Whitney Biennial, Can You Hear Us?

Fascism is upon us, but a major US art show seems none the wiser. Also, how to make a protest sign, remembering Pat Steir, and more.

I hope you're reading this while waiting for the sparkly glue to dry on your DIY protest sign for today's No Kings marches. Check out Steven Weinberg’s fantastic comic this week for tips from artists and writers on how to make a great one. Reuse your “I Prefer My ICE Crushed” banner at less mainstream local actions to keep the pressure going.

This leads us to a weightier question looming over art and activism right now: “Where does socially engaged art fit into a world progressively hostile to independent thought?” That inquiry prompted Ed Woodham, a fixture of NYC's experimental scene and founder of Art in Odd Places, to explore the pernicious ways in which the frameworks of social justice are being subsumed by profit-making entities. Below, read about Woodham's workshop at the School of Visual Arts, where students learn not just how to identify this predatory pattern, but also how to "slip quietly through systems of oversight.”

This year's Whitney Biennial, meanwhile, seems far away from protests, subversion, or other strategies of speaking truth to power, according to Hyperallergic's Editor-in-Chief Hakim Bishara. I'll leave you with the first line of his review: “Say you just landed from Mars and walked straight into the 2026 Whitney Biennial. Would you be able to tell from the show that the country is teetering on the precipice of fascism?”

—Valentina Di Liscia, senior editor


Jordan Strafer, TALK SHOW (2026) (photo Hakim Bishara/Hyperallergic)

The Whitney Biennial Is for the Faint-Hearted

I got the sense that this biennial is hiding from the world today instead of reflecting on it. | Hakim Bishara


Ed Woodham, The Keepers - Penn Station (2024) (photo Paul Takeuchi)

Social Malpractice in the Age of Cultural Compliance

What happens when the language of social practice becomes a tool of the very systems it once hoped to challenge? | Ed Woodham


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In Conversation: Will Wilson

In partnership with Art Bridges, the Visual Arts Center of New Jersey presents works by Will Wilson alongside historic photographs by Edward Sheriff Curtis. On view through August 23.

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News

Pat Steir photographed by Eric Boman, 1990 (© Eric Boman Archive)

From Our Critics

Tracey Emin’s Cult of the Self

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Frida-Mania Hits MoMA

A collaboration with the Metropolitan Opera’s costume designer, this exhibition is an irresistible marketing opportunity at best. | Néstor David Pastor López

Beacons in a Grim World

In concurrent exhibitions by Kevin McNamee-Tweed and Tajh Rust, we find two artists who keep looking and discovering, despite dark circumstances. | John Yau


Art Books

Joel Meyerowitz’s photograph of Giorgio Morandi’s preserved studio in Bologna (©Joel Meyerowitz, courtesy Damiani Books)

Joel Meyerowitz on Photographing Giorgio Morandi’s Studio

“He was assembling a force field of geometric objects,” said Meyerowitz, whose book of images exploring the painter’s famous still lifes is being rereleased this spring. | Greta Rainbow

Before the “Global South,” Indian Modernists Dreamed of Solidarity

Historian Atreyee Gupta unravels the threads of catchall terms like “Global South” to trace the connections between Indian painters and anticolonial figures like Frantz Fanon. | Nageen Shaikh

Frank O’Hara’s Curatorial Eye

Though best remembered for his poetry, O’Hara championed artists like Helen Frankenthaler and organized several shows at the Museum of Modern Art during the Cold War. | Nathan Gelgud


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Thaddeus Mosley in 1957. (courtesy Karma and the estate of Thaddeus Mosley)

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Is There an Ethical Path for AI Art?

There is a destabilizing, dreamlike sense of awe in encountering something without knowing the answer to sanity’s most fundamental question: “Is this real?”


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Gabrielle Goliath (© Anthea Pokroy)

Art Movements: A Canceled Biennale Show Finds a New Home

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Remembering Calvin Tomkins, Rhoda Roberts, and Agosto Machado

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Comics

How to Make a No Kings Protest Sign

We asked artists, writers, and curators for practical tips on crafting a powerful protest sign. | Steven Weinberg