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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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
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SPONSORED
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Stamps Gallery’s panel discussion with Benedict Hinmon and Rochelle Ettawageshik supports its major exhibition of renowned black ash basket weavers. Learn more
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IN THE NEWS
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EXHIBITION SPOTLIGHTS
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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
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SPONSORED
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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
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Pacific Abstractions at Perrotin draws attention to Asian abstract artists and traces their legacy through contemporary diasporic artists on the West Coast. | Sigourney Schultz
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MORE ON HYPERALLERGIC
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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
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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
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FEATURED OPPORTUNITY
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UNM Tamarind Institute – Workshop for Curators and Print Scholars
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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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You’re currently a free subscriber to Hyperallergic. To support our independent arts journalism, please consider joining us as a paid member. |
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