As the US presidential election draws near, we looked into where Vance and Kamala Harris’s running mate Tim Walz stand on the arts.
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September 21, 2024

Climate change activists who protest at museums should be punished by up to 10 years in prison — that’s what Republican Vice Presidential candidate JD Vance proposes when he’s not busy spreading xenophobic rumors about Haitian immigrants. As the US presidential election draws near, we looked into where Vance and Kamala Harris’s running mate Tim Walz stand on the arts. Staff Writer Maya Pontone reports.

Meanwhile, Philadelphia’s University for the Arts files for bankruptcy, while the Getty Museum apologizes for an over-the-top fireworks display in Los Angeles that left several people wounded. But there’s also some good news, like an upcoming traveling exhibition of Amy Sherald’s work, a new Latinx art book fair happening in New York this weekend, and the restoration of the Dutch Room at Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, which was plundered in a famous heist some 30 years ago.

Other highlights this week include a glimpse into the lives of professional henna artists in the New York area, impressions from María Magdalena Campos-Pons’s participatory “Procession of Angels for Radical Love and Unity” through Manhattan, and excellent art, film, and book reviews by our contributors and staff.

Finally, we’re excited to invite you to celebrate Hyperallergic’s 15th anniversary with us at the Red Pavilion in Brooklyn on October 9. Priority tickets are available now for Hyperallergic Members. To join us as a member, visit hyperallergic.com/membership.

— Hakim Bishara, Senior Editor

Where Do Tim Walz and JD Vance Stand on the Arts?

Hyperallergic looked at the VP candidates’ track records in the culture sector, from Vance’s proposed penalties for climate protesters to Walz’s investment in Minnesota’s heritage. | Maya Pontone

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NEWS THIS WEEK

IN NEW YORK

María Magdalena Campos-Pons Leads a Procession of Hope

With stops at sites of significance to Black and Cuban New Yorkers, the artist’s walking performance captures the essence of her practice: harnessing the collective toward a unified vision. | Valentina Di Liscia


Latinx Art Book Fair Launches at New York University

The inaugural fair, spanning books, zines, posters, and academic publications, is organized by the university’s Latinx Project. | Isa Farfan


The Unsung Labor of New York’s Henna Artists

“I don’t think many people see henna as an actual art or service that is in demand or valued,” said 29-year-old henna artist Sabeen Marghoob. | Uzma Afreen

FROM OUR CRITICS

How Ukraine Refashioned Modernist Art

In the Eye of the Storm conveys how Ukraine came to be a thriving center of avant-garde art in the early decades of the 20th century. | Michael Glover


Women Artists Take Over Tate Britain

What’s clear in Now You See Us is that the artists were excluded from the canon because of sociopolitical factors, not artistic merit. | Olivia McEwan 


Riva Lehrer’s Portraits Bring Out the Beauty in Difference

The artist has long been fighting for people with disabilities or marginalized identities, with sincerity, courage, and fierce love for the monsters in us all. | Lori Waxman 

Pia Arke’s Archives of Arctic Colonization

Arke’s art calls forth memories of Greenlandic Inuit life and reinscribes them with the reality of the body against its representation by White colonizers. | Ela Bittencourt


Rachel Martin Serves Up a Communal Meal of Art

Martin’s capacity to weave cultural traditions together in her distinctive artistic voice translates into inventive drawings that center the joy of communing, confiding, and sharing meals. | Lakshmi Rivera Amin 


Without Content Doesn’t Mean Empty

Lacey Black and Aubrey Levinthal share a talent in their paintings for bringing inward and outward states together until they are one. | John Yau 

WHAT WE'RE READING

A Sympathetic if Incomplete Portrait of Alberto Giacometti

Though it glosses over his misogyny, Michael Peppiatt’s biography reflects Giacometti’s uncanny ability to capture the energy of ancient art in a modern format. | Bridget Quinn


Charting a Better World Through Malcolm X’s New York

A new essay collection contextualizes the activist’s life through the physical spaces that nurtured him, like Yuri Kochiyama’s apartment-turned-community center. | Shameekia Shantel Johnson


Challenging the Visual Story of Mass Incarceration

With The Warehouse, James Kilgore and Vic Liu counter the tendency to reduce people to stereotypes or mere statistics. | Greta Rainbow

ANNOUNCEMENTS

A VIEW FROM THE EASEL

A View From the Easel

This week, artists pluck color schemes from their tropical surroundings, sketch sigils to calm the mind, and turn a subway commute into an artistic ritual. | Lakshmi Rivera Amin

Want to take part? Check out our submission guidelines and share a bit about your studio with us through this form! All mediums and workspaces are welcome, including your home studio.

MORE ON HYPERALLERGIC

Six Art Shows to Visit in Philadelphia This Fall

Keep election-season woes at bay with masterworks of Black portraiture, musings on a Persian epic poem, Mickalene Thomas’s first international traveling solo show, and more. | Isabella Segalovich 


Toronto Biennial of Art Promises Joy Amid Precarity

The third edition of the free citywide event features artists including Cecilia Vicuña and Pamila Matharu. | Priya D’Souza McDonough


How Lucas Cranach the Elder Went From Making Icons to Agitprop

The artist would develop a distinctly Protestant imagery that replaced sacredness with utility, functioning essentially as propaganda minister for Martin Luther. | Ed Simon


What’s the Difference Between Private and Public Museums?

The answer to this seemingly straightforward question reveals a few common misconceptions about our nation’s institutions. | Elaine Velie


Required Reading

This week, yoga and nationalism, opulent Tibetan mandalas, the environmental costs of ChatGPT, Earth’s temporary “mini-moon,” and much more. | Lakshmi Rivera Amin


Opportunities in September 2024

Residencies, grants, and open calls from the City of Melbourne, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and more in our monthly list of opportunities for artists, writers, and art workers.

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