Required Reading
Briefly

Required Reading
"Anti-occupation protests broke out across the world after Trump attacked Venezuela and kidnapped Nicolás Maduro on January 4, brazenly declaring that he plans to "run" the country and seize its oil reserves. A day after the US strike took place in Caracas, photojournalist Juan Barreto captured a passerby in front of a mural reading "Viva la Patria" - "Long Live the Homeland." (photo by Juan Barreto/AFP via Getty Images)"
"They brought attention to many things. Certainly, feminists had been agitating for women artists to be treated more equitably before the Guerrilla Girls, but it's remarkable to recognize how long they have sustained their campaign and how consistently they show up. Their work is always thoughtful, and they bring an intersectional ethos while doing it with style. They are artists, not just activists, and even if they were only activists, that would be enough. But combining the two roles? They do it so very well."
Anti-occupation protests broke out worldwide after a US attack on Venezuela and the kidnapping of Nicolás Maduro, with images of a passerby before a mural reading "Viva la Patria" following a US strike in Caracas. The Guerrilla Girls sustain a long-running campaign that combines art and activism to bring attention to inequities facing women artists, employing anonymity to prioritize message over messenger and an intersectional ethos executed with style. Questions about the future of dictionaries arise in the internet age, prompting examinations of dictionary histories and the role of free online dictionaries. Other items include anti-ICE whistles and Snoopy's 75th anniversary.
Read at Hyperallergic
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