Good morning! Today, we report on a performance embodying trans Jewish self-discovery, an outdoor meal of Indigenous dishes, and a pro-Palestine protest in which artist Nan Goldin was one of 200 arrested. Who said art lives in a white cube?
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October 16, 2024

Good morning! Today, we report on a performance embodying trans Jewish self-discovery, an outdoor meal of Indigenous dishes, and a pro-Palestine protest in which artist Nan Goldin was one of 200 arrested. Who said art lives in a white cube?

More below, including reviews of Hettie Judah’s book on artist-mothers by Sophia Stewart and a show bridging Asian artists at home with those in diaspora by Sigourney Schultz. And before October slips through your fingers, bookmark our editors' dispatches from must-see exhibitions across New York, from Mala Iqbal’s frenetic urban scenes to Carrie Mae Weems’s new body of work.

— Lakshmi Rivera Amin, Associate Editor

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Centering Indigenous Storytelling Through the Culinary Arts

A meal hosted by Forge Project and I-Collective to mark the fall harvest focused on Indigenous foodways and community-stewarded knowledge. | Brianna L. Hernández

SPONSORED

American Indian Boarding Schools: The Michigan Anishinaabe Experience

Stamps Gallery’s panel discussion with Benedict Hinmon and Rochelle Ettawageshik supports its major exhibition of renowned black ash basket weavers.

Learn more

IN THE NEWS

EXHIBITION SPOTLIGHTS

Six New York City Art Shows to See Right Now

As mid-October rolls around we’re enjoying some serious and not-so-serious art by Carrie Mae Weems, Mala Iqbal, Lady Shalamar Montague, and others. | Natalie Haddad, Hrag Vartanian, and Hakim Bishara

SPONSORED

Glenn Ligon, Gustav Metzger, and Jason Rhoades in Their Own Words in New Books From Hauser & Wirth Publishers

Explore an anthology of writings by Glenn Ligon, a collection of interviews with Gustav Metzger and Hans Ulrich Obrist, and a facsimile sketchbook by Jason Rhoades.

Learn more

A Group Show Bridges Asia and the West Coast

Pacific Abstractions at Perrotin draws attention to Asian abstract artists and traces their legacy through contemporary diasporic artists on the West Coast. | Sigourney Schultz

MORE ON HYPERALLERGIC

Hettie Judah Confronts the Unwritten History of Artist-Mothers

Though more interested in taxonomy than analysis, the critic’s new book is most exhilarating when it maps a timeline of childrearing’s influence on artists. | Sophia Stewart

Marval Rex Shares a Tale of Trans Jewish Self-Discovery

The artist's newest performance, Rexodus: Out of the Closet, Into the Tribe, is “sort of a TED talk, but not a boring one,” Rex told Hyperallergic. | Matt Stromberg

FEATURED OPPORTUNITY

UNM Tamarind Institute – Workshop for Curators and Print Scholars

With support from Getty through its Paper Project initiative, 10 early-career curators and print scholars will participate in an immersive, hands-on workshop on fine art lithography in Albuquerque, New Mexico, May 19–23, 2025. Travel, lodging, most meals, local transportation, and workshop materials are covered; participants also receive a $250 stipend.
Deadline: November 1, 2024 | tamarind.unm.edu

See more in this month’s list of opportunities for artists, writers, and art workers!

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