Happy Juneteenth!
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June 19, 2025

Happy Juneteenth! As we mark 150 years since enslaved people in Texas claimed their own freedom, artist Damien Davis examines the material afterlives of slavery in the art world, where visibility is often used as a placeholder for reparations and justice. He asks us: “What does it mean to build an artistic practice inside a funding ecosystem that still profits from what it refuses to repair?” Read his answer below.

And if you’re in New York City this weekend, mark your calendars for artsy Juneteenth events recommended by Staff Writer Rhea Nayyar and Editorial Intern Mary Ghebremeskal, from Black improv to zine-making sessions. While you’re at it, check out a new book on 30 monuments to Black Americans you can visit around the city, plus Reviews Editor Natalie Haddad on Glenn Ligon and the latest report in our Pride series on the lesbian artist behind Central Park’s iconic Bethesda Fountain. 

— Lakshmi Rivera Amin, Associate Editor

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Juneteenth Is the Story of a Freedom Withheld

In the art world, as in America at large, spectacle is welcomed more readily than structural change. | Damien Davis

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11 Juneteenth Events Around New York City 

Workshops inspired by contemporary artists, performances, comedy, food, screenings, and so much more. | Rhea Nayyar and Mary Ghebremeskal

30 NYC Monuments of Black Americans You Should Know

From Harriet Tubman to Duke Ellington, the city boasts a wealth of public art honoring Black individuals, the subject of a timely new book. | Maya Pontone

The Queer History of Central Park’s Bethesda Fountain

Artist Emma Stebbins may have modeled her 1873 bronze angel for the popular landmark after her partner, actor Charlotte Cushman. | Isa Farfan

For Glenn Ligon, Language Is Material

An exhibition of Ligon’s well-known works at the Brant Foundation shows how language fails us and confronts us with silence. | Natalie Haddad

FROM THE ARCHIVE

How Do We Photograph Freedom? A Conversation with Leigh Raiford

The relationship between Black liberation and photography reveals many things about our notions of freedom and the limitations of image making as a form of common truth. | Hrag Vartanian

What We Can Learn From a Vanished Mural of Racist Violence

John Wilson’s 1952 mural “The Incident,” is a salient meditation on the horrors of lynching and though physically lost, the mural endures in archival images, preliminary sketches, and studies. | Jasmine Weber

IN MEMORIAM

Leonard Lauder (1933–2025)
Art collector and cosmetics heir | Hyperallergic

Joel Shapiro (1941–2025)
Sculptor of emotive figures | Hyperallergic

Arthur Folasa “Afa” Ah Loo (1985–2025)
Samoan-American fashion designer | Associated Press

Gordon Baldwin (1932–2025)
British potter and ceramic sculptor | Guardian

Graham Gund (1940–2025)
Art collector and Boston architect | New York Times

Beuford Smith (1941–2025)
Photographer who chronicled Black life | New York Times

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