Have you voted yet? If you haven't and are able to, here's some handy information about voting early
Oct 28, 2020 • View in browser
Have you voted yet? If you haven’t and are able to, here’s some handy information about voting early or by mail, which no matter what anyone tells you, is safe and secure.
This week, there’s lots of art to dive into. From PS1’s landmark show of art made against the backdrop of mass incarceration, to a protest art show at the Jewish Museum, and our take on the Whitney’s blockbuster Vida Americana, many of our latest reviews illuminate the ways in which artists and curators can challenge narratives of exclusion.
Also worth checking out are deep dives into the long slept-on but fascinating work of artists Tishan Hsu, Andrew LaMar Hopkins, Feliciano Centurión, and of course, Amy Sillman.
Looking for a way to shake up your routine? Catch this dance workshop focused on Afrolatinx music history.
– Dessane Lopez Cassell, Editor, Reviews
Considering the "Carceral Gaze"
Tameca Cole, “Locked in a Dark Calm” (image courtesy MoMA PS1)
Tameca Cole, “Locked in a Dark Calm” (image courtesy MoMA PS1)
Nicole Fleetwood, lead curator of the exhibition Marking Time: Art in the Age of Mass Incarceration, defines “carceral aesthetics” as a visual language situated within circumstances of captivity, where freedom and unfreedom are not to be compared.
The exhibition, on view at MoMA PS1 through April 4, displays works by 35 artists “who are or have been incarcerated” and artists “who have not but exposed aspects” of the carceral state, and demonstrates the urgent need for a shift in culture.
Latest Reviews
Where Does Protest Art Fit in the “Canon” of Contemporary Art?
A Painter’s Visions of Créolité in 19th-century Louisiana
Sculptural Paintings That Channel the Static Soup of Television
Shifting the Modernist Center of Gravity to Mexican Muralists
The Visceral Intimacy of Amy Sillman’s Drawings
Lisa Corinne Davis Critiques Corporate America Through Abstract Art
The Exuberant Softness of Feliciano Centurión’s Textiles
A Dance Workshop Celebrating Afrolatinx Culture
Dance and Move Your Way Through Afrolatinx Music History
Closing Soon
Luchita Hurtado. Together Forever at Hauser & Wirth, through October 31
With its emphasis on never-before-seen painting and drawings, Luchita Hurtado. Together Forever. reveals the artist’s progressively sensual and abstract representations of the body, pushing the viewer to look much closer. – Valentina Di Liscia
Richard Mayhew: Transcendence at ACA Galleries, through October 31
Offering an up-close look at the artist’s brushstrokes, the show is a meditative space awash in incandescent pigment and texture. – Julie Schneider
Aubrey Levinthal: Vacancyat Monya Rowe Gallery, through October 31
What distinguishes Levinthal from her contemporaries is her ability to evoke a melancholic state that has been heightened by the COVID-19 pandemic. – John Yau
Billie Zangewa: Wings of Change at Lehmann Maupin, through November 7
Zangewa’s world-building is expansive as much as it is intimate, sharply invoking the material and the political to achieve more than representation. – Danilo Machado
Michael Berryhill: Solo Exhibitionat Kate Werble Gallery, through November 12
At a time when quirkiness often feels contrived, and a widespread attitude seems to all but insist that art deliver its content front and center, Michael Berryhill has developed a powerful, resistant, and important alternative. – John Yau
A Tribute to NYC's Queer Communities
A Tribute to Sylvia Rivera and the Spirit of NYC’s Old Meatpacking District
What's Going On?
New York Magazine has commissioned “I Voted” sticker designs from 48 artists, including David Hammons, Amy Sherald, and Barbara Kruger.
A dozen activists were detained after they protested against a pro-Trump rally in front of the Museum of the American Indian in Manhattan.
Following pressure from the artist-led group P.A.I.N, New York University will remove the Sackler name from its Graduate Biomedical Institute.
In a virtual roundtable, New York lawmakers heard bleak reports and urgent pleas for funding from leaders of arts organizations across the state.
From the Store
"Unicorn in Captivity" Patch
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