Happy first weekend of Pride Month!
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June 07, 2025

Happy first weekend of Pride Month! As per tradition, we’re publishing a dedicated series of articles throughout June, with a focus this year on important moments, monuments, and heroes from New York’s LGBTQ+ art history. We begin the series with the remarkable stories of the Lesbian Herstory Archives in Brooklyn and Staten Island’s Alice Austen House Museum. Meanwhile, Isabella Segalovich visits a Medieval-style “Pilgrimage to Pride” at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine on Manhattan’s Upper West Side.

In our Opinion section, artist Damien Davis writes about the art establishment’s exploitation of Black queer pain during Pride Month, while Erin L. Thompson asks: Why do we need to fly all the way to Paris to see New York’s only slavery memorial?

Meanwhile, in a shocking move, the Whitney Museum suspends its once-famed Independent Study Program and discharges its associate director. That’s after the museum faced intense backlash for canceling a performance about Palestinian grief. Hundreds of the program’s alumni and faculty decried the decision in an open letter.

In other news, President Trump has a new official portrait that looks AI-generated. Our Staff Reporter Maya Pontone compares and contrasts it with previous presidential portraits throughout American history. And in the latest episode of the Hyperallergic Podcast, Editor-in-Chief Hrag Vartanian speaks with Mohawk artist Alan Michelson about his decades-long career and his poignant commission outside the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Make sure you also check out our guides to the best art shows to see this summer in Los Angeles and Upstate New York, as well as this month’s art book recommendations, Opportunities listings, and the ever-fun Hyperallergic Art Crossword. Thanks for reading and have a great weekend.

— Hakim Bishara, Managing Editor

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To See New York’s Slavery Memorial, You’ll Have to Fly to Paris 

A version of Barbara Chase-Riboud’s inaccessible Manhattan monument “Africa Rising” is now on public display at the Jardin des Tuileries. | Erin L. Thompson

SPONSORED

Plásmata 3: We’ve met before, haven’t we?

Onassis Stegi presents an immersive open-air biennale in Athens featuring visual art, music, cinema, performances, and more. 

Learn more

NEWS THIS WEEK

  • Come this fall, a new Frida Kahlo museum in Mexico City will intimately explore the renowned artist’s early life and familial relationships.
  • The Whitney Museum pauses the 2025–26 iteration of the Independent Study Program just weeks after it canceled a performance about Palestinian mourning.
  • A tourist reportedly damaged two sculptures in the famous “Terracotta Army” in the Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor in Shaanxi province in China.
  • The White House released an ominous new portrait of Donald Trump that seems to echo the nation’s decline into authoritarianism.
  • Art dealer Daniel Lelong, co-founder of Galerie Lelong in Paris and New York, has died at the age of 92.

PODCAST

Alan Michelson’s Answer to the “Vanishing Indian” Myth

The artist discusses his gleaming installation outside MFA Boston, his journey to reconnect with his Mohawk roots, and how he responded to the racist trope.

SPONSORED

Painter Amy Werntz Wins the 2025 Bennett Prize

Work by finalists for this year’s cycle of the largest award for women figurative realist painters is on view at the Muskegon Museum of Art.

Learn more

ALL ABOUT PRIDE

Pride Gets a Medieval Twist at NYC’s St. John Cathedral

Decked out in tassels and tulle, hundreds of attendees gathered at the storied church for the second annual Pilgrimage to Pride, hosted by TikTok’s Greedy Peasant. | Isabella Segalovich


An Archive of Lesbian History Right in the Heart of Brooklyn

Nestled between brownstones near Prospect Park, the Lesbian Herstory Archives houses the world’s largest selection of materials by and for anyone who identifies with the word. | Rhea Nayyar


The American Street Photographer Who Queered the Victorian Era

The Alice Austen House Museum in Staten Island is preparing to receive thousands of images and negatives by the iconic artist who defied 19th-century gender norms. | Isa Farfan

We’re Not Your Pride Publicity Stunt 

For many Black queer artists, Pride Month doesn’t feel like a celebration. It feels like extraction. | Damien Davis

FROM OUR CRITICS

Apocalypse Art Has Never Been More Relevant

A Paris exhibition traces artists’ obsession with the Apocalypse, from rare Medieval illuminated manuscripts to Blake, Kandinsky, and Kiki Smith. | Daniel Larkin


The Self-Fashioning of the Black Dandy

The Met’s exhibition expands Black fashion history by centering ordinary individuals and their dress practices. | Imani Wiliford


Tony Tasset Exposes the World’s Frayed Canvas

I wanted to hate these artworks, then I wished to poke my finger through their holes, and finally they became a perfect aestheticization of the contemporary moment. | Lori Waxman 

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ALSO ON HYPERALLERGIC

8 Art Books to Read This Pride Month

Dig into new and upcoming tomes on the long lineage of LGBTQ+ art, from Beauford Delaney’s bond with James Baldwin to iconic lesbian photographer JEB and Alice Austen. 


15 Art Shows to See in Los Angeles This Summer 

Jeffrey Gibson’s ebullient beadwork, Luchita Hurtado’s restitched canvases, Black cowboy history, Barbara T. Smith’s photocopy experimentation, and more to see this season. | Matt Stromberg


15 Art Shows to See in Upstate New York This Summer

Welcome the sweetest season with Emily Pettigrew’s moody paintings, Native artists on time and memory, Renée Green’s shuffled words, Black history in the Hudson Valley, and more. | Taliesin Thomas


Required Reading

This week: Alison Bechdel has a new graphic novel, Noor Abdalla on facing motherhood alone, Nathan Fielder’s unhinged brilliance, a vegetable orchestra in London, and more. | Lakshmi Rivera Amin


Opportunities in June 2025

Residencies, fellowships, grants, and open calls from the Grand Canyon Conservancy, the Dedalus Foundation, and more in our monthly list of opportunities for artists, writers, and art workers. 

✍️🤔💭

The Hyperallergic Art Crossword: June 2025

Start Pride Month with clues on Inca Cola memes, Basquiat’s favorite music genres, Dictee’s author, lesbian Victorian photography, and much more. | Natan Last

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