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August 10, 2021 • View in browserToday's must-read is Valentina Di Liscia's report on a protest against the Purdue Pharma settlement in White Plains, New York on Monday. Activists, including artist Nan Goldin, transformed the courthouse landscape into a graveyard. “It’s an egregious case of injustice,” Goldin tells Hyperallergic, pointing out that the Sacklers are "walking away with most of their money." Plus, a Yayoi Kusama piece is swept away by a typhoon, Jennifer Packer's 2020 paintings, and much more. — Elisa Wouk Almino, Senior Editor A Protest Against Purdue Settlement Transforms Courthouse Landscape Into a GraveyardActivists from advocacy groups PAIN Sackler and Truth Pharm denounced Judge Robert D. Drain's "bankruptcy scam.” | Valentina Di Liscia WHAT'S HAPPENING Artist Yayoi Kusama's yellow and black dotted pumpkin sculpture in Naoshima, Japan A typhoon on the island of Naoshima in southeastern Japan washed away and severely damaged an iconic dotted pumpkin by Yayoi Kusama. The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian has repatriated a Prairie Chicken Society headdress and a Weather Dance robe to the Siksika Nation. SPONSORED Jennifer Packer Portrays Friends Through the Haze of MemoryPacker processes the horror of 2020 into elegiac mood studies that wrestle with exhaustion, fear, and longing. | Allison Conner Gleefully Voyeuristic, Sara Cwynar Invites Us to Spy on the Workings of ConsumerismAmidst the frenzy of accelerated consumption and existential doom, Glass Life provides a lucid meditation on how and why we consume. | Isabel Ling What Happened to the Hagia Sophia Is a Terrible ShameI recently visited the Hagia Sophia for the first time after its conversion and felt overwhelming sadness. | Hakan Topal MOST POPULAR Huguette Caland’s Vivacious Takes on the Female FormThis Sculpture Museum Is 32 Feet Below WaterWe Need to Reform the September 11 MuseumAfter Decades of Repression, Bill Gunn’s Work Finally Breaks FreeThe Nuances of LonelinessON SALE IN OUR STORE "Sky Sun" Plate x Judy ChicagoThis luminous fine bone china plate features “Sky Sun” (1971) by Judy Chicago. The work is part of the artist's Flesh Gardens series, which she created using a technique she developed after learning how to spray paint at auto body school. Become a Hyperallergic MemberReader support makes Hyperallergic happen. Contribute today and help keep our site free and accessible to all. Join NowFROM THE ARCHIVE Storytelling and textile art practices have often intersected, redefining the means by which history is preserved and passed down. The following posts highlight the narrative power of quilting and embroidery — from stitching symbols of family histories to documenting the course of a brutal dictatorship. What Sewing Samplers Tell Us About Women’s Lives from the 17th to 19th CenturiesA sewing sampler can be the only trace of a 17th- to 19th-century woman's existence, and the Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge is recovering this lost history through over 100 examples. | Allison Meier Rosie Lee Tompkins’s Textiles Offer Windows Into Other WorldsTompkins’s quilts are at turns abstract beauties, political statements, faith-based texts, and textile craft. | Serena W. Lin The Anonymous Women Who Embroidered the Cruel History of the Chilean DictatorshipThe arpilleras narrated the course of Pinochet’s brutal dictatorship through bold colors, broad stitching, and striking imagery, often incorporating fabrics from their disappeared children’s clothes. | Rosa Boshier
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