painting in London last week should stop clutching their pearls and worry more about the lives of future generations. And if you missed it, watch how our Editor-in-Chief Hrag Vartanian tackles this issue, answering the question: Why museums? β Hakim Bishara, Senior Editor Β Β Β Whoβs Afraid of Rosa Bonheur's Sexual Identity?In the wake of a new retrospective, some are casting scrutiny on the way in which aspects of the artistβs biography are being characterized. | Jasmine Liu Β Β SPONSORED Pre-Raphaelite Power Couple Makes Their US Debut at the Delaware Art MuseumA Marriage of Arts & Crafts: Evelyn & William De MorganΒ in Wilmington, Delaware, showcases paintings and ceramics by two underrecognized yet influential artists. Learn more. Β Β WHAT'S HAPPENING A quick snap of the mural in progress from around four years ago. (photo courtesy Pirate Studios)
Β Β Β SPONSORED SITE Santa Fe PresentsΒ Endless Journey, a Solo Exhibition by New Mexico-Based Artist Max ColeThis show surveys over six decades of Coleβs ongoing career, featuring works that highlight her lifelong investigation of rhythmic, repetitive lines and composition. Learn more. Β Β LATEST REVIEWS Georgia OβKeeffe, ReframedA new exhibition at the Denver Art Museum renders the artistβs persona through newly identified photographs. | Sommer Browning Β Β SPONSORED CCS Bard Offers Expansive Resources and a Transformative Education in Curatorial StudiesStudents in this two-year graduate program in New York enjoy access to the Hessel Museum of Art, the CCS Bard Library and Archives, and opportunities to curate in practice. Learn more. Β Β How John Mitchell Shakes Up PortraitureMitchell is conscious of the many profound changes occurring in our society, and the urgent need to challenge old tropes. | John Yau Β A Difficult but Necessary Exhibition About RoadkillJeanne Dunning's works attest to widespread human disregard for animal life, and their finished form insists on both their deadness and how it happened. | Lori Waxman Β Β SPONSORED Cey Adams Celebrates 40 Years of Art and Design at Boston University Art GalleriesAdamsβs first career retrospective features over 60 works that showcase his wide-ranging practice, from graffiti and photography to painting and collage. Learn more. Β Β MORE FROM HYPERALLERGIC What if Van Gogh Could Paint Your Hometown?Neither Picasso nor Hilma af Klint ever visited the Faroe Islands, but in a new exhibition, a museum uses AI to imagine how these artists would have painted their archipelago. |Β Jasmine Liu Β The Lasting Appeal of Wittgenstein's βPicture TheoryβIf Ludwig Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-PhilosophicusΒ radically redefines the scope of philosophy, it has proved irresistibly suggestive to literary theorists, poets, and artists. | Mark Scroggins Β Β Support Hyperallergic's independent journalismBecome a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Β Β IN MEMORIAM Mario AlgazeΒ (1947-2022) Jack BroganΒ (1930-2022) Tigre Mashaal-LivelyΒ (1985-2022) Β Β |