If you were looking for more proof that nothing is sacred anymore, check this out: The oldest-known marble tablet of the Ten Commandments is heading to auction at Sotheby's.
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November 14, 2024

If you were looking for more proof that nothing is sacred anymore, check this out: The oldest-known marble tablet of the Ten Commandments is heading to auction at Sotheby’s. That’s not even the worst part. It was also used as a paving stone for 30 years. Staff Reporter Rhea Nayyar has more exciting details below.

In other news, San Francisco’s Contemporary Jewish Museum announces a “sabbatical” for at least one year to address its financial woes, while pro-Palestine activists protest outside a World Jewish Congress gala at New York’s Museum of Modern Art.

Also today, sociologist Erin E. O’Connor on how Hurricane Helene’s disruption of mining activity in North Carolina affected the field of glass art, war and diaspora in the work of late artist Yong Soon Min, Tiffany Shlain and Ken Goldberg’s homage to trees in a Los Angeles exhibition, and the second installment of Noah Fischer’s comics series about the artists and activists fighting for housing affordability in NYC. And there’s more, as usual.

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Protesters Take to MoMA During World Jewish Congress Gala

One activist was taken into custody during the action, which targeted the organization’s support for Israel amid its attacks on Gaza. | Isa Farfan

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The Political Was Personal for Yong Soon Min

An exhibition showcases the late artist’s lifelong commitment to considering the relationship between the unremitting Korean War and her own diasporic identity. | Sigourney Schultz

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The Living End: Painting and Other Technologies, 1970–2020

MCA Chicago’s new exhibition delves into the persistence of painting, challenging its longstanding traditions and mythologies to show a medium in constant reinvention.

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Two Artists Seek Out the Ancient Wisdom of Trees

Tiffany Shlain and Ken Goldberg pay homage to the ongoing human quest for knowledge by documenting its evolution through timelines inscribed in fallen tree fragments. | David S. Rubin

Erwin Wurm’s Slapstick Social Critique

The apparent humor in Wurm’s current retrospective in Vienna camouflages a cultural and historical pessimism that recurs in his art. | Andrea Scrima

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Intermedia + Digital Arts MFA at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County

Full funding, including bi-weekly stipends and summer fellowships, is available. Apply by February 1, 2025, to be considered for financial support.

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Hurricane Helene Was a Wake-Up Call for Glass Artists

Studio glass practitioners pride themselves on rejecting industry, but the cyclone laid bare the movement’s entwinement with mining. | Erin E. O’Connor

NYC Housing Stories: Betty Yu and Emily Gallagher

Meet the artists, activists, and organizers on the front lines of the housing justice movement in New York City. Part two of a series. | Noah Fischer

IN MEMORIAM

Alexander Anufriev (1940–2024)
Russian painter of angels | Washington Post

Frank Auerbach (1931–2024)
German-British figurative painter | Hyperallergic

Emma Calder (1959–2024)
British animator and illustrator | Guardian

Walter Dahn (1954–2024)
German photographer, painter, and sound artist | Sprüth Magers

Bruce Degen (1945–2024)
Illustrator for the Magic School Bus series | New York Times

Sabina Khorramdel (1991–2024)
Tajik artist, writer, and critic | Hyperallergic

Judith Jamison (1943–2024)
Dancer, choreographer, and artistic director of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater | Philadelphia Inquirer

Benedict Rubbra (1938–2024)
British abstract and portrait painter | Guardian

Daniel Spoerri (1930–2024)
Swiss experimental and assemblage artist | Artnews

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