March 8, 2023Good morning. 🌤️ Happy International Women’s Day! On this occasion, all of our articles today are by and about women in the arts. Hall W. Rockefeller writes about the quiet struggles of women artists who must balance their practice with caregiving for their ailing parents. Olivia McEwan grapples with important questions about women-only shows, and Sanoja Bhaumik reviews a new book about pioneering feminist filmmakers. Sarah Rose Sharp has two pieces: one about artist Katie Shulman’s bodily fiber sculptures and the other about Chloé's new Artemisia Gentileschi-inspired fashion line. Rhea Nayyar reports about a Pussy Riot art auction and an Idaho College that removed artworks about abortion, while Elaine Velie writes about Alina Bliumis's paintings of terrifyingly beautiful abortion-inducing flowers. Long live the women who speak up and fight back, and down with the patriarchy! — Hakim Bishara, Senior Editor Why Is No One Talking About the Artist-Daughters?We need more support for the women who have to balance an art practice with caregiving for their ailing parents. | Hall W. Rockefeller SPONSORED The Bruce Museum Announces Grand Reopening After $67M ExpansionThe new building in Greenwich, CT, triples the space for art and science exhibitions and includes community spaces like an auditorium, café, and education wing. Learn more. WHAT'S HAPPENING Nadya Tolokonnikova (Pussy Riot) in a balaclava with a giant lit matchstick next to her wax candle "Fragile Masculinity Genesis" (2023) (image courtesy Pussy Riot)
SPONSORED Stanford Arts Hosts a Virtual Conversation With Cecilia Alemani and Darren WalkerPart of the university’s “Artists on the Future” series featuring renowned artists and cultural thought leaders, this online event is free and open to the public. Learn more. LATEST REVIEWS A Women’s History of Global AbstractionAction, Gesture, Paint is a pointed challenge to the common definition of Abstract Expressionism: White, male, American artists. | Olivia McEwan Film as a Terrain of Feminist StruggleFeminist Worldmaking and the Moving Image reminds us that feminist visions are abundant, and feminist critique is generative. | Sanoja Bhaumik Do you value Hyperallergic?We need your support to continue publishing quality arts journalism and criticism. ARTIST SPOTLIGHTS Painting the Terrifying Beauty of Abortion-Inducing FlowersIn Plant Parenthood, Alina Bliumis portrays the plants that have been used to terminate pregnancies for hundreds and thousands of years. | Elaine Velie Katie Shulman’s Delicate Dance With FiberIf the body as a point of inspiration was once an innocent or abstract notion for the fiber artist, her more recent work can no longer avoid the body as battleground. | Sarah Rose Sharp IN OUR STORE Hilma af Klint “Childhood” Recycled Tote BagKeep the esoteric art of Hilma af Klint always at your side with this luminous tote featuring “No. 2, Childhood” (1907) from her Paintings for the Temple cycle, one of her most expansive and well-known bodies of work. |