Posted on October 3, 2024, 10:47 AM, by jfriedman, under
Community Art.
The latest issue of the Dallas-based humanities quarterly is dedicated to the Edith and Peter O’Donnell Jr. Atheneum—the 12-acre UT Dallas campus art district designed by iconic architecture firm Morphosis. I contributed an article “Why we Need the Athenaeum” in which I argue that the Athenaeum model of public spaces is exactly what our culture […]
Posted on April 5, 2024, 5:35 PM, by jfriedman, under
art history.
This article published in Quillette is a cautionary tale about what happens when while looking at a painting one only sees their own reflection. As the historian Christopher Lasch pointed out four decades ago, disproportionate concern with “identity” is directly linked to the difficulties of establishing the boundaries of selfhood. And without the certainty of […]
Tags:
Art History,
Christopher Lasch,
Claude Gellée,
Greek mythology,
Instagram video,
museums,
Narcissus and Echo,
National Gallery,
Ovid,
painting,
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Posted on March 20, 2024, 12:07 PM, by jfriedman, under
art history.
The April issue of the New Criterion has my article about the Santa Barbara Museum of Art debacle—the eleventh-hour cancellation of the “Three American Painters: Then and Now” exhibition, and the firing of its curator Dr. Eik Kahng. Read and weep.
Tags:
Amada Cruz,
Art History,
Eik Kahng,
Frank Stella,
ideology,
idiocracy,
Jules Olitsky,
Kenneth Noland,
Michael Fried,
museums,
Santa Barbara Museum of Art,
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Posted on March 2, 2024, 2:21 PM, by jfriedman, under
art history.
While the Whitney Museum of American Art’s webpage still defines the Whitney Biennial as “the longest-running survey of American art” (emphasis added), this year’s eighty-first installment will expand its reach well beyond the United States. The show includes artists from Chile, Britain, Korea, Indonesia, Canada, Hong Kong, Germany, Switzerland, Lebanon, Singapore, Mongolia, Finland, Sweden, Croatia, India, Mexico, and China. This mad dash for inclusivity is consistent with the theme of the 2024 Venice Biennale, “Foreigners Everywhere,” but, whereas Venice’s has always been an international affair, the Whitney’s has always been national, making it a radical departure.
It is telling that among ten contributions to the catalogue by contemporary artists whose work has been influenced by Guston, three dealt specifically with the “sensitive” references. Two of these were penned by African American artists— Trenton Doyle Hancock and Glenn Ligon, who, far from being offended by Guston’s allusions to the KKK, found them redemptive and even “woke.”
Tags:
Art History,
controversy,
impact,
intent,
museums,
NGA,
open letter,
Philip Guston,
retrospective,
safetyism,
woke Comments Off on Philip Guston (Not) Now: the Impact Argument |
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