Good morning. ☀️ Today, work from the Dutch Golden Age teaches us something about paintings and accuracy, photographs of a Polish Ghetto are donated, a critical look at the popular TV series WandaVision.
Jan de Baen’s “The Corpses of the De Witt Brothers” has become the dominant visual representation of the brothers’ lynching, but whether it deserves this honor is debatable.
The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston acquired photos by Jewish photojournalist Henryk Ross, who secretly documented the brutal living conditions in a Polish ghetto to leave a record of atrocities committed by the Nazis.
Dr. Anthony Fauci donated his 3-D model of COVID-19, which he used during briefings to lawmakers and the press throughout the pandemic, to the Smithsonian.
From open calls for art and writing to a number of exciting residencies and fellowships, a list of opportunities that artists, writers, and art workers can apply for this month.
In conjunction with the new exhibition Reconstructions: Architecture and Blackness in America, the free course creates further space to hear directly from Black designers, scholars, and artists.
We all need a little reminder to be kind sometimes and where better to do it than in your kitchen? This 100% linen artwork would look great alongside any of the other tea towels we carry at the Hyperallergic Store.
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