Feature
Saad Khan Archives the Detritus of Censored Culture
Since 2019, the New York-based archivist has cultivated a digital and physical menagerie of censored mass media spanning South Asia to the Maghreb known as Khajistan.
News
Djerassi board members Michael Molesky and Alexander Maxwell Djerassi, nephew of Ghislaine Maxwell, visited the notorious private island in 2011.
Opinion
His new article taps into deep frustrations about affordability, but I throw my lot in with those making change, rather than moving out.
Features
Through research and collaboration, a feminist art collective reclaims the place of alternative spiritualities in art history.
Margaret Curtis’s deconstruction of American myth, quotidian objects by Marsden Hartley, and Wendy Red Star’s bead-inspired installation are among our picks.
Residencies, fellowships, grants, and open calls from Banff Centre, the Vilcek Foundation, and more in our monthly list of opportunities for artists, writers, and art workers.
Join us on April 15 for a conversation with social justice artist and recent MacArthur “Genius Grant” winner Tonika Lewis Johnson and Hyperallergic Senior Editor Valentina Di Liscia.
“Asking for Raphael loans is like asking for the firstborn heir of the royal family,” Carmen C. Bambach, curator of the first comprehensive show of the master in the US, told Hyperallergic.
I got the sense that this biennial is hiding from the world today instead of reflecting on it.
The gleeful subversiveness of Duchamp at MoMA, the first major US show on Raphael at The Met, and exhibitions on spirituality, the body, fashion, and more.
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Features
Through research and collaboration, a feminist art collective reclaims the place of alternative spiritualities in art history.
New York Newsletter
Read Aruna D’Souza’s take on the Iranian artist. Plus, Duchamp is coming to MoMA, Upstate art this month, and more.
Book Review
The art critic and former painter reinvents the genre’s well-trod territory in her debut novel, which makes heartbreakingly acute the consequences of teacher-student relationships.
Art Review
Learning about Cha was like a secret revelation handed down among Asian American artists and poets. This show helped me appreciate her more clearly.
Community
“My favorite phrase lately is ‘mouthfeel,’ which is used in relation to food and drink,” said the East Village artist. “I’m thinking about that textural quality as a parallel to the paintings.”
News
The president's threats to destroy the Islamic regime have escalated to include the entire population of Iran and the millennia of history and culture preceding it.
Daily Newsletter
A show rewrites the narrative of the farmworkers' movement, a permanent home for Ruth Asawa in San Francisco, the museum reviving New York's downtown performance scene, and the discovery of a 7.9-inch Ancient Roman phallus.
Art Review
In Cinga Samson’s haunted paintings, we do not know what we are looking at, or where we are.
Opinion
The Leslie-Lohman is figuring out how to collect art while connecting with the basic needs of the city's queer community.
Feature
The decorous fashion show has evolved into a rambunctious and all-inclusive pageant of New York’s crafters, artists, and street performers.
News
Complementing the artist’s various public works throughout the city, her family-run estate's forthcoming gallery comes on the centenary of the artist's birth year.
Books Newsletter
Art books we're reading this spring, a deep dive into Frank O'Hara's curatorial gig at MoMA, and more.