The vice presidential debate this week was so tepid and dull that we couldn’t even put together a decent meme roundup in its aftermath.
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October 05, 2024

The vice presidential debate this week was so tepid and dull that we couldn’t even put together a decent meme roundup in its aftermath. But maybe it’s for the best. History has shown us what catastrophes occur when politicians get a bit too “interesting.”

Meanwhile, there’s no shortage of drama in our art world: Climate activists who “souped” a van Gogh in London are sentenced to prison, the soon-to-shutter Rubin Museum of Art is facing repatriation calls regarding Tibetan and Himalayan items in its collection, and a hurricane decimates the art district of Asheville in North Carolina.

Also this week, Coco Picard’s excellent comics review of a Yoko Ono survey in London, Julia Curl on Robert Frank, Lorissa Rinehart on Robert Rauschenberg, John Yau on Joshua Hagler, and Claudia Ross on Divya Mehra.

In books, an art detective mystery about a once-lost Paul Gauguin painting, Elizabeth Catlett’s trailblazing activism, and the little-known story of an artist-led farm at the famed Black Mountain College.

Finally, we’re throwing a party for our 15th anniversary in Brooklyn on Wednesday, October 9. The program includes six magnificent drag performers, DJ music, and gourmet Mediterranean food from Tanoreen in Bay Ridge! We’d love to celebrate with you. Get your ticket here.

— Hakim Bishara, Senior Editor

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Yoko Ono’s Quiet Destructions

Music of the Mind at Tate Modern was a memory bank of seven decades of the avant-garde artist’s career. | Coco Picard

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NEWS THIS WEEK

IN AND AROUND NYC

How Robert Frank Pushed the Boundaries of Photography

A refreshing retrospective demonstrates that, far from being overshadowed by The Americans, Frank was only getting started with it. | Julia Curl 


An Art Inhabited by Higher Spirits

In his paintings, Joshua Hagler seems to follow a path where logic and convention are left behind in favor of visions and dreams. | John Yau 


15 NYC Art Shows to See in October

Start off the month with thoughtful shows by a range of artists, from established names like Nan Goldin to newcomers like Rachel Martin and trailblazers like Elizabeth Catlett. | Natalie Haddad, Hrag Vartanian, Hakim Bishara, Lisa Yin Zhang, Lakshmi Rivera Amin, Natalie Weis, and AX Mina


10 Shows to Visit in Upstate New York This October

Kristen Wells’s absurdist cardboard worlds, Susan Wides’s ecological abstractions, Alannah Farrell’s loaded tableaux, and more. | Taliesin Thomas

HAPPENING IN LA

An Intimate Autobiography of Robert Rauschenberg

In many ways, Autobiography, a small Rauschenberg exhibition in Santa Barbara, is self-explanatory, and this is its great strength. | Lorissa Rinehart 


Divya Mehra Makes the Machinery of History Visible

The artist’s works force theatrical encounters with metaphors for colonization or display the same violence actualized against discrete bodies. | Claudia Ross


10 Art Shows to See in Los Angeles This October

Jane Dickson’s hazy roadtrip hymns, Joe Brainard’s whimsical collages, David Lloyd’s curious collaborations with AI, crosscurrents of Asian diasporic art, and more. | Matt Stromberg


Corita Art Center, Dedicated to the “Pop-Art Nun,” Gets New Home in LA

The artist, educator, and activist fused social justice and spirituality in her bold, vibrant works. | Matt Stromberg 

BOOKS WE'RE READING

How a Gauguin Painting Went From Real, to Lost, to Fake

A new book is an art detective mystery, a behind-the-scenes look at provenance research, a psychological analysis, and a critical commentary on the art market. | Michelle Young


The Farm at Black Mountain College You Didn’t Know Existed

A new book centers the voices of those whose hands built the historic school and whose dreams shaped its programs, all of which involved a little-known farm. | Nancy Zastudil 


Elizabeth Catlett’s Steadfast Radicalism

In the catalog for her Brooklyn Museum show, scholars explore how the Black revolutionary artist lived out her beliefs after her exile from the United States. | Alexandra M. Thomas


Five Poems for Vincent

What started as a catalog essay about van Gogh’s little-known passion for poetry became a suite of poems for the Dutch painter. | Michael Glover 

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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12 Art Shows to See in Chicago This Fall

Usher in autumn with Leasho Johnson’s aqueous abstraction, iconic Windy City protest art, John Akomfrah’s elegy for the environment, stunning works on paper by Haegue Yang, and more. | Lisa Yin Zhang and Isabella Segalovich


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Required Reading

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Opportunities in October 2024

Residencies, grants, open calls, and jobs from Amherst College, apexart, Tamarind Institute, and more in our monthly list of opportunities for artists, writers, and art workers.

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