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April 28, 2022 β’ View in browserGood morning. π€οΈ Today in the news, the Toledo Museum of Art is selling works by CΓ©zanne, Matisse, and Renoir to diversify its collection, the San Francisco Art Institute gets a grant to preserve its Diego Rivera mural, and a judge in Florida orders a man who defaced an LGBTQ+ mural to write an essay about hate crimes. We also have reviews of Pratt Instituteβs MFA thesis exhibition, Thornton Willis, and much more. β Hakim Bishara, interim editor-in-chief Become a member today to support our independent journalism. An Insightful Look Into the Lives of Women Over 50The Second Half: Forty Women Reveal Life After Fifty is a celebration of the strength and insight of women from across the world. | Lauren Moya Ford SPONSORED NEWS TODAY Ancient Earth shows Brooklyn, NY, today (left) and during the Devonian Period around 400 million years ago (right) (screenshots Valentina Di Liscia/Hyperallergic) See what your neighborhood looked like millions of years ago with Ancient Earth, a new online tool. The Toledo Museum of Art is deaccessioning paintings by CΓ©zanne, Renoir, and Matisse in a move towards diversifying its collection. The San Francisco Art Institute receives a $200K grant from the Mellon Foundation to support the preservation of its Diego Rivera mural. A judge ordered a man who defaced LGBTQ+ mural to write an essay on the Pulse shooting and his views on why hate crimes occur. SPONSORED School of the Art Institute of Chicago Launches 50+ Art and Design Summer CoursesArtists from around the world can join online and in-person courses at one of the most influential art and design schools in the United States. Learn more. LATEST IN ART Artβs Conventional Signifiers Are No Longer UsefulPrattβs MFA Thesis Exhibition features immersive presentations that transcend the parameters of traditional painting. | Julia Curl SPONSORED Shuli SadΓ© Uses Augmented Reality to Reveal the Birds of Battery Park Cityβs WaterfrontThe site-specific installation βBirdβs-Eye Viewβ celebrates Manhattanβs coastline and the wonders of migration patterns with digitally-created birds. Learn more. Thornton Willis's Aversion to PerfectionThe openness of Willis's art suggests that he does not believe that painting needs to attain visual perfection; painting is a process that does not search for closure. | John Yau SPONSORED Acquavella Galleries Presents Unnatural Nature: Post-Pop LandscapesCurated by Todd Bradway and presented concurrently at Acquavellaβs NYC and Palm Beach locations, this group exhibition features landscape paintings by 28 contemporary artists. Learn more. MORE FROM HYPERALLERGIC Over 40 Years Later, The Wobblies Is as Relevant as EverThe 1979 documentary, recently restored and now returning to theaters, is a vital record of the early years of the Industrial Workers of the World. | Dan Schindel In Nature, a Poet Finds a Visionary LanguageThe poems of Cody-Rose Clevidence are shot through with a sense of natureβs vitality and with the possibility that the numinous, even the divine, may inhere in that nature. | Mark Scroggins IN MEMORIAM Enoch Kelly Haney (1940-2022) David Lea (1939-2022) Jerry Uelsmann (1934-2022) MOST POPULAR Pompeii Heats Up With a New Exhibition of Erotic ArtCaptivating Highlights From the 2022 Venice BiennaleIn Historic First, Simone Leigh and Sonia Boyce Win Venice Biennaleβs Golden LionsTurkish Philanthropist Osman Kavala Sentenced to Life in PrisonA Working-Class Artist Is Something to Be
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