#jacob-lawrence

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Arts
fromArtforum
4 days ago

Jacob Lawrence and the Unfinished History of American Inequality

Jacob Lawrence's art addresses migration, racial inequalities, and social issues, making it relevant to contemporary societal challenges faced in the US.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Baldwin by Nicholas Boggs review the relationships that drove a genius

James Baldwin's legacy has been revitalized, particularly through Raoul Peck's documentary, despite earlier criticisms of his work and its relevance.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
3 days ago

Melvin Edwards, Who Sculpted a New Vocabulary for Political Art, Dies at 88

Melvin Edwards, influential sculptor, passed away at 88, known for his innovative abstractions reflecting art history and the legacy of Atlantic slavery.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
4 days ago

Remembering Glen Baxter, Pat Steir, Melvin Edwards

This week honors an absurdist cartoonist, a feminist artist, and a sculptor addressing violence in the US.
fromArtforum
1 week ago

Pat Steir, Whose "Waterfalls" Dazzled, Dies at 87

I wanted to be a great artist, not in the slang use of 'great,' but fantastic—reaching the soul of other people. This ambition drove Pat Steir throughout her life.
Writing
fromThe Washington Post
2 weeks ago

Calvin Tomkins, who narrated the rise of contemporary art, dies at 100

When I started, there was no art coverage in the news magazines and there was no regular coverage, even in Time ... Contemporary art, particularly, was considered a ridiculous and foolish aberration. It didn't have anything to do with art, according to a lot of people.
US news
Photography
fromColossal
2 weeks ago

Nostalgia and Decay Meet Theatricality in Andrew Moore's Dramatic Photos

Andrew Moore's atmospheric photographs capture timeless landscapes and interiors that evoke a mysterious past through decay, lighting, and absence of people.
#contemporary-art
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Minor Black Figures by Brandon Taylor review portrait of a working-class artist in New York

Brandon Taylor's novel explores themes of isolation, identity, and the struggle of an artist in a post-pandemic world.
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
1 week ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Nat Meade's "Franklin" @ HESSE FLATOW, NYC

Nat Meade's exhibition 'Franklin' explores life's struggles and triumphs through figurative works reflecting personal experiences and themes of vulnerability and renewal.
Brooklyn
fromBrooklyn Paper
3 weeks ago

'Printing Black America' examines modern society through a historic lens at the Brooklyn Public Library * Brooklyn Paper

W.E.B. Du Bois's 1900 Data Portraits visualized Black American progress through infographics, now recontextualized in a 21st-century exhibition exploring ongoing racial inequities and sociological questions.
Arts
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

African people are surreal': songwriter and blues poet Aja Monet on Black resistance and love as spiritual warfare

Aja Monet blends surrealism and blues in her art, addressing themes of love, resistance, and societal absurdities influenced by historical fascism.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 week ago

A View From the Easel

Creating molds from high-heeled shoes in a shared workspace enhances precision and organization in the artistic process.
Photography
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The camera is my weapon of choice': Gordon Parks' era-defining shots of segregation and those who defied it

Gordon Parks' 1956 photographs of racial segregation in Alabama document Jim Crow South injustices and remain relevant amid contemporary historical revisionism and censorship.
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
2 weeks ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Vignettes & Mutations: Eric White @ GRIMM Gallery, NYC

Eric White's exhibition 'Vignettes & Mutations' reinterprets past works, creating a refracted retrospective that connects earlier ideas with contemporary compositions.
fromHarper's BAZAAR
1 month ago

Dance Theater of Harlem Is Bringing Back Firebird . It's Never Felt More Timely.

First performed in 1910 by Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes and adapted by George Balachine for New York City Ballet in 1949, Firebird was inspired by a Russian folk tale. The ballet tells the story of Prince Ivan, who captures the firebird, a creature who is part bird, part woman, and then lets her go.
NYC music
Arts
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Absolutely transformative': Willem de Kooning exhibition uncovers raw intensity of early work

Willem de Kooning's 1948 solo exhibition at Charles Egan Gallery launched his international career, establishing him as a pre-eminent painter by the 1950s through his innovative exploration of figuration and abstraction.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Act Black: posters of Black Americans on stage and screen in pictures

Many of these posters are the only surviving proof of certain shows, with no recordings of plays, and certain films, having been lost over time. They offer a history of Black Americans trying to counter harmful stereotypes and provide vital and humanizing contributions to a growing Black culture.
Arts
Arts
fromHyperallergic
3 weeks ago

A View From the Easel

Artist Lusmerlin Lantigua uses meditative practices like dancing and singing to align body and mind before painting, viewing the studio as a flexible space where nature observation directly influences creative work.
fromColossal
3 weeks ago

'The Language We Share' Traces a Photographic Lineage Between Gordon Parks and Beverly Price

I saw that the camera could be a weapon against poverty, against racism, against all sorts of social wrongs. I knew at that point I had to have a camera. Parks recognized photography's potential as a tool for social change and advocacy, viewing the medium not merely as documentation but as an active means of confronting systemic injustices and giving visibility to marginalized communities.
Arts
#abstract-expressionism
Arts
fromHyperallergic
3 weeks ago

Lucian Freud Mastered the Art of Lostness

Lucian Freud excelled at depicting people painfully disconnected from themselves, as demonstrated through a National Portrait Gallery exhibition exploring how drawing and printmaking informed his painting throughout his career.
US politics
fromWIRED
2 months ago

Sorry MAGA, Turns Out People Still Like 'Woke' Art

Mainstream entertainment achieved major success with diverse, politically conscious projects that became cultural phenomena despite political and corporate pushback against DEI.
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

A Landscape Artist in Winter

The British artist Andy Goldsworthy moved to Penpont, a village in southwest Scotland, in 1986, when he was thirty. The area's initial appeal was twofold. Property was cheap, which meant that Goldsworthy and his wife at the time, Judith Gregson, could acquire an unrenovated stone building that had likely once stored grain. This structure could serve as a workspace and, for a while, as a rough-and-ready home.
Environment
Arts
fromArtnet News
3 weeks ago

Robert Frank and June Leaf's New York Studio Hits the Market

Robert Frank and June Leaf's historic 7 Bleecker Street townhouse, their creative home for over four decades, is now listed for $6.5 million following both artists' deaths.
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Frederick Wiseman, who captured the weirdness and wonder of everyday life, dies at 96

I usually know nothing about the subject before I start,
Film
Design
fromwww.amny.com
2 months ago

Between Worlds': Musah Swallah art exhibit in Chelsea shows the transformation of surface into message amNewYork

Musah Swallah uses canvas, wood, and cork to foreground material history while making saturated color the structural, inheriting and advancing modern and African painting lineages.
Graphic design
fromBerlin Art Link
2 months ago

Review Jaune Quick-to-See Smith at Fruitmarket | Berlin Art Link

Jaune Quick-to-See Smith advanced Indigenous rights and environmental justice through four decades of art, activism, curation, and teaching, blending language, collage, and Indigenous knowledge.
fromHyperallergic
3 weeks ago

Lisette Model's Silenced Jazz Pictures

Fearing for her safety, Lisette Model buried her photos of artists like Billie Holiday and Louis Armstrong, but a new book reveals them to the world. Lisette Model was targeted by the FBI during the Red Scare, like so many other leftist Jewish refugees. The book is one front, not least because of the systematic exclusion of women from art historical narratives and institutions.
Arts
fromwww.amny.com
2 months ago

Painting history: Upper West Side artists commemorate Jan. 6 Capitol riots with powerful artwork

For two artists from NYC, the occasion means it is time to, once again, whip out their paintbrushes. Lesley Friedman Rosenthal and Brigitte Bentele of the Upper West Side in Manhattan mark the anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection in Washington, DC, with powerful and somewhat unsettling works of art. Their hope is to document a pivotal moment in American history and spark necessary conversations around politics and democracy.
US politics
fromArtnet News
4 weeks ago

Ludovic Nkoth on Painting the 'Emotional Texture of Everyday Scenarios'

Stars under the border began with a simple image of people resting together in an open field, but that idea quickly expanded into something more complex, both visually and formally. I kept thinking about aspiration: how it persists beneath systems that try to define or limit us. The title suggests this tension. Stars suggest hope or possibilities existing in an endless veil of darkness, while a border implies a sense of limitation and separation.
Arts
Photography
fromPortland Mercury
1 month ago

Ronin Roc on Why He Sees Black Art as "More Than February"

More Than February gallery elevates Black creativity year-round through Ronin Roc's digital portraits and a community-centered, accessible platform in Portland's Old Town/Chinatown.
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Caption or Not, Trump's Portrait Says It All

The docent had finally stopped before the black-and-white photograph of a looming, glaring President Trump that dominates the entrance to the final rooms of the "America's Presidents" exhibit. We had managed not to talk about him for several minutes, swerving left toward the bright, kinetic John F. Kennedy painted by the abstract expressionist Elaine de Kooning and then crossing right to view Kehinde Wiley's portrait of Barack Obama-a calm, floating, saintlike figure surrounded by leaves and flowers.
US politics
Film
fromwww.amny.com
1 month ago

Bronx filmmaker spotlights Jamaican Diaspora stories | amNewYork

Dante Hillmedo centers Bronx Caribbean immigrant experiences in film, teaching himself videography and building Team Elite Productions to portray Black and Caribbean stories authentically.
Arts
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 month ago

whitney biennial asks: what does 'american art' mean in 2026?

The Whitney Biennial 2026 examines what constitutes American art by featuring artists whose practices connect Indigenous histories, land, migration, institutions, and cultural memory across diverse territories and communities.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

The Jazz Pictures the FBI Silenced

Lisette Model's thousand hidden photographs of East Coast jazz legends from 1940-1959 are revealed in a new book, exposing how government repression forced her to bury this significant artistic legacy.
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

David Driskell's Gifts to Black Art

Driskell started collecting in 1955 after taking a position as an art professor at Talladega College. As he explained in a 2017 lecture at the Whitney Museum of American Art, he put aside a small budget for art each year from his beginning salary of $3,000.
Arts
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 month ago

'If a work is meant to be mine, there's always time': Mashonda Tifrere on the art she collects and why

While taking a break from her musical career, Tifrere founded the nonprofit organisations ArtLeadHER and Art Genesis in 2016. ArtLeadHER provides visual-arts education and exhibition opportunities to women and teenage girls, while Art Genesis helps organise shows for emerging and underrepresented artists.
Arts
#noah-davis
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 month ago

New York Historical receives gift of 150 works by Indigenous artists

"I rarely use the term collecting and collector," Hsu-Tang says. "We both see ourselves as messengers... I don't own these works of art. I'm here to be a temporary steward of these messages, and to pass on-it's my duty to connect the past, the present and the future."
Arts
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

A Cold Plunge Into Glenn Ligon's Blue

Glenn Ligon merges language and saturated blue to transform abstraction into perception-driven figuration that probes formal limits and racialized meanings.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

Keeping a Critical Eye on the Art World With Damien Davis

Damien Davis will address systemic inequities in the art market and propose actionable strategies for a more equitable, transparent art ecosystem.
fromArtnet News
1 month ago

How Wifredo Lam Made Surrealism More Surreal Than the Surrealists | Artnet News

An exhibition of Wifredo Lam is about as safe a bet as the Museum of Modern Art can place and still plausibly say that it's a bet on expanding the canon. The Cuban artist is one of the most famous painters of the 20th century, featured in almost every single key show about Surrealism. MoMA acquired his famous painting The Jungle in 1946, a few years after he made it.
Arts
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Black Artists Create New Universes in "Unbound"

Unbound at MoAD connects African and diasporic artistic practices to cosmology, ancestral ritual, and futuristic imaginaries through sculpture, photography, and painting.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

A View From the Easel

A small, adaptable studio provides calm, supports varied artistic practices—drawing, performance preparation, archival work—and becomes a communal space for collaboration and care.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

We Must Do More Than Simply Depict Our Lives

The Bronx Museum biennial spotlights representational works that center urban youth and marginalized identities, challenging mainstream narratives through sincere, everyday portrayals.
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

The African Diaspora Pictures Itself

Walking through Ideas of Africa: Portraiture and Political Imaginationat the Museum of Modern Art, I noticed that the exhibition didn't have definite sections or texts, and the wall labels abstained from naming the nationalities of the photographers. It was an invigorating experience to be in a show that eschews geographic boundaries set up by Western nations, as well as rejects a cause-and-effect narrative that centers Western colonialism as a framework for understanding African aesthetic production.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

A View From the Easel

Mornings are best for concentrated work. In the winter, I turn on the heat at 8am and get started around 10am. Summer, I start around 9am. I have two areas in the studio for projects. The large, heavy wood sculptures are carved in the front section of the studio, closest to the roll-up wide door. Smaller sculptures are placed on a hydraulic workbench. Before I start, I focus, connect with the Source, and ask for guidance.
Arts
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

A View From the Easel

Artist balances painting, drawing, embroidery, and large-scale scroll work in a vineyard-side studio, managing herniated discs by alternating tasks, drawing inspiration from sunrise and sunset.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

The Things That Really Matter

Artists and communities mobilize memorials, protests, and cultural expression to resist state violence, political aggression, cultural censorship, and labor suppression.
Arts
fromArtnet News
2 months ago

How 19 Contemporary Artists Paid Tribute to John Constable

Bernard Jacobson Gallery is exhibiting the 1976 print portfolio For John Constable by 19 contemporary artists through February 27, 2026.
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

A View From the Easel

I work outside, carving and shaping the stone. Outside my house, I have a table, an extension cord, and tools. It's very cold and I have to wear all my winter clothes. When it's too cold, I do the filing and finishing work inside after I shape it outside. I listen to all kinds of music. I listen to Eminem all the time; his albums are all my favorites. For drawings, I work at Kinngait Studios or at home on my kitchen table.
Arts
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

A View From the Easel

Home studio constraints shape artistic labor and conceptions of women's spaces, intertwining domestic routines, community interactions, and concentrated multi-project practice.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Giving and Receiving: Memoirs of an Immigrant Curator and Philanthropist

Marica Vilcek, an immigrant art historian, built a 30-year curatorial career at The Met and co-founded the Vilcek Foundation to support immigrant artists and scientists.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Edward Zutrau Was a Chromatic Rebel

Edward Zutrau fused reductive Abstract Expressionism with Japanese ink-painting principles to create a distinctive, underrecognized mid-20th-century painting practice.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

James Castle Was a World Unto Himself

James Castle's found-paper and soot works create transportive, formally radical abstractions that evoke otherworldly, rule-governed visual universes.
fromColossal
1 month ago

Amoako Boafo Weaves His Portraiture into an Architectural Replica of His Accra Studio

Although this truism is typically offered as a negative, it can also be read as a positive that provides comfort and stability amid new environments. In I Bring Home with Me, Ghanaian artist Amoako Boafo recreates his Accra studio in an architectural reproduction within Roberts Projects ' Los Angeles gallery. Boafo is known for his stylized portraiture of Black people, whose skin the artist renders in swirling gestures made with his fingers.
Arts
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
2 months ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Faith Ringgold @ Jack Shainman Gallery, NYC

Faith Ringgold's practice centers textiles—tankas and story quilts—alongside paintings and sculptures, addressing Black American history, gender, racial identity, and activism.
Arts
fromwww.amny.com
2 months ago

Channeling the primeval: Why Matthew Marcot paints as if art remains a matter of survival amNewYork

Matthew Marcot’s paintings treat images as charged ritual sites, using mask-like faces, glyph-like marks, and containment geometry to evoke ancient visual intelligence.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

John Altoon's Fever Dream Drawings

John Altoon abandoned abstraction to create dreamlike, sexually charged drawings that challenged formalist norms and emphasized imaginative, unsettling figure work.
Arts
fromwww.amny.com
2 months ago

The reluctant Renaissance man: John Kelly's trauma-fueled art takes over Tribeca amNewYork

John Kelly created an epic 182-panel hand-illustrated graphic memoir and accompanying video and music exploring a near-fatal trapeze accident and hospital recovery.
Arts
fromThe Nation
2 months ago

Did We Get the History of Modern American Art Wrong?

Surrealism significantly influenced 1960s American art, challenging the dominant narrative that Abstract Expressionism led directly to Pop Art and Minimalism.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

Art and Power Collide in New York City

New York's art scene faces systemic corruption, yet exhibitions by Goya, Amazonian and Indigenous artists offer hopeful artistic resistance and storytelling continuity.
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

How Joan Miro and America Fell in Love

Six months before his momentous first trip to the United States, Joan Miró sent a letter to his New York City gallerist, Pierre Matisse. Writing from repressive Francoist Spain in the austere aftermath of the Second World War, the Catalan artist was searching for new frontiers. "In the future world, America, with its energy and vitality, must play a leading role," he told Matisse." I have to be in New York to be in direct, personal contact with your country; my work will benefit from that shock."
Arts
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Uncovering the Secrets of Henri Rousseau's Paintings

Curators and conservators reveal hidden colors, technical processes, and personal-context connections in Henri Rousseau's works, enriching understanding of his observational skill and enigmatic imagery.
Arts
fromArtnet News
1 month ago

How British Artist Lincoln Townley Captures the Faces of Modern Success

Lincoln Townley's paintings interrogate success, wealth, and power through psychologically informed, gestural portraits that obscure faces and reveal darker human drives and anxieties.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Uman's Diasporic Abstraction

Uman's work evokes floating, mutable memories that bridge a lost homeland and the imagined labor of dreaming it back into existence.
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Trump Targets New Deal-Era Art

As the administration continues its attacks on culture, the president is targeting a building near the National Mall with several remarkable New Deal-era murals about social security, which remain as relevant as the day they were painted. Reporter Aaron Short brings us inside the fight to save this gem of a building, which a new petition describes as a "Sistine Chapel" of artworks centering working-class communities that the government abandoned during the Great Depression (and continues to neglect today).
Arts
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