With a broader, more international scope, this year’s gathering will offer fresh discoveries at every turn. New York January 15, 2020 With a broader, more international scope, this year’s gathering will offer fresh discoveries at every turn. Edward M. Gómez | Metropolitan Pavilion, January 16-19 Events Starting January 23, Women In Public will explore themes of place and wandering with a focus on the female experience, featuring screenings, a lecture, and a workshop. Valentina Di Liscia | Triangle Arts Association, January 23-26 The book club’s first selection is Angela Davis’s Are Prisons Obsolete?. The monthly gatherings will be held at Bluestockings Bookstore, Café, & Activist Center in Manhattan. Hakim Bishara | Bluestockings Bookstore, Jan 26, 5-7 pm SPONSORED News The Snowy Day, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, and 1984 are among the most popular books in the library’s 125-year history. Martha Rosler, Michael Rakowitz, and Laura Poitras are among the artists who call on the museum to separate itself from trustees with ties to private prison companies. The artist posted a statement next to the paused video, demanding two of the museum’s trustees divest from private prison companies and defense contractors. The Department of Cultural Affairs has launched the Create NYC Language Access Fund, awarding grants ranging from $5,000 to $25,000. Reviews In an age that celebrated the avant-garde and the so-called vie bohème, Swiss-born painter and printmaker Félix Vallotton deftly demonstrated that everyday, middle-class people were just as worthy of artistic representation. Angelica Frey | The Met, through January 26 What is striking about Jiha Moon’s work is that it does not quite fit into the New York art world’s current concerns with racial and ethnic identity because, as far as I can tell, this art world has never addressed issues of Asian cultural dislocation. John Yau | Derek Eller Gallery, through February 2 At the Metropolitan Museum, Making Marvels: Science and Splendor at the Courts of Europe makes clear Europe’s obsession with technological and scientific advancement between 1550 and 1750. Alejandra Ott | The Met, through March 1 SPONSORED An Evening with Stan Douglas at the Guggenheim, 1/21Don’t miss the chance to hear artist Stan Douglas discuss his recent work Doppelgänger (2019) on the occasion of the work’s US premiere. This new video installation conjures Douglas’s longstanding interests in doubling, alternate histories, and technologies of seeing, through the lens of quantum entanglement and science fiction. Buy tickets. Who would have thought that still lifes would create such a strong reaction? David Carrier | Yoshii Gallery, through January 25 “I’m an artist who prefers to paint things for people rather than for walls,” Neumann explained in 1971. Julie Schneider | Museum of Arts and Design, through Jan 26 At the Rubin Museum of Art, Truth to Power spotlights Alam’s tireless documentation of over 40 years of struggle and change in his native Bangladesh. Melissa Stern | Rubin Museum, through May 4 MoMA’s recent expansion embodies the tension between the ways in which cultural spaces can offer visitors comfortable narratives and on the other, how they can suggest the potential for radical inclusiveness by iteration, reinvention, and reinstallation. Laura Raicovich Forward this newsletter to a friend! If this email was forwarded to you, click here to subscribe Hyperallergic, 181 N11th St, Ste 302, Brooklyn, NY 11211 This email was sent to newsletter@newslettercollector.com. Manage your preferences to subscribe to our daily or weekly newsletters. Forward Preferences | Unsubscribe |