Good morning. ⛅ Today, the Vatican's sci-fi Nativity is creating a stir, Mimi Wong considers how rece
Dec 18, 2020 • View in browser
Good morning. ⛅ Today, the Vatican’s sci-fi Nativity is creating a stir, Mimi Wong considers how receiving a grant as an art writer impacted her work, and artist Pablo Helguera explains Tania Bruguera’s continuing fight for freedom of expression in Cuba.
If you’re not already a member, today is a great day to join us and ensure the strength of independent journalism in the arts. Your support helps make this work possible.
– Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief
Pablo Helguera on Tania Bruguera
The artist and activist Tania Bruguera (photo via Tania Bruguera's Facebook, used with permission)
The artist and activist Tania Bruguera (photo via Tania Bruguera's Facebook, used with permission)
For the first time, Pablo Helguera publishes his 2015 essay on Tania Bruguera’s attempt to stage a public performance on free speech.
In an introduction to the essay, Helguera writes:
While Bruguera is not the only artist being attacked by the Cuban authorities during this moment, I think the issues described here might be helpful to shed light on the larger debates around art and freedom of expression in Cuba today.
In Other News
Latest Reviews
The Silly, Sexy, and Serious Wigs That Made History
A More Personal View of the Killing of Jamal Khashoggi
An Elderly Painter Rediscovers His Passion in a Moving Animated Short
More from Hyperallergic
Good Fictions: Remembering Peter Wollen
What Winning a Grant for my Art Writing Meant to Me
Most Popular
Support Hyperallergic
Did you enjoy this issue?
If you were forwarded this newsletter and you like it, you can subscribe here.
Hyperallergic Media
181 N 11th St., Suite 302, Brooklyn, NY 11211