Good morning. A mural of Italian Olympic volleyball star Paola Egonu was defaced with racist graffiti, prompting outcry from local officials and community members who long saw this coming given the vitriol she and other athletes of color have endured. Staff Reporter Maya Pontone has the story.
Also today, an exhibition at the New Mexico Museum of Art plumbs the influence of queer people on the Southwest art scene. Read Nancy Zastudil’s thoughtful review.
Now, let’s all take a collective deep breath: It’s hard to believe, but we’re just two weeks away (!) from the art fair extravaganza in New York City. Check out our guide to Armory Week and the fall fairs — and stay tuned for our larger guide to the season and much more this week. — Valentina Di Liscia, News Editor | |
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You’re currently a free subscriber to Hyperallergic. To support our independent arts journalism, please consider joining us as a paid member. | Become a Member |
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| We can’t promise you won’t get lost in a maze of booths, but we can steer you to the fairs worth the trip. | Rhea Nayyar and Maya Pontone |
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SPONSORED | | | The foundation provides support to cultural institutions for traveling exhibitions, collection loans, and developing programs to inspire local audiences. Learn more |
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NEWS | | Italian player Paola Egonu’s skin was painted over in pink in a widely condemned act of vandalism. | Maya Pontone |
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LATEST REVIEWS | | Out West has no strict or static boundaries, no assumptions about or prescriptions for what 20th-century “queer art” in the region may have been. | Nancy Zastudil |
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| The artist tells the stories of unsung people of color who played key roles in crucial events of Euro-American culture, including exploitative and colonialist endeavors. | Anna Souter
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| MORE ON HYPERALLERGIC | | Steve Wasterval stashes his tiny paintings of Greenpoint locales in traffic cones, behind telephone pole flyers, and even at Citi Bike stations. | Rhea Nayyar |
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| | Co-directors Julian Brave NoiseCat and Emily Kassie discuss the making of their documentary Sugarcane, told from the perspective of Indigenous survivors. | Dan Schindel |
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FROM THE ARCHIVE | | Tabitha Arnold’s rugs pay tribute to organizers who lay their bodies on the line in the workplace, in the public square, and in the depths of private prisons. | Billie Anania |
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You’re currently a free subscriber to Hyperallergic. To support our independent arts journalism, please consider joining us as a paid member. | Become a Member |
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