Plus, what happened to the art in the Columbia student encampments?
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New York • June 18, 2024

For these last halcyon days of June, Hyperallergic editors Hakim Bishara and Valentina Di Lisca, along with staff writer Rhea Nayyar and longtime contributor AX Mina, have put together (with love and care) a list of five New York City art exhibitions to see before the end of the month. From an Upper East Side townhouse to a subway stop in Brooklyn, check out works by artists such as Niki de Saint Phalle, Chloë Bass, and Alejandra Seeber — and make sure you get in a round of mini golf while you’re at the Seeber show.


This city wears many faces and photographers never tire of capturing them. For a sensitive portrait of the outdoors, Eugene Richards’s book Remembrance Garden documents over 100 trips to Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn. And if you’d like to go green with envy, pay a visit to Loft Law: Photographs by Joshua Charow at Westwood Gallery, which looks at some of the few remaining protected artist lofts in New York.

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Five New York Shows to See Before June Ends

From Niki de Saint Phalle to the subway, time is running out to see some of our favorite art in the city. | Hakim Bishara, Valentina Di Liscia, Rhea Nayyar, and AX Mina

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North America’s largest Japanese film festival presents two weeks of contemporary movies at Japan Society in NYC, July 10–21.


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LOFTS & GRAVES

Grief and Healing at Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery

Eugene Richards’s sensitive photographs in Remembrance Garden are rooted in over 100 visits he took to the grounds after enduring COVID in 2020. | Maya Pontone

The New York Housing Law That Helped Sustain Artists

Any New Yorker who steps into Loft Law: Photographs by Joshua Charow will likely look with a lascivious gaze upon the few remaining protected artist lofts. | Alexis Clements

WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING?

  • Student artists who were part of the Columbia University solidarity encampments want to know why the school took their protest art into its archives.

  • Art dealer Barbara Gladstone has passed away at the age of 89. She was the founder of Gladstone Gallery, opening the first location in Manhattan in 1980.

  • For Hyperallergic’s 2024 Pride Month Series, we interviewed New York art world legends Su Friedrich, Holly Hughes, and Philip Yenawine.

  • Williamsburg Changes, But Toñita Still Reigns [hellgatenyc.com]

  • On June 21–23, the American Folk Art Museum and the Museum of the Moving Image are screening the three-day film series Radical Institutions and Experimental Psychiatry: The Legacy of Francesc Tosquelles on Film. [folkartmuseum.org]

  • Do you want to party with Tinashe and Julia Fox under the K Bridge on Pride Weekend? You should get a ticket to LadyLand Festival. [ladylandfestival.com]

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