While some in the New York art world may yearn for a return normalcy (whatever that means amid a pandemic and a national reckoning on racist violence), there are also many who remain committed to disrupting the systems which have led us to such a precarious state. Case in point, the artist-activist groups behind the
recent guerrilla projections on the Guggenheim Museum facade, in solidarity with unionized staffers. More on this action below.
Further downtown, Alexandra Thomas spends some time with
an incisive exhibition of Joiri Minaya’s work. The exhibition, she says, “exerts Minaya’s demand for a visual politic that flirts with beauty, ecology, and the desire to be seen, without capitulating to the pull of exoticization.” Today is the last day to catch the show, so don’t miss it!
Last but not least, Danilo Machado previews
the forthcoming Billie Zangewa exhibition at Lehmann Maupin. A first in New York for the closely-watched Johannesburg-based artist, the exhibition will include Zangewa’s tender silk collages, which revel in Black domestic intimacy.
– Dessane Lopez Cassell, Editor, Reviews