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Hyperallergic

Hyperallergic

Sensitive to Art & its Discontents

Jesse Krimes

Posted inArt

In Large-Scale Quilts, Jesse Krimes Memorializes Those Subsumed by Incarceration

Avatar photo by Billie Anania December 14, 2020August 31, 2021

American Rendition interweaves materials cherished by current and formerly incarcerated people into contemplative scenes.

Posted inArt

Making Art Against the Backdrop of Incarceration

Avatar photo by Erica Cardwell October 21, 2020December 14, 2020

In a year of perpetual change, Marking Time demonstrates the urgent need for a shift in culture, one where crisis need not be the charge for moving towards a better world.

Posted inArt

Artists Imagine New Monuments and “Otherwise Worlds”

Avatar photo by Thea Quiray Tagle August 4, 2020November 5, 2020

In Building a Better Monument, nine artists remind us of the work that anti-racist monuments and movements must do: memorialize the fallen, while stoking the righteous anger needed for transformation.

Posted inArt

Formerly Incarcerated Artists Visualize Healing

Avatar photo by Jasmine Weber March 12, 2019March 12, 2019

The OG Experience amplified the voices most directly affected by mass incarceration, putting the spotlight on artists thoughtfully grappling with the prison industrial complex.

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Hyperallergic is a forum for serious, playful, and radical thinking about art in the world today. Founded in 2009, Hyperallergic is headquartered in Brooklyn, New York.

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