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September 14, 2021 • View in browserGood morning. ⛅ Today, two documentaries take on the Salvator Mundi fiasco, Marcel Dzama’s new subway mosaic goes on view in Brooklyn, and the fascinating afterlives of found photographs. — Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief There Are Now Not One But Two Documentaries About the Salvator Mundi SagaBoth The Lost Leonardo and Savior for Sale dig into how museums and galleries are not merely complicit with the unregulated art-industrial complex, but are necessary to it. | Bedatri D. Choudhury SPONSORED WHAT'S HAPPENING Strike MoMA initiated “Phase 2” of action with an activist-led teach-in last Friday, leading up to a city-wide protest on September 17. Criticism grows around the artist chosen to replace Mexico City’s Columbus monument, with hundreds of artists, writers, and curators voicing their opposition in an open letter. LATEST IN ART This Brooklyn Subway Station Is a Portal Into Marcel Dzama's Surrealist UniverseThe permanent installation in Williamsburg features anthropomorphic moons and suns, watching over wild, celebratory scenes. | Hakim Bishara SPONSORED An Exhibition at Krannert Art Museum Delves Into Louise Fishman’s Works on PaperRemaking the abstract expressionist gesture and minimalist grid, the drawings on view at KAM at the University of Illinois center the artist’s identities as Jewish, feminist, and lesbian. Learn more. The Indigenous and Female Roots of Harvesting FlaxChristine Borland looks at one of the oldest known forms of fabric in the world. | Anna Souter A Sculptor Who Helped Us Find Community Among StrangersHis sculpture is what I remember the most from a childhood visit to the hospital. It brought levity and joy to a place that otherwise felt sterile and frightening. | Kevin Ritter The Silent Lives of Found PhotographsThe mind works desperately to fill the gaps in these lost stories. | Kealey Boyd Support HyperallergicContribute today and join a community over 5,000 readers committed to sustaining independent arts writing. Become a MemberCOMICS Art World Subversion Has Its LimitsDepends on who's doing the subverting. | Guy Richards Smit MOST POPULAR In Japan, Enormous Straw Sculptures Pop Up After Annual Rice HarvestHow Judy Baca Redefined the Intersection of Art and ActivismVermeer Restoration, Finally Complete, Reveals a Painting Within a PaintingWith a Medieval Flair, Spring Break Art Show Celebrates the EccentricUnearthed Interviews Shed New Light on Truman Capote
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