October 31, 2022Happy Halloween! 🎃 Let's hope the midterm election results this week in the United States don't give us all a fright. If you're eligible to vote, please exercise your right to do so. Last Friday, we learned that the Museum of Modern Art, that bastion of the ultra rich and their courtiers, has been hanging a Piet Mondrian painting upside down for 75 years. Guess what, they're going to leave it that way. This week, you can check out some sculptural treats. In honor of the Day of the Dead, Catrinas sculptures that portray American and Mexican artists and superstars, including Georgia O’Keeffe, Frida Kahlo, Marilyn Monroe, and Diego Rivera, are up at Rockefeller Center in midtown Manhattan, while those who are in upstate New York can check out the Wangechi Mutu installation at Storm King Art Center. For those trick or treating today, stay safe and have a frightfully delightful night. — Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief The Spookiest Images of Early PhotographyFrom creepy Victorian post-mortem portraits to Félix Nadar's horrifying shot of the Paris Catacombs, we’re definitely never sleeping again. | Sarah Rose Sharp SPONSORED Get an MFA in Art in the Los Angeles Arts DistrictUSC Roski School of Art and Design’s MFA Art program is an intensive two-year, studio-based pedagogy designed to maximize individual practices focused on critical dialogue, electives from across the university, and regular studio visits with Roski’s renowned faculty, guest artists and scholars, and group critiques with student peers. José Guadalupe Sánchez, California Xochitl (performance documentation) (2021) LATEST NEWS Catrinas sculptures are installed at the Top of the Rock and throughout Rockefeller Plaza. (photo courtesy Tishman Speyer)
SPONSORED From Student to Stage: An Exhibition Designer Lights Up The ArenaNora Neely, a recent graduate of the George Washington University’s Exhibition Design program, now builds arena stages. Learn more. HAPPENINGS ON THE COASTS In Praise of the Humble PrintThis year’s International Fine Print Dealers Association Print Fair features work so eye-catching, it's easy to forget the medium is sometimes disregarded in the art world. | Elaine Velie Your Concise Los Angeles Art Guide for November 2022Your list of must-see, fun, insightful, and very Los Angeles art events this month, including Lauren Halsey, Henry Taylor, William Kentridge, Cauleen Smith, and more. | Matt Stromberg SPONSORED Full Funding Is Available for Graduate Students in Art and Design at the University of IllinoisA variety of scholarships, fellowships, and assistantships are available for candidates pursuing advanced degrees in Studio, Graphic, or Industrial Design; Art Education; and Art History. Learn more. NATURE AND THE MATERIAL WORLD Wangechi Mutu Is Urgently Optimistic About the FutureMutu’s imposing sculptural characters magnify her decades-long collage practice as sites of cultural, psychological, and sociopolitical transformation. | Catherine Yang Phoebe Adams Memorializes the EphemeralAdams's imaginative recreation of our everyday surroundings in her paintings is a reminder of how fleeting and transmutable the material world can be. | John Yau MORE FROM HYPERALLERGIC Pierre Clémenti, Rebel With a CauseThe French director made his films with his own earnings as an actor, not for monetary gain or widespread recognition but as a form of self-realization. | Julia Curl Required ReadingThis week, Elon Musk trolls, getting your news from TikTok, cacti music, and more. | Hrag Vartanian and Lakshmi Rivera Amin Support Hyperallergic's independent journalismBecome a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. NEW IN THE STORE Greek Vase Tea TowelThis eye-catching tea towel shows off a detail from an ancient Greek terracotta volute-krater (ca. 450 BCE). Used for mixing water and wine, the vase features a narrative scene illustrating a battle between the Greeks and the fabled Amazons. |