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New YorkMarch 30, 2022 • View in browserYour Concise New York Art Guide for April 2022Your list of must-see, fun, insightful, and very New York art events this month, including Morgan Bassichis, Kazuko Miyamoto, Frida Orupabo, and more. | Cassie Packard NEWS THIS WEEK The Caribbean Cultural Center expands its presence with a new 5,000-square-foot space in East Harlem. Hetvonulsen NH, a new 3,000-square-foot gallery run by two college graduates, opens in the heart of Williamsburg in Brooklyn. An anonymous artist spray-paints massive graffiti on the New Museum’s façade. SPONSORED Lin Shih Pao Recycles Windows Into Sculptures With Golden AgeThe works created during Lin’s residency at Crystal Foundation and Park will be on view at Artexpo New York from April 7 to 10. Learn more. Messing with Museums and Our Desire for OrderIs the earth a necropolis in which the survivors live among the dead and their sarcophagi, which includes museums, pyramids, and monuments of all kinds? | John Yau The Problems and Pleasures of an Activist Art ExhibitionI am often skeptical of protest art behind glass, yet I still cannot deny the pleasure of experiencing politically charged artworks in a venue making the effort. | Billy Anania What Can We Learn From Italy’s Early Leftist Modernists?The artists in Staging Injustice: Italian Art 1880-1917 faced a real problem: how to represent injustices and project a hopeful vision of what changes were possible? | David Carrier SPONSORED Keith Haring: A Radiant Legacy Is on View at the Michener Art MuseumFeaturing more than 100 unique works by the acclaimed Pop Art icon, this exhibition in Doylestown, Pennsylvania is open through July 31. Learn more. Arthur Jafa’s Medley of Joy Everlasting Versus Hell on EarthThe video installation akingdoncomethas is an epic montage of sermons and performances from Black churches. | Justin Kamp Gwendolyn Brooks Championed Black Authors and PressesMaterials from the poet’s personal library testify to lifelong engagement with the Black community. | Marcella Durand Julia Fish’s Architectural Abstractions Are Joyful EnigmasFish’s artworks elude every attempt to enclose them in language, and they resist explanation. They become something only a painting can be. | John Yau Become a member today to support our independent journalism. CLOSING SOON Berenice Abbott, “Night View, New York” (1932), gelatin silver print; printed later, 35 1/2 x 28 3/8 inches (© Berenice Abbott/Getty Image) A Female Gaze: Seven Decades of Women Street Photographers Gretchen Scherer: Sometimes, Light The New Bend Gillian Wearing: Wearing Masks ON VIEW Adelita Husni Bey: These Conditions Harriet Korman: New Work Vik Muniz: Scraps The Slipstream: Reflection, Resilience, and Resistance in the Art of Our Time Julia Fish: Threshold/s with Hearth: recent paintings and a site intervention Mimi Park: Dawning: dust, seeds, Coplees Jule Korneffel: Here comes the night
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