July 15, 2022 • View in browserGood morning. 🌤️ Today, Philadelphia Museum of Art workers organize a massive rally, a New York gallery and artist are accused of profiting from Black trauma, the new generation of land artists in the US, an artist census in Los Angeles, contemporary art in Las Vegas, and more. Also, John Yau writes about the drawings of Rick Barton and Julia Curl reviews Justine Kurland's SCUMB Manifesto, in which she slices the male canon to pieces. And congratulations! The world population is expected to reach eight billion in November. But will it continue growing? Find out the answer in Required Reading. — Hakim Bishara, interim editor-in-chief Discovering Rick BartonI am not alone when I say that I had never heard of Barton before his exhibition opened at the Morgan Library & Museum. | John Yau SPONSORED Stream Media Works by Korean, European, and West Asian Artists on Watch and Chill 2.0International audiences have free access to the media collections of MMCA Korea, Sharjah Art Foundation, and ArkDes through this subscription-based art streaming platform. Learn more. THE LATEST LAAC Newspaper (photo by and courtesy Josh Schaedel)
Support Hyperallergic's independent journalismBecome a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. COMMUNITY & ECOLOGY Chronicling Contemporary Art in Las VegasAn online platform creates a community around southern Nevada’s transitory creative life, but there’s a problem with its name. | Brent Holmes New Generation of Land Artists Embodies a Call for ActionFrom sites to studios to systems, the nature of earthworks has changed since the 1960s and ’70s. | Lynn Trimble ALSO ON HYPERALLERGIC Justine Kurland Cuts the Male Canon to PiecesIn SCUMB Manifesto,Kurland slices up her collection of photo books by men to create collages that subvert the male gaze. | Julia Curl Required ReadingThis week, the global population approaches eight billion, Hermès is coming to Brooklyn, how to live longer, and much more. | Hakim Bishara IN OUR STORE Joan Miró “Woman, Bird, Star” Recycled Tote BagWith a design based on one of the Spanish artist’s last works, the real beauty of this tote is that it’s environmentally friendly, being made of 100% recycled materials. TRANSITIONS Harold Ancart is now represented by Gagosian Gallery. Shirin Fozi was named Paul and Jill Ruddock Associate Curator in the Department of Medieval Art and the Cloisters at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Loie Hollowell is now represented by Jessica Silverman Gallery along with Pace Gallery. Eileen Jeng Lynch was appointed director of curatorial programs at the Bronx Museum of the Arts. Amanda Sroka was appointed senior curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. James D. Thornton was elected board chair at the Baltimore Museum of Art. Virginia K. Adams, Sam Callard, and Paul L. Oostburg Sanz were named trustees. AWARDS & ACCOLADES The Frist Art Museum is the 2022 recipient of the Foundation for Contemporary Arts’s Ellsworth Kelly Award. The $45,000 grant will support a solo exhibition of artist Shahpour Pouyan. The New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) announced the recipients and finalists of the NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship program; 99 artists across New York State were awarded a total of $661,000. A list of recipients can be found here. Talia Beale, Malu Luecking, Shao Qi Tan, Antoinette Yetunde Oni, and Qiongzi Zhu are the recipients of this year’s MullenLowe NOVA Awards, which highlight emerging talent from the graduating class of Central Saint Martins in London. |