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WeeklyOctober 1, 2022 • View in browserMuseum workers across the United States have had enough! Staff at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Museum of Modern Art are protesting what they say is unfair pay and substandard working conditions, while the Whitney Museum continues to suffer from staff shortages, which is no surprise considering visitor services staff earn only $17/hour with no benefits and little support. The hypocrisy of the art field is on full display during these protests as workers struggle to make ends meet while museums flaunt expensive buildings, big endowments, and host galas that their own staff would never be able to afford — for instance, in 2015 the Whitney Museum unveiled its $422M structure by starchitect Renzo Piano. As protesters at the Brooklyn Museum recently chanted, "Ancient Art, Not Ancient Wages." And you can see a snippet from that protest on our TikTok channel. When we started Hyperallergic 13 years ago, conversations about museums, labor, and social justice were hardly circulating outside of a few small circles, and the institutions themselves continued to accept unpaid interns and greatly underpay staff. Hyperallergic was the first to consistently champion the perspective of workers, and that is something we have always been proud of. Now, the debate about pay and equity is roaring across the field. Are things changing? Slowly, but it certainly appears that they are. We will continue to monitor this and continue to report on the changing landscape for museum and cultural workers. In other stories, artists are amplifying the voices of Iran's protests, the fake art industry is booming online, and I pulled in the press releases from five blue-chip art exhibitions in Manhattan and found out that AI is pretty good at interpreting art based on those texts — you have to see the results for yourself. And be sure to check out the adorable otters of art history. — Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief Hannah Hill, “Sex-Worker Still Life” (2020) (courtesy and © Hannah ‘Hanecdote’ Hill) The Feminist Revival of EmbroideryOnce denounced as “women’s work” with no artistic merit, embroidery is experiencing a revival, with a feminist punch. Despite the lack of appreciation for a medium that is often viewed as “women’s work,” contemporary female artists like Judy Chicago, Orly Cogan, and Hanecdote use embroidery to create fine art with a feminist message. — Stefani Graf SPONSORED Five Women Indict an Unjust System in They Won’t Call It MurderThis intimate and subversive look at a community irrevocably altered by police violence is streaming free now on Field of Vision. Learn more. NEWS THIS WEEK PMA Union workers at the September 16 warning strike (photo by Tim Tiebout; courtesy PMA Union) Workers at the Philadelphia Museum of Art are striking indefinitely as nearly two years of union negotiations have failed to yield a contract. Union members say MoMA offered workers the option to forgo pay raises in exchange for keeping their jobs during the pandemic. Low hourly pay, no benefits, and a lack of support has reportedly led to severe staff shortages at the Whitney Museum. Archaeologists are scrambling to save an Ancient Roman mosaic in the British county of Kent that is in danger of falling into the sea. Lizzo plays former US President James Madison’s 200-year-old crystal flute in a historic moment. SPONSORED Meet UConn’s MFA Studio Art Class of 2025This fully-funded, three-year graduate program in Southern New England culminates with an exhibition in an NYC gallery and an on-campus thesis exhibition. Learn more. AMPLIFYING VOICES Artwork by Sahar Goreshi (courtesy the artist) The Artists Amplifying the Voices of Iran’s ProtestersAs protests rage across the country following the death of Mahsa (Zhina) Amini, Iranian and Kurdish artists are creating work in support of freedom. Despite Iran’s brutal crackdown on dissent, protestors of all genders, ages, religions, ethnicities, and socioeconomic backgrounds continue to fight... Iranian and Kurdish artists are putting their skills to work to amplify their voices. — Isabella Segalovich SPONSORED After Three Years, Printed Matter’s NY Art Book Fair Returns In PersonCatch a broad range of artists, publishers, antiquarian booksellers, and more from October 13 through 16 at the fair’s historic first location in Chelsea. Learn more. LATEST REVIEWS Installation view of Nick Cave: Forothermore at the MCA Chicago. Pictured: Soundsuits (photo Nathan Keay, © MCA Chicago) The Joyous Kitsch and Lingering Simmer of Nick Cave’s ArtWith explosions of color and materiality, Debrah Brehmer explores Nick Cave's enigmatic ways of funneling the funk through histories of adversity. The Seductive Music of James Joyce’s UlyssesTim Keane reviews The Morgan Library and Museum's immersive exhibition on the novel’s tortuous route into mainstream culture. Kapwani Kiwanga Uses Daylight to Expose Racial SurveillanceZoë Hopkins examines how the artist illuminates nuanced ways of seeing race in Off-Grid at the New Museum. AI, FAKES, AND HOAXES Left, Detail of Jill Mulleady’s “The Fisherman’s Daughter” (2022) and, right, DALL-E’s interpretation of the Gladstone gallery press release for Mulleady’s exhibition (photo on left Hrag Vartanian/Hyperallergic, photo on right by DALL-E) We Asked AI to Re-Imagine 5 Blue-Chip Art ExhibitionsHrag Vartanian inserted the text from five press releases into DALL-E and this is what it churned out. The Fake Art Industry Is Booming OnlineFrom catalog pages marketed as original prints to fake “authorized” copies, Chris Cobb breaks down how we’re living through a golden age of art piracy. The Andy Warhol Lecture That Never HappenedWhat lessons on celebrity and capitalist consumption can this little-known, Warhol-orchestrated lookalike hoax reveal? SPONSORED ANNOUNCEMENTS Social Fabric: Art and Activism in Contemporary BrazilCamille Walala’s “Ice and a Slice” Takes Over XNA AirportCome Study at the University at Buffalo’s MFA and MA ProgramsMcEvoy Foundation for the Arts Celebrates Five Years in San Francisco With Color CodeApply for the 2023 Lenore G. Tawney Fellowship at John Michael Kohler Arts CenterCranbrook Academy of Art Announces Online Conversation Series About Graduate ProgramsDAS MINSK Opens With Exhibitions on Wolfgang Mattheuer and Stan DouglasApply to RAIR’s 2023 Artist Residency at a Recycling CenterPreviously Unpublished and Rarely Exhibited: Master Drawings From the Age of RembrandtMORE FROM HYPERALLEGRIC Seki Shuko, “Otters Swimming,” Japan, Meiji period (1868–1912) (image courtesy The Metropolitan Museum of Art) Otters Are Art History’s Unsung MusesFrom ancient times to the present day, join us as we pay tribute to these otter-ly charismatic creatures in various visual media. Though seals are probably the gateway to aquatic mammal fandom, connoisseurs of the genre all agree that otters are best in class… So it’s no wonder that they have been a recurring motif throughout art history, and not just a mainstay of aquarium gift shops and Etsy stores. — Sarah Rose Sharp A Trip Through the Many Worlds of David BowieDan Schindel speaks with director Brett Morgen about how he sought to let Bowie’s music and philosophy hit in a whole new way. Photo Book Retells the History of HysteriaCity of Incurable Women draws from archival materials to speculate on the lives of women who were famously hospitalized for hysteria throughout history. Michael Heizer’s Empty Empire"Despite his reportedly encyclopedic knowledge of the region’s geologic and mineral makeup, Heizer has displayed a baffling incuriousness about the larger story of the land he digs, cuts, and plows." — Chris Fernald Required ReadingThis week, Godard’s anti-imperialism, in defense of “bad” curating, an inexplicable statue, criminalizing culture wars, and more. COMICS Documenta 15 in the Shadow of the Russia-Ukraine War“What does it mean to arrive from a country with a fascist regime?” asks Russian dissident artist Victoria Lomasko. Support Hyperallergic's independent journalismBecome a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Become a MemberNEW IN OUR STORE Mexican Sampler Cashmere-Blend ScarfBased on an 1861 cloth sampler from Mexico at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, this charming scarf reproduces its secular and religious imagery, including floral motifs, animals, and a trio of sacred hearts.
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