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New YorkFebruary 9, 2022 • View in browserWalking for ArtThe visual stutter of Mary Lum’s artwork invites us to enunciate the staccato repetitions of sounds we hear and see when we walk through the city. | John Yau SPONSORED Contemporary Iranian Art That Doesn’t Shy Away from PoliticsFighting the Western perception of Iran as a hostile war zone, Mohammed Afkhami began collecting artworks by Iranian artists to highlight the country’s rich cultural production. | Ksenia M. Soboleva SPONSORED The Morgan Library & Museum Presents Gwendolyn Brooks: A Poet’s Work In CommunityNow on view in New York City, this exhibition celebrates the life and work of American poet Gwendolyn Brooks, the first Black author to win a Pulitzer Prize. Learn more. The Troublesome History of America’s Public MonumentsA new exhibition at the New-York Historical Society revises the assumption that the current debate about controversial public monuments is in any way new. | Jasmine Liu Pompeii’s Long-buried Frescoes Come Back to LifePompeii in Color at New York University presents a scintillating close read on the fresco art of the lost city’s villas. | Sarah Rose Sharp Become a member today to support our independent journalism. CLOSING SOON Zorawar Sidhu and Rob Swainston, "July 4" (2021), multi-color woodblock print on paper. Paper dimensions: 57.5 x 42.25 inches (courtesy the artists and Petzel, New York) Zorawar Sidhu and Rob Swainston: Doomscrolling Dennis Osadebe: Inside Out Sholeh Asgary: By The Mouth of a Wadi Shannon Ebner: FRET SCAPES On Delegitimization and Solidarity: Sisiku AyukTabe, the Martin Luther King Jr. of Ambazonia, the Nera 10, and the Myth of Violent Africa
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