Gabrielle Goliath, Richard Avedon, “Chicken Linda”

A Jackson Pollock sold for a record-breaking $181 million at Christie's auction. Should it matter to anyone?

I skipped the New York art fairs this season. Went to none, not even the so-called "anti-fair" fairs. It was a choice, a kind of detox. And guess what? I don't feel like I missed anything. Soon after, a spate of auctions culminated in the record-breaking sale of a Jackson Pollock for $181 million at Christie's. I wasn't there either, and I had 181 million reasons to not care.

Instead, I kept thinking of pioneering performance artist Linda Montano, who's now 84. She invited our contributor Taliesin Thomas into her home-shrine in Upstate NY, welcoming her in a devotional chicken costume. God bless "Chicken Linda." I urge you to read this profile.

I was also thinking about Gabrielle Goliath's exhibition Elegy, now on view at a church in Venice after the South African culture minister banned it from the country's pavilion for political reasons. I'm glad to report that the video installation only benefits from the alternative location and reaches deep into the heart. Aruna D'Souza was there too and wrote an excellent review.

Oh, and did I tell you that Hyperallergic won the New York Press Club journalism award for Noah Fischer's comic "A Prospect Heights Ghost Story"? Supported by the Economic Hardship Reporting Project, it was the final part of a series that focused on the artists, activists, and organizers on the front lines of the housing justice movement in NYC. Congrats to Noah, and thank you all for your continuous support. Enjoy reading and have a wonderful weekend.

—Hakim Bishara, editor-in-chief


The Divine Powers of “Chicken Linda”

Pioneering performance artist Linda Mary Montano gave me a tour of her home-shrine and a glimpse into her lifelong spiritual quest through art. | Taliesin Thomas

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News


From Our Critics

A New Richard Avedon Documentary Lets Him Down

Director Ron Howard is a gun for hire, and it shows in this conventional documentary about the famed photographer.

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Gabrielle Goliath Sounds a Call to Action in Venice

With “Elegy,” the South African artist proposes that grief is a necessary tool for building solidarity. | Aruna D’Souza

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Martin Wong’s Brick Monument to Popeye

He repurposed bygone cartoon characters and gave them new life with a queer, magpie sensibility, which still pops two decades after his death. | Brian Karl

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The Black American Artists Who Dazzled Post-War Paris

An exhibition in Chicago celebrates the painters, writers, and performers who sought freedom in the city of light and left an indelible mark on its history. | Daria Simone Harper

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Still in Sound
Sound artists compose sonic and multisensory interpretations of abstract paintings for this new exhibition at the Clyfford Still Museum in Denver, Colorado.

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Features

The Painted Book Cover Is Back

The recent shift toward figuration on book covers may reflect a broader desire for physical presence — proof of the artist’s hand in the digital age. | Tara Anne Dalbow

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12 Art Books to Kick Off Summer

A novel lampooning the art world, Megan O’Grady’s meditation on art and living, the man who defined color in the dictionary, Nan Goldin’s tender photo essay, and more.

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Human Connection Cuts Through Technology at Focus Art Fair

The show, New York’s only art fair dedicated to contemporary Asian art, featured uniquely tender subversions of this year’s topical theme. | Isa Farfan

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Opinions

I’m a Chicana Curator. This Is Why I Removed Cesar Chavez From My Show

The decision to remove a portrait of the labor leader from “Chicano Camera Culture” at The Cheech was not one I took lightly. | Elizabeth Ferrer

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Community

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  • In Memoriam — we honor F. John Sierra, a champion of Chicano art, Valie Export, an Austrian feminist artist, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, a painter and Civil Rights luminary, and others.
  • A View From the Easel — artist Lavett Ballard organizes exhibitions and transforms wood in the former chemistry lab of a high school-turned-community center.
  • Required Reading — a mysterious LA guerrilla artist, Whistler and gold paint, remembering Totó La Momposina, the art of photographing queer nightlife, AI agents turn Marxist, and more.

From the Archive

A Prospect Heights Ghost Story

The final part of our NYC Housing Stories series focuses on its creator, who was displaced from his Brooklyn brownstone. | Noah Fischer

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