November 5, 2022Good Morning. ⛅️ If you've been online this week, you'll know that Elon Musk's takeover of Twitter has been one of the main topics of conversation, partly because it represents a changing of the guard at one of the most popular social media sites. What this means for news and media is unclear, particularly since Twitter has not only been a useful watercooler for journalists, like yours truly, and politicians, but also because digital artists (especially those who make and sell NFTs) have been a vocal presence on the platform. In some ways, Twitter has always been an outlier — for instance, it is the only social media platform that openly allows nudity, and even porn. I've never heard of artists who dip their toes into those topics on Twitter complaining about censorship, unlike on Meta's Facebook and Instagram platforms, or even LinkedIn and newcomer TikTok. If you're looking for a concise summary of the problems facing Musk, I recommend Nilay Patel's "Welcome to hell, Elon" article over at The Verge. We'll definitely be keeping our eye on things to see how this will impact creative communities. Now, let's talk art. Check out our reviews of Pachi Muruchu by John Yau, N.V. Parekh by Mallory Cohen, Wangechi Mutu by Catherine Yang, and Bernd and Hilla Becher by Julia Curl. I also recommend Valentina Di Liscia's excellent consideration of the contentious history of a Mexican Modernist cave house, which is part of a current exhibition at the Noguchi Museum in Queens, NY. And you've probably noticed how much work we've been doing to improve the quality of our already excellent opinion pieces. This week, the Met's deal with the Greek government is dissected by scholar Yannis Hamilakis, who writes, "no member of the Greek archaeological and museum community has come out in support of it, and to my knowledge, no specialist on Greek archaeology and heritage anywhere in the world has defended it." It's a must-read. But before you dive into this week's email, I wanted to ask if you'd support us by joining our membership program. We rely on member support to fund our team of editors and writers and can't continue to do this without your support. If you appreciate what we do and want to see in continue, please consider becoming a member today. All contributions go directly towards funding our editorial team, freelancers, and ensuring we can continue to bring you the quality journalism you’ve come to expect. — Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief Bernd and Hilla Becher’s Misunderstood OeuvreCritics who have deemed the photographer couple’s work outmoded and detached are simply wrong. | Julia Curl SPONSORED School of the Art Institute of Chicago’s 2022 Art Auction and A Happening Auction PartyProceeds from the art auction and benefit party will provide critical support for student scholarships. Learn more WHAT'S HAPPENING
Support Hyperallergic's independent journalismBecome a member today to help us to continue publishing quality arts journalism and criticism that is free and available to all. We need your support! OPINION Sorry, But This Is Not “Repatriation”The Met’s deal with the Greek government to “repatriate” billionaire Leonard Stern’s Cycladic art collection is not what it seems. | Yannis Hamilakis I Am Not a “Gypsy”Often, there is a disconnect between the museum world and Roma representation. One exhibition at the National Gallery of Art proves that it doesn’t have to be this way. | Cristiana Grigore Finding Strength as an Artist With Chronic IllnessWhen the profits from every sale are dumped right back into medical costs, what does the balance of surviving and creating even look like? | Denise Zubizarreta REVIEWS Reclining Men Reading Radical BooksArtist Pachi Muruchu merges his radical beliefs and resistance to colonialism with a complex sense of color and the moods it can conjure and inflect. | John Yau N.V. Parekh and the Rise of Studio Photography in East AfricaIsolde Brielmaier’s book I Am Sparkling illustrates how Parekh’s studio became a place for sitters to assert their agency in a changing world. | Mallory Cohen 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 SPONSORED EXHIBITION AND EVENT ANNOUNCEMENTS
ARE WE SCARED YET? 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 Dead People Prefer Photography, ApparentlyShannon Taggart’s book SÈANCE pictures the supernatural occurrences in the lives of Spiritualists, seekers, mediums, and other occult practitioners. | Sarah Rose Sharp SPONSORED ART EDUCATION ANNOUNCEMENTS
ALSO.... The Contentious History of a Lost Cave House in Mexico CityThe disappearance of “Casa Cueva,” a model of which is on view at the Noguchi Museum, pitted two great artists against each other in one of the most divisive episodes in Mexican contemporary art history. | Valentina Di Liscia In Venice, the Roma People Take Center StageThe history of the Roma and Sinti in Poland and Europe is that of marginalization, exclusion, misrepresentation, and persecution. | Viktor Witkowski Opportunities in November 2022From residencies, fellowships, and workshops to grants, open calls, and commissions, our monthly list of opportunities for artists, writers, and art workers. 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. FROM THE STORE Byzantine Tesserae Silk ScarfDazzle them with color — gold, silver, and a brilliant rainbow assemblage of glass — on this stunning silk scarf. Its pattern is derived from tiny tiles thought to have come from a Byzantine mosaic created at some point between the 6th and 15th centuries. |