This week, special highlights and news from the 2022 Venice Biennale, Pompeii heats up with an exhibition of erotic art, the Toledo Museum of Art offers Impressionist masterpieces for sale to diversify its collection, Turkey hands persecuted arts philanthropist Osman Kavala a life sentence, and Chicago threatens to put a removed Christopher Columbus statue back on its pedestal, among other stories. We also have reviews of Thornton Willis, Eamon Ore-Giron, Cindy Ji Hye Kim, Pratt Institute's MFA thesis exhibition, and more. This week we also published the 200th installment of A View From the Easel, our popular series by artists in their own words. And have you noticed the trend of medieval art memes online? Alicia Eler takes a deep dive into the internet phenomenon. Lastly, through August, I'll be filling in for our editor-in-chief Hrag Vartanian, who's taking his first sabbatical. Enjoy this much-deserved recharge time, Hrag! — Hakim Bishara, interim editor-in-chief Become a member today to support our independent journalism. Your support helps keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Installation view of the United States Pavilion at the 2022 Venice Biennale, featuring Simone Leigh’s “Satellite” (center) and Facade (structure in the background) (photo Laura Raicovich/Hyperallergic) After expanding its collection with work made by a broadly representative group of American artists, SAAM will feature more than 130 of these recently acquired pieces in a new exhibition. Learn more. A fragment of a fresco depicting a nymph and a satyr (image courtesy Archaeological Park of Pompeii) Curated by Todd Bradway and presented concurrently at Acquavella’s NYC and Palm Beach locations, this group exhibition features landscape paintings by 28 contemporary artists. Learn more. Eamon Ore-Giron, “Talking Shit with Coatlicue” (2017), Flashe on linen, 79 9/10 x 65 inches (image courtesy Cary Whittier) Abstraction From a Different Origin Kealey Boyd on Eamon Ore-Giron: Competing with Lightning at the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver.Once Ore-Giron’s influences are understood as homegrown in the Americas and not secondary, derivative, or siloed, he tempts you to consider culture as a collective living concept, evolving through influences and destabilizing identity. Exhibition view of Pratt MFA Fine Art and Photography Thesis Exhibition (photo by Federico Savini; courtesy Pratt Institute) The work in the show mirrors recent trends in contemporary art, favoring an immersive presentation that transcends the rectangular parameters of traditional painting. Opening Up the Thingness of Painting John Yau Dana Lok: Part and Parse at Miguel Abreu Gallery. Submission from Alyson Champ, Saint-Chrysotome, Quebec, Canada A View From the Easel The 200th(!) installment of A View From the Easel highlights artist studios from Nashville, Long Island, Quebec, and Philadelphia. Artists Go DIY in the Desert Marya Errin Jones highlights how a tight-knit community of art entrepreneurs in Albuquerque launched their businesses in the wake of the pandemic. The Alaska museum is teaming up with a local writer and newspaper to help its community reconnect in a world changed by COVID. Learn more. Artists from across the Americas are collaborating on this open-access platform for radical learning and collective making in public spaces. Learn more. Meme from @artmemescentral (screenshot Natalie Haddad/Hyperallergic; image used with creator’s permission) What Makes Medieval Art So Meme-able? Alicia Eler looks at how medieval imagery has been remixed, captioned, and somehow reads as peak hilarious.I laid in bed staring at the tiny screen in my hands, laughing maniacally, posting it to my Instagram story and sending it to all my close friends. How could this seemingly arcane medieval imagery, previously confined to an art museum or, perhaps, a European crypt, feel so meme-able? Was it the meme’s imagery or the caption above it? I had to find out. Required Reading This week, Karl Marx was wrong about “primitive communism,” Zoomers say they’ve had enough of TikTok, and great news: Time travel is within the realm of possibility. A fun and elegant way to cushion drinks, these coasters are based on rugs dating from the 14th–19th centuries in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's collection. Shop more art-inspired coasters! |