Good morning, and buckle up — we’re about to get real “artworld” on you. Four major Black artists — Amy Sherald, Rashid Johnson, Jack Whitten, and Lorna Simpson — have just opened or are about to open exhibitions at major museums around New York: the Whitney, the Guggenheim, MoMA, and The Met, respectively.
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May 08, 2025

Good morning, and buckle up — we’re about to get real “artworld” on you. Four major Black artists — Amy Sherald, Rashid Johnson, Jack Whitten, and Lorna Simpson — have just opened or are about to open exhibitions at major museums around New York: the Whitney, the Guggenheim, MoMA, and The Met, respectively. All four artists are represented by one major international gallery, Hauser & Wirth, causing some in the media to claim that it’s now officially “Hauser spring.” But as artist and writer Damien Davis argues in his must-read opinion piece today, this language offers a convenient narrative of market dominance. He asks: Who gets to frame Black success?

In New York City, the first crop of art fairs is happening now: News Editor Valentina Di Liscia paid a visit to the Spring Break Art Show. Read her report and check back for dispatches from Frieze, Independent, NADA, and more later this week.

In our pages today, we also mourn the loss of Matthew Courtney, the downtown legend who helped found nonprofit ABC No Rio, hosting an anything-goes open mic event there for almost 20 years. And we report on SFMoMA laying off 29 workers. Elsewhere, we’ve got Claudia Ross’s review arguing that we’ve got a thing or two to learn from the students at UCLA (if recent events haven’t already proven that), plus Eileen G’Sell on a film about extreme body modification, and yes, conclave memes.

Thanks again to the Hyperallergic Members who attended last week's conversation about artist studio visits with curators Kimberli Gant, Candice Hopkins, and Caroline Liou! If you weren't able to make it, members can now access the video recording for the next 30 days. Become a member today.

— Lisa Yin Zhang, Associate Editor

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Who’s Afraid of Successful Black Artists?

This spring, New York’s museums feature four Black artists in major solo exhibitions. Some in the media are not happy about it. | Damien Davis

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IN THE NEWS

The Next Big Thing Is at Spring Break Art Show

It has a longstanding reputation for being scrappy and DIY, but the latest edition of the New York art fair proves it can also clean up quite nicely. | Valentina Di Liscia

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The Arab American National Museum Tells a Story of Diversity

The museum’s collection and mission are rooted in the rich, diverse sights, sounds, sensations, and stories of Arab American culture and heritage.

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LATEST REVIEWS

An Artist Who Transgressed the Boundaries of the Body

A Body to Live In takes a multilayered perspective on artist Fakir Musafar’s life to creatively excavate his role as a pioneer of extreme body modification. | Eileen G’Sell

The UCLA MFA Show Proves We’ve Got to Learn From Students

Far from perfect, their work illustrates the kind of mess, ambition, and attention that many artists would be lucky to have. | Claudia Ross

FROM THE ARCHIVE

Doris Derby’s Searing, Intimate Photos of the Civil Rights Movement

A book presents more than 110 pictures from Derby’s archive, offering a rich panorama of the key people and places behind the movement. | Lauren Moya Ford

IN MEMORIAM

Dara Birnbaum (1946–2025)
Feminist and video art pioneer | Hyperallergic

Matthew Courtney (1959–2025)
Downtown New York artist and ABC No Rio member | Hyperallergic

Julia M. Alexander (1967–2025)
Former Walter Art Museum director | Baltimore Fishbowl

Julia Ball (1930–2025)
British abstract landscape painter | Guardian

Jackson “Butch” Guice (1961–2025)
Comics artist who worked on X-Factor, Iron Man, and more | Comics Beat

Herbert Migdoll (1934–2025)
Painter, environmental artist, and photographer of Chicago’s Joffrey Ballet | Chicago Sun-Times

Paul Van Hoeydonck (1925–2025)
Belgian artist who made the first artwork on the moon | Brussels Times

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