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New YorkJune 8, 2022 • View in browserWhat Documentaries to Catch at This Year’s Tribeca Film FestivalThis year’s iteration includes titles about AOC, the making of movie sex scenes, and what’s happened to the “stars” of older documentaries. | Dan Schindel SPONSORED WHAT TO CATCH THIS WEEK Heeseop Yoon, “Still Life with Eiffel Tower” (2022) (image courtesy the artist and Jay Oh) Heeseop Yoon: Agglomeration In Agglomeration, Heeseop Yoon commands an entire gallery of Korea Society with monochromatic still life drawings that incorporate architectural elements of major American cities. Ernesto Neto: Between Earth and Sky For more than four decades, Ernesto Neto has created immersive, socially attuned installations influenced by midcentury Brazilian vanguardists and the concept of biomorphism, in which architectural design resembles organic life forms. LaKela Brown: Second Growth LaKela Brown’s latest exhibition at 56 Henry focuses on the concept of “second growth,” or what blooms from an unnaturally cleared landscape. All-white sculptures and plastic reliefs take the form of still lifes, portraying African heritage vegetables like okra and corn. SPONSORED Human Hotel’s Employee Experience Platform Helps Create Culture, Not Just Measure ItOvercome Zoom fatigue from hybrid work culture and connect with colleagues in real life by coming together for monthly Home Dinners. Learn more. LATEST REVIEWS Marta Minujín Looks Ugliness Right in the FaceThe Argentine artist’s early Informalist works, conjuring decay and degradation, are difficult to look at but deserving of our gaze. | Valentina Di Liscia Siobhan Liddell Presents a Poem of a ShowHer latest exhibition is spare, strange, intentional in its moves, and economical in its means. | Cassie Packard Become a member today to support our independent journalism. Become a Member |
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