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January 24, 2023Good morning. π€οΈ In today's news, a university gallery in Arkansas pulls an exhibition following student complaints about works that incorporate Ku Klux Klan motifs. It was primarily students of color who found the works racially insensitive, despite the best intentions of the White artist who made them. There might be a lesson there for those who pressured the National Gallery of Art to open its much-disputed Philip Guston retrospective without proper contextualization. Also today, we check in on the Orlando Museum of Art, which is now under probation following its fake-Basquiats fiasco, and we speak with members of the Croatian art collective What, How & for Whom, who were pushed out of their roles as directors of Vienna's Kunsthalle for reasons still unclear. You can also enjoy our reviews of Chicago's Drawing Biennial, Nathalie Djurberg and Hans Bergβs wacky exhibition on women's sexuality, David Drakeβs pottery at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and more. β Hakim Bishara, Senior Editor Art Collective Ousted From Viennese Museum Speaks OutβWe wanted Kunsthalle Wien to address multiple Viennas, not just the old established one,β said What, How & for Whom, whose contract at the museum was not renewed. | Avedis Hadjian SPONSORED An Introduction to UCI Langson Institute & Museum of California ArtImagine, if you will, a dynamic classroom filled with stunning works of art that provoke stimulating debate, dialogue, and conversationβ¦ Join us on our journey to realize the vision for a new facility while we probe the question, βWhat is California Art?β LATEST NEWS A photo of Dominique Simmons's "KLAN BRIDE" (2023) (image provided by Jace Bridges, crop Rhea Nayyar/Hyperallergic) An exhibition at Arkansas Tech was taken down after several students of color deemed Dominique Simmonsβs artworks βracially insensitive.β Native leaders object to the sale of antique Lakota objects from the Battle of the Little Bighorn listed in the Guns of History Auction. The American Alliance of Museums puts the Orlando Museum of Art on probation after its exhibition of disputed Basquiat paintings. SPONSORED Advance Your Creativity With Dynamic Grad Programs at University of the ArtsMaster new skills, set new goals, and grow as an artist. Learn more. FROM OUR CRITICS Shining a Light on a Dark Chapter of American PotteryHear Me Now: The Black Potters of Old Edgefield, South Carolina brings awareness of both Edgefieldβs awesome artistry and poet-potter David Drakeβs odds-defying life to a sizable audience. | Ekin Erkan A Darkly Whimsical Take on Feminine SexualityNathalie Djurberg and Hans Bergβs exhibition A Pancake Moon made me reflect on my experience of freezing my eggs. | Jennifer Remenchik Nazafarin Lotfi Dreams Up a Borderless FutureThe artist wedges a sharp critique, and in many ways, erodes the foundations on which borders are built. | Erin Joyce Support Hyperallergic's independent journalismBecome a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Become a MemberART FAIRS & BIENNIALS Chicagoβs Drawing Biennial Has Something for EveryoneEach artist has one to three examples, in such a broad range of styles that if you canβt find something of interest here, thatβs probably on you. | Lori Waxman Two Nordic Art Fairs Look Beyond GeographyDown Πorth: North Atlantic Triennial and CHART suggest a model of regional exhibition-making that teases out threads of particularity to refute essentialism common in contemporary art. | Leah Triplett-Harrington MOST POPULAR The New MLK Sculpture Is Officially a MemeAbstract Art Did Not Begin With Paul CΓ©zanneBarbara Chase-Riboud Breathes Life Into BronzeWhat Makes a Good Arts District?My Comics Collaboration With DALL-E
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