- Ten years after the debut of College Dropout, Kanye West announced that he will receive an honorary doctorate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago on May 5. While rumors of organized student protest abound, most SAIC students hope to interrupt the ceremony and insist that Beyonce was the one who really deserved the award. Or, let’s hope he sets up a scholarship fund. [Note from Art F City senior editor Corinna Kirsch: As an alum of SAIC, I am offended that the school’s exorbitant tuition and fees will help fund this nonsense. I suggest re-tweeting Kanye’s nude pics of Kim to SAIC administration until this blows over.] [Consequence of Sound via Clique]
- Happy drunkest day of the year, friends! A Chicago resident live-blogged snippets from a local police scanner over the weekend, documenting the horrors of St. Patty’s Day revelry. The result? A laundry list of gun threats, McDonald’s brawls, and arrests before the end of brunch. [BroBible via Crime in Boystown]
- Check out 0p3nr3p0, an open-source, open-ended database specifically for hackers, glitch, and digital-media artists. It’s a part of NetArtizens Open Online Exhibition, an evolving online exhibition spanning three platforms. Take a look, or submit work before April 2 to participate. [NetArtizens]
- Underappreciated folk critic? Attention-seeking provocateur? Sell-out? Capital offers this meditation on the controversial career (and antics) of Jerry Saltz. [Capital]
- For those of you who just can’t fingerpaint or nap without permission, fear not! Brooklynite Michelle Joni Lapidos will gladly charge you $333 or more for the privilege. Her adult pre-school encourages hardened New Yorkers to re-discover their inner children through dress-ups and sleepovers. So, it’s pretty much a standard Saturday night, but with crayons. [Gothamist]
- The female:pressure Tumblr offers a visual survey of women in the music business working the other end of the mic. Much credit is due to Bjork—the Tumblr responds to her call for more documentation of women working the production side of the music industry. [Flavorwire via female:pressure]
- Threewalls announced the release of The Tabletop Collection. This edition of the Community Supported Art Chicago program features five limited-edition artworks by Chicago-based artists Sabina Ott, Julia Klein, Laura Davis, Stephen Reber, and Assaff Evron. Their small apartment-friendly works re-imagine the sculpture garden, if sculpture gardens were the size of a bookshelf or tabletop. [Threewalls]
Tuesday Links: Dr. Kanye
Monday Links: Bad Cats and Sexy Farmers
- A dating site for people live in the country. Because city folk just don’t get the farmers. So weird. (And also, apparently old news. Whatev’s. I just discovered it.) [Farmers Only]
- Here’s Jerry Saltz on the new Whitney Museums, and more generally museum culture, and museum building. It’s a long sprawling piece, but my favorite stuff is on the Whitney itself: “Let’s start with the building. I don’t care what it looks like. It’s “likable enough,” but my only concern as an art lover is with the inside of museums. Were I to judge the new Whitney exterior, I’d say it looks like a hospital or a pharmaceutical company.” I’m not convinced their architect Renzo Piano is all that, but yeah, it’s what’s inside that matters. [New York Magazine]
- Choire Sicha writes that Jon Ronson’s ‘So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed’ would have been better handled by a woman. The money quote: But the actual problem with the Internet isn’t us hastily tweeting off about foolish people. The actual problem is that none of the men running those bazillion-dollar Internet companies can think of one single thing to do about all the men who send women death threats. [The New York Times via: Hyperallergic]
- 20 plus asshole cats shamed for their misdoings. Very, very funny. [Bored Panda]
- So good: The Triumphant Rise of the Shitpic. This came out in December (and much of the links below aren’t recent either) but if you haven’t read them, do so immediately. [The Awl]
- See also: Trollpunk is the New Cyberpunk. [The World of Today]
- See also: It’s Supposed to Look Like Shit: The Internet Ugly Aesthetic. [Journal of Visual Culture]
- See also: A little academic for my tastes, but another analysis of internet pics: Pics or It didn’t Happen. [The New Inquiry]
This Week’s Must-see Art Events: Talk Hard, Talk Dirty
There’s a lot to do in the next seven days—from Chelsea openings to the Met’s rooftop and art fairs on opposite ends of Manhattan. When your eyes (and feet) are sore from trying to see it all, sit down and enjoy listening to some stellar presentations from some of the world’s best and brightest curators, artists, and critics. And Jerry Saltz.
Mon
Element 47: The Art Collection; Paula Crown, Michelle Grabner & Jose Lerma
Paula Crown, Michelle Grabner and Jose Lerma discuss how their relationship to Chicago and Aspen affects their art making and teaching practice. As it happens Grabner and Lerma both have strong ties to New York as well, (we know both personally) so there’s that to talk about as well. We expect, though, they’ll stay focused on Element 47 restaurant, which is located in Aspen and the focus of the talk. Apparently they have an art collection, and a newly released publication on said collection.
“Computer Programming for Developing a Better Society” Understanding Media Studies
Nick Montfort, Associate Professor of Digital Media at MIT believes that everyone benefits from knowing how program. Much like learning how to read and play music improves our math and language skills, learning how to program can similarly improve our abilities to debate and build consensus. Montfort’s gonna talk about that, and presumably some of the literary generators and other computational art and poetry he’s produced over the years.
Tue
Pierre Huyghe: The Roof Garden Commission
In the art world, the best indication that summer is near isn’t the weather, but the Met’s Roof Garden Commission. This year, the institution promises a new nineteen-minute video by Pierre Huyghe on the survival of mysterious creature after a natural and man-made disaster. This is quite a departure from the Koons dogs they displayed in 2008 or even last year’s glass pavilion with grass by Dan Graham and Günther Vogt.
Wed
99 Objects: Catherine Taft on DRAWING RESTRAINT 7 by Matthew Barney
“99 Objects” is a series of talks, each focusing on an individual artwork from the Whitney’s collection. This iteration addresses Matthew Barney’s multi-channel video installation Drawing Restraint 7. The piece will be presented by Catherine Taft, assistant curator at the museum. It’s free with museum admission and is a perfect excuse to check out the Whitney’s new Meatpacking District digs, if you haven’t already.
Thu
Lee Lozano: Drawings & Paintings
This exhibition revisits 2D work the late Lee Lozano created in the 1960s. Her brief but prolific career focused on precise abstractions evoking tension. Her dark canvases can sometimes read as tensile materials twisted, violent penetrations or breaks, or cool depictions of potential energy. This promises to be a rare look into the career of an enigmatic (Lozano staged her own departure from the art world in 1971) artist.
247365 presents a performance by Brian Belott
NADA’s provided zero details for the Brian Belott performance and we’re still listing this event. We’ve never met any artist as full of energy, enthusiasm for comics, music, collage, found sound and photography and pretty much any other medium you can think of. With Belott, more is more; prepare to be overwhelmed.
Fri
A Forum on the Born-Digital Art Institution
Beginning with a keynote address from architect Keller Easterling, Rhizome’s Forum on the Born-Digital Art Institution brings together critics, curators, and bloggers to discuss online art platforms. If a week of objects trading hands at art fairs has bummed you out, this might be the perfect Friday night antidote.
BHQFU Transparent Critique
Is your studio in need of a little shaking up? Bruce High Quality Foundation University has got your back. This year at NADA, faculty, staff and students will participate in an interdisciplinary critique class session. Attend, take a few notes, and bring that critical brain back to the studio. You’ll be happy you did so.
Jacqueline Humphries: GROUND FLOOR
Jacqueline Humphries’s large, immersive canvasses can read like a wall of static. It’s remarkable how many surprise hints of color and diversity of mark-making a seemingly all-over abstract composition can hide—from painterly gestures to hard-edged abstraction that seems to reference printmaking. This exhibition is the artist’s first solo show in New York since appearing in the 2014 Whitney Biennial.
GUERRILLA GIRLS: NOT READY TO MAKE NICE, 30 YEARS AND STILL COUNTING
The feminist activists known as The Guerrilla Girls take over the Abrons Art Center with close to 100 Posters, stickers and billboards from 1985 to the present. We’re looking forward to this show—their work has shone a light on inequality issues that need addressing—but we’ll reserve judgement until we see the show. In the statement, the Guerrilla Girls promise a wall where anyone can complain about issues they care about and clips of “hotshot gallery owners making totally embarrassing statements.” The former could invite slander and the latter feels punitive. Let’s hope neither is the case.
Sat
#AskJerry with Jerry Saltz
#AskJerry promises to be exactly what one would expect: a chance for participants to get more of Jerry Saltz’s opinions on everything and a chance for Jerry Saltz to flex his bulging social media muscles…. But given his recent Facebook history, I’m not sure we’re allowed to use the words “Jerry Saltz”, “Social Media”, and “Bulging” in the same sentence.
Sun
David Salle in Conversation with Francine Prose
Ever listen to David Salle talk about his own work or others? He’s, without a doubt, one of the most articulate artists working today. (Just read this short interview on artnet from 2011.) Which is to say, it’s worth heading out to see him speak with the American writer Francine Prose. Even if you don’t like Salle’s paintings, the conversation will almost certainly leave you with something to think about.
Paul McCarthy and Leigh Ledare in conversation with Chrissie Iles
Leigh Ledare took nudie pictures of his mother for his first show in New York. Paul McCarthy is best known for his Santa butt plugs, flying inflatable turds and father-son goat fucking sculptures. They’re getting together to talk about breaking social taboos with Chrissie Iles. We’d say something juvenile here, but the conversation will likely be quite heady. There’s not a conceptual slouch in this crowd.
Friday Links: Thumbs Up to the Men
- Making the rounds: Congratulations, you have an all-male panel. [allmalepanels]
- Art fairs: when art critics bring out their secret comedian. Michael Miller’s lament: “Either way, attending these kinds of cyclical events that arrive at the same time every year with the same cast of largely uninteresting stock characters and only a few details changed forces a person to think about all the things that happened in the interim, between the last event and this new one.” [ARTnews]
- Jerry Saltz appeared on Anderson Cooper this Wednesday and complained that museums can’t compete with big collectors who are willing to pay $170 million for an artwork. Well, yes, but the main reason why museums acquire works is through donations by wealthy collectors? I’d like to see a study on this subject, because I honestly don’t know how/if auctions affect museum acquisition programs. [Vulture]
- “Advil lyquigel model”? [Imgur]
- For just $10, you can enter a Kolache-eating contest in Bed-Stuy. This Saturday! [Gothamist]
- An Henri Matisse painting once looted by the Nazis has been returned to the descendants of the Jewish collector who originally owned it. It was one of many artworks recently discovered in the collection of Cornelius Gurlitt, son of Hitler’s favorite art dealer. [Deutsche Welle]
- You know that real-estate situation in Brooklyn stinks when, Paul Ramirez Jonas, artist and executive producer of the Brooklyn Academy of Music, admits he is facing the threat of closing his studio. [WNYC]
- In related “Rent is too damn high!” news, city residents marched across the Brooklyn Bridge yesterday in a demonstration calling for better protection for low-income tenants. The protest coincides with a debate in Albany over the future of New York’s rent regulations. [Brooklyn Eagle]
- In even more real-estate news, in Leith, Scotland, there’s a shortage of artist studios. A new study “warns that artists based in the area may be forced out of the city completely unless more studio space can be found.” [The Scotsman]
- Scientists discover the world’s first warm-blooded fish. [Scientific American]
- Performance artist Chris Lloyd resigned as the Canadian conservative candidate slated to run against Justin Trudeau. Apparently, at least part of the campaign was intended to “mess with the Tories.” His actual stance on anything seems more akin to a politician’s than an artist’s, though, it’s entirely unclear what his politics are. While he has never voted conservative, he also said that “The easiest persona I’ve been able to summon up…is to somehow convince myself that by taking on the Conservative candidature, I’m doing it to defeat some greater evil which is perhaps Justin Trudeau…so I’m earnestly trying to unseat him and I can sleep at night with that idea, with that knowledge.” [Canadian Broadcasting Company]
Wednesday Links: Fear of Demon Flats Reaches New Levels

Art with use value. Our favorite image from the fairs via Jerry Saltz.
- Pete Wells, fearful of Texans, but a lover of their fine foods, lavishes glowing words upon the new Tex-Mex restaurant Javelina. “At most restaurants, you are served what you ask for so routinely that your eyes glaze over with boredom. Javelina does not fall into the trap of dull predictability. One night after I left, I realized the guacamole I’d ordered had never arrived; it’s not every restaurant that gives you something to think about on your way home.” [The New York Times]
- Trend-spotting: superhero movies exploring 9/11 mythology. [Vox]
- New Yorkers will get the opportunity to vote down “ugly” public art thanks to a bill proposed by Jimmy Van Bramer and passed by city council. The bill came in response to outcry over a pink reclining figure by Ohad Meromi proposed for LIC; people were concerned about its color and its 500k+ price tag. And let’s be honest—that thing needs to be voted down. I want to go to the hearing. [DNAInfo]
- Los Angeles County officials have raised the minimum wage to $15 an hour! The raise won’t go into effect until 2020. [Los Angeles Times]
- Mouthfeel, a food magazine that mixes food reviews and sexy men. [Mouthfeel]
- Four percent of Americans are unsure if they own art. This survey, run by YouGov on the subject of the importance of art in daily life also asked how much time participants put into their looks. Ten percent of male respondents answered “none at all.” [Hyperallergic]
- Wow. Cara Ober is great. Read this opinion piece about why she opposes Baltimore’s plan to tear down one of Baltimore’s remaining Brutalist structures, McKeldin Fountain in the Inner Harbor. The whole plan is to replace it with a green lawn, extra traffic lanes, and a generic water wall. I have to confess, I can’t stand Brutalist architecture, but it seems no one consulted Baltimore residents when the decision was made to gut the place in 2002. A little more transparency is clearly needed. [Bmore Art]
- Women wearing flats are being denied entrance at Cannes. What? [Jezebel]
Tuesday Links: All You Ever Need to Know to Feel Depressed
- An essay on bots and poetry that is so good. “These days people are writing poems about fucking on volcanoes. ‘We fucked on a volcano.’ How does that help? How does it do anything to solve anything?” [n + 1 via The Paris Review]
- The Whitney’s board of trustees has elected a new president, Richard M. DeMartini, and two new co-chairs, Laurie M. Tisch and Neil G. Bluhm. While Tisch has a background in the nonprofit sector—heading her own fund dedicated to increasing access to art education, economic opportunities, and healthy food—DeMartini and Bluhm are both from the world of finance. Bluhm had served as the board’s president since 2008 and is the founder and president of JMB Realty Corporation—a luxury real estate interest that at one point was the largest property developer in the United States. [ARTnews]
- More info about the board of trustees, but not from us: “Also militarizing the Baltimore Police Department is Defense Tech ammunitions, sold by Warren Kanders’ Safariland Group. A vice chairman of the Whitney Museum of American Art’s board of trustees, he is a wealthy investor who for the last 20 years has profited from the suppression of civil unrest.” [Al Jazeera America]
- Thank you, Karen Archey, for bringing up Jackie Wullschlager’s recent article in the Financial Times. Writing about the Tate’s exhibitions of female modernists like Sonia Delaunay, Barbara Hepworth, and Agnes Martin, Wullschlager concludes: “Yet none delivers the visceral thrill or intellectual charge of a great retrospective, because none of these artists really changed how we see or think. Has a woman artist ever done so? The stories here show that female artists tend to assimilate and adapt radicality pioneered by men.” There is absolutely no way that you can prove that female artists have not changed the way we see or think or that they have assimilated and adapted radicality pioneered by men—scientific principles would be welcome in art history—not to mention that plenty of exhibitions have shown the influence of women in art. We don’t even know where to start, but let’s try Wack! Art and the Feminist Revolution. Sigh. [e-flux conversations]
- A pair of paintings featuring the Confederate flag has gone on display at the Laguna Art Museum in Ocean County, California. In reference to the flag’s controversy and the wave of racial unrest sweeping the nation, the artist G. Ray Kerciu said, “I thought as an old man, we would be past all this stuff. But we’re not. It’s a great disappointment to me.” [Los Angeles Times]
- While Greece’s economy is in a tailspin, artnet takes the time to notify us that there is absolutely no news about the troubled country’s under-construction Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center. [artnet News]
- The Great Wall of China is disappearing. By some accounts, almost 30% of the structure has fallen victim to plundering, erosion, and neglect. People are freaking out. [The New York Times]
- Hyperallergic’s Robin Grearson reviews Stay in New York, Art F City’s affordable workspace conference, and calls it a “crucial first step.” It’s a great summary for those who missed the conference. [Hyperallergic]
- Jerry Saltz explains why everyone should be nicer to gallery attendants…with a picture of Marnie from HBO’s Girls. [Vulture]
- WHOA! For the first time ever, the New York Rent Guidelines Board approved a freeze on one-year leases. There’s a couple of caveats to which leases will be affected, but this is historic. [Curbed NY]
Friday Links: Museum Poo on a Slide
- Miley Cyrus will be collaborating with underground net artists and artist Jen Stark for the VMA’s this year, which she will host. Prediction: Jerry Saltz will write a think piece lauding whatever she does. Anyway, here’s an interview she gave to the Times totally stoned. Read it if you dare. [The New York Times]
- Stefan Simchowitz and his dealer/partner Ellis King are suing the 28 year old Ghanaian artist Ibrahim Mahama for deauthenticating nearly 300 signed art works. As Greg Allen tells it, the Simchowitz King position sure is rich. Simchowitz claims he made his career with a Dublin show in 2015. At that point Mahama had two shows at Saatchi, a London residency, participation in DAK’ART, the largest African biennial, an announced show at The Mistake Room in Los Angeles, and announced participation in the Venice Biennale, but sure, that Simchowitz show in Dublin made Mahama. Then there’s the art itself. Simchowitz’s 300 works are drawn from a sprawling installation of jute sacks which he purchased for approximately $138,000—he has a history of buying large works and cutting them up to make buckets of money—and he’d already sold 17 of those works for $16,000 each. So, he’s already made close to $450,000, which means the suit is merely a complaint that he didn’t make 20 times his investment. Anyway, Allen suggests that Mahama flood the market with these things and devalue the work entirely. Haha! [Greg Allen]
- North Korea’s new airport in Pyongyang has all the latest technology, including an Internet room…with no Internet. It seems the room exists primarily to create the illusion of a modern airport, as the country itself allows its citizens virtually no access to the web. [Associated Press]
- Why are paintings of the baby Jesus usually so creepy? Maura Callahan investigates, and highlights some especially terrifying ones in the Walters Art Museum’s collection. [City Paper]
- In other “children in museums” news, Osaka students can dress up like poo and navigate a sewage-themed interactive exhibit that features a giant toilet slide. [CCTVNews]
- The Times publishes its second piece this week on hydration rumors. The first put to rest the myth that drinking eight cups of water a day was a necessity, the second catalogues a few high school football students who drank too much Gatorade and died. All we need now is a piece about how dehydration has been shown to lower cancer rates and the story loop will be complete. [Well]
- New York City’s taxi drivers are getting an Uber-like app to help compete with the rise of popular, more-affordable ridesharing services. [Fortune]
- Yes, this is a real headline from the BBC’s health report: “Young goths ‘at risk of depression’”. [BBC News]
- A new retrospective of Keith Arnatt’s work sparks old discussions over the art world’s historically cold shoulder to photography as fine art. [The Guardian]
- This photo essay looks more like New Orleans than New York, but “Bungalow Brooklyn” is facing many threats from development, sea level rise, and blight. The borough’s historic bungalow districts mostly date from the early 20th century as summer homes. Today, many of the tiny houses are storm damaged, squatted, or vacant as developers sit on them. The upshot? If you’re a crafty aspiring homeowner, they’re probably the only place in the borough where you can buy a home for less than $200,000. [Curbed NY]
- The mass exodus of galleries from Chelsea to cheaper digs in the Lower East Side continues. [The Real Deal]
Thursday Links: Sucker Schools

Casey and Rowdy horse training, 71 Ranch. Deeth Nev. 2012. Lucas Foglia, Courtesy of Fredericks & Freiser Gallery, New York (originally via Lens Blog)
- More negative press for the University of Southern California. Earlier this year, the entire first year class MFA class dropped out of the program, citing an array of broken promises by the school’s administration. Now, the unofficial blog they set up in protest has been taken down the school’s administration. The administration has a problem with the URL, uscmfa.tumblr.com, which they claim looks like an official blog of the school. The students have set up another blog under a slightly different address that thus far has not been removed. [Hyperallergic]
- Kara Walker has left her position at Columbia for Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. What a coup. [ARTnews]
- A Matthew Barney profile in which we get to learn about just how icky his art has become. [The New York Times]
- Larry Pitman’s new paintings are displayed inside a tiny box in Culver City. [Culture: High & Low]
- Jerry Saltz hands four female painters positive three sentence reviews. They are very long sentences. Alicia McCarthy, Jackie Saccoccio, Keltie Ferris, and Betty Tompkins will be very happy right now. [Vulture]
- We don’t normally link to profiles of collectors, but Nancy & David Frej’s collection is so thoughtfully put together, this one deserves a nod. [THE SEEN]
- Yogi Berra, famed Yankees catcher died yesterday at the age of 90. He’s the guy who once said, “It’s ain’t over til it’s over”. Or did he? Here’s a list of properly and misattributed quotes by the baseball player. [The New York Times]
Tuesday Links: Even Animals Are Pissed-Off About Gentrification
- I’m not sure exactly what this awesome creature is (a goat?) but I do know how he feels. [Facebook]
- Gentrification tensions in Bushwick have been running at a seemingly all-time high after neighborhood newcomer London Kaye and Bushwick Flea owner Rob Abner installed a pretty heinous crochet mural inspired by Wes Anderson on a longtime resident’s home without her permission. This Saturday, the anarchist group Brooklyn Solidarity Network staged an anti-gentrification protest at the market, which led to one very-illegal sounding fake arrest by NYPD Officer Bin-Safar. [Gothamist]
- Meanwhile, on the other side of the Atlantic, British anarchist group Class War has been organizing “Fuck Parades” to protest London gentrification. In their latest action, hundreds of masked protesters descended upon a novelty cafe that sells £3.20 (~$5) bowls of breakfast cereal on Brick Lane—once a major center for the city’s working class immigrant communities that has seen huge rent increases. [The Telegraph]
- And in a softer approach to confronting gentrification in London, Lucy Sparrow has created Madame Roxy’s Erotic Emporium, a sex shop with all hand-stitched fabric replicas of everything from porn to condom wrappers. The project is a commentary on Soho’s transformation from a “seedy” area to one of the most expensive neighborhoods in the capital. [Dezeen]
- This is so well-deserved: LaToya Ruby Frazier and Ta-Nehishi Coates are 2015 MacArthur Fellows. [Artforum]
- Amazing: Theaster Gates’s Rebuild Foundation will be housing Frankie Knuckles’s record collection in its Stony Island Arts Bank. [Chicago Reader]
- Dia has scrapped plans for a new building in Chelsea. The proposed building, headed by previous director Philippe Vergne, promised to give the Foundation a major presence in New York, and would be situated on the footprint of two of its three existing sites in the city. It was also Vergne’s big banner project, but since moving on to MOCA, has obviously been scuttled by new director Jessica Morgan, who wants to bring “equilibrium” to all of Dia’s spaces. [Art Newspaper]
- Leftover bruschetta ham and eggplant tortellini: turns out you can eat pretty gourmet if you dumpster dive in the Upper West side. [VICE]
- Jerry Saltz weighs in on Dana Schutz and Katherine Bernhardt, and the frustratingly protracted careers of female bad-boy painters. [New York Magazine]
- Listen to this interview with Simon Denny, the Berlin-based artist who used leaked NSA PowerPoint presentations for the installation “Secret Power,” New Zealand’s Venice Biennale Pavilion. He also used Behance to track down David Darchicourt, the former NSA creative director of defense intelligence. He commissioned the graphic designer to the spies to create maps of Denny’s native New Zealand. So smart. [Marketplace]
- Lydia Cash, a painter who participated in last weekend’s Edgewater Fall Art Fair, had a large number of her paintings stolen. But she left her tent completely open and had her paintings still in view. According to the organizer’s statement, “she had done the same when she participated in our Art Fair last year.” As much as I want to have one tear streaming down my face for Cash’s plight, I think I agree with one of the story’s commenters: “don’t feel sorry for her — she left her stuff in an open tent.” [NBC Chicago]
- The Moscow Biennial faces a double whammy of a devalued Ruble and a political climate that’s not particularly friendly to contemporary art. This year’s curators Bart de Baere, Dafne Ayas, and Nicolaus Schafhausen used their shoestring budget to trim any excesses designed to cater to the market—no shipping of huge expensive artworks, for example—and focused on providing space for artists to produce new work, showing easier-to-insure photographs, and hosting small-scale interactive performances. [artnet News]
- In other Moscow news, the nonprofit art space Red Square Gallery has closed following police intimidation over an exhibition of photographs of LGBT teenagers. [The Art Newspaper]
Thursday Links: AFC Critic Deemed More Powerful Than Bernie Sanders
- AFC’s Michael Anthony Farley lands the Number 1 position in City Paper’s Baltimore Power Rankings this week, beating out Democratic Presidential Nominee Bernie Sanders and Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby. This may be the first time we’ve seen an art critic afforded so much influence. We approve! (Also, go Michael!) [City Paper]
- Kitty Scott, currently the curator of modern and contemporary art at the AGO, has been named the co-curator of the 2018 Liverpool Biennial. And in related news, it was announced last week that she’d be the curator of Geoffrey Farmer’s Canadian pavilion at the 2017 Venice Biennale. [Artforum]
- “It is such a simple joy to feel the real rhythms of the city and see this perfect public sculpture, especially in an age when public space seems more and more turned by developers into private arcades for the privileged.” Jerry Saltz is a huge fan of Deborah Kass’s OY/YO sculpture, but conflicted about how mega developers are likely underwriting this new “golden age of public art”. [New York Magazine]
- A Miami art handler’s experience on that depressing hurry-up-and-wait end to the fair crazy: the de-installation. [Two Coats of Paint]
- Are we at all surprised that the big pharma collector who bought the Wu-Tang Clan album and tried to jack the price of a live-saving HIV pill has been arrested by the FBI for fraud? [Bloomberg]
- As expected, the new director of Korea’s National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art is playing down the censorship controversy surrounding his hiring. While Bartomeu Marí has acknowledged that the MACBA incident was a “mistake”, he’s yet to meet the demands of South Korean artists and curators to address how he’ll contend with government censorship, a big problem for South Korean cultural institutions. [Hyperallergic]
- This interview with anonymous feminist collective Laboria Cuboniks accessibly unpacks their politics of alienation and the “illogical universalism” of the White Euro-Male perspective. Occupy the centre! [Kunsthalle Wien]
- Palestinian Canadian artist Rehab Nazzal was shot by a sniper last week while doing research in the West Bank. Shot in the leg while documenting a “skunk weapon”—basically a truck used by the Israeli Defense Forces that sprays a foul-smelling mist for crowd control—she’s in stable condition. Last year, an exhibition of her work at a gallery in Ottawa’s city hall was condemned by conservative politicians and even Israel’s ambassador to Canada, igniting a public art debate. [Canadian Art]
- Nars Foundation has a year-end benefit campaign you can donate to. They are raising money for their residency program and have brought in over $1000 of their $7000 goal. [Generosity]
- Military visions of the future are terrifying. DARPA is creating vampire drones – drones that sublimate into nothing in direct sunlight. (Isn’t that what Stealth planes already do?) Other projects include an empathic system that allows robots to identify emotional states on the field, the development of super strong lightweight materials (meh, okay), oh yeah, and communicating using nothing but our brains. [IFLScience]
- In other miracle science news, red wine apparently has the same effect on the brain as an hour at the gym. I’d love to see the sample size of that group. [The Huffington Post]
Should I Get An MFA? The 2016 Edition
Back in 2011 AFC asked the question, “Should I get an MFA?” At the time we leaned towards “No”. There were a number of reasons cited, the most pressing being that we believed it was too expensive and most artists could get the equivalent experience in the real world.
Five years later, has much changed? Let’s take a look:
PROS

The Studio of Eugène Delacroix. Engraving from: L’Illustration, 25 September 1852, 205, The Hague, Koninklijke Bibliotheek, T 1788.
2011/2016: Two Solid Years of Studio Time.
This benefit hasn’t changed: having the time to make your work is invaluable, and will definitely impact your artistic and intellectual growth. “The transformation of young artists during graduate school is astonishing, both in terms of the sophistication and accomplishment of the work made and because they come to understand the kind of commitment and intensity they must bring to their work to sustain it,” says Deborah Bright, Chair of Fine Arts Department at Pratt Institute in an 2014 interview with The Artist’s Magazine.
2011: Four Solid Years of Studio Time (Part-Time).
Hunter’s three-year full-time programme allows students access to studio space for longer periods of time and attend school part-time for four years. Other upside: popular open studios frequented by critics and gallerists.
Pioneered by Bard in 1981, this low-residency model offers multi-week sessions of intense on-campus work with long periods of independent study. “The idea,” said the poet Robert Kelly, who wrote the graduate school’s constitution, in a 2012 Brooklyn Rail Magazine interview, “was to create a graduate school for people who didn’t usually go to graduate school—people in the midst of their lives who wanted to reanimate their connection to art.”
2016: Three Solid Years of “Low-Residency”.
Baltimore’s Maryland Institute for the Arts and New York’s School of Visual Arts now have low-residency MFA programmes. But, according to Artsy’s recent survey of alternate MFA options, a low-residency programme, such as the one at Chicago’s School of the Art Institute, will still rack up a $90,000 tuition for the 60 credits to graduate.
2016: MFA Subsidies and Alternatives Emerge.
Artsy mentioned Kara Walker’s decision to teach at Rutgers’ Mason Gross School of the Arts as an encouraging sign that “moving away from the big brand-name programs is a better option.” Also encouraging is Rutgers’ recent decision to grant all incoming fall 2016 visual arts grad students with scholarships equivalent to a first year’s full out-of-state tuition and full in-state tuition for their second year. “As a public university, we feel that critical art practice should be the focus of our graduate program and that access should be as democratic as possible,” said Gerry Beegan, chair of the Visual Arts Department at Mason Gross when the news was reported.
But let’s not forget the existence of free artist-run schools. AFC favourite BHQFU offers a full slate of free artist-taught classes, a summer residency and even a gallery. And this fall, as reported by Artsy, they’ll be launching MFU, a new year-long programme offering five artists studio spaces at the Bruce High Quality Foundation in Brooklyn. While it’s not accredited, BHQFU outreach director and faculty member Sean J. Patrick Carney quips that “we’re going to offer everything an MFA offers including visiting artist critiques, studio visits, and an opportunity to reach, and it costs zero dollars.”
2011: You Can’t Teach Without an MFA.
Thanks to the ongoing professionalization of the art world, most teaching positions require a MFA.
2016: You Really Can’t Teach Without an MFA.
MFA remains the terminal degree for a teaching position, and in some cases, has been replaced by the PhD as a desired requirement.
2011/2016: A Built-In Lifetime Network.
While this shouldn’t be a primary motivation for getting an MFA, there’s definitely a value in the connections made with fellow students and teachers. Being a part of a supportive community, face-time with visiting gallerists and curators furthers careers; this amounts to the professional pay-off of recommendations, introductions, and even group show invitations.
2011: You’ll Learn Theory.
Theory, according to Coco Fusco in her 2013 Modern Painters Magazine rundown on a MFA’s worth, is an “aura still hang[ing] over a handful of high-profile MFA programs.” Being able to talk up the intellectual and philosophical merits of your work with critical theory artspeak terminology has traditionally given artists the intellectual arsenal to get their work picked up by critics and curators. Understanding the “contemporary art moment” (read: art world trends) can help artists navigate the changing tides of opinion, not to mention beef up their grant writing skills. Since grants can cover a huge chunk of living and work expenses, this is invaluable.
CONS

“Why are artists so fucking poor? (detail),” 2012. William Powhida for W.A.G.E., courtesy the artist
2016: Theory is Out.
As Fusco pointed out in the same article, theory is a “double-edged sword”. If the glut of artspeak-ladened e-flux press releases not to mention Alix Rule and David Levine’s International Art Speak project has taught us anything, theory can overshadow art work. Often, art speak can seem like overcompensation and worst, exclusionary, suggesting that a viewer without a certain level of higher education won’t get the work. It’s an artificial re-enforcement of the value of education. Artists should realize that being able to plainly speak about their work is a valuable skill in itself.
And, honestly? Most of us don’t need school for that. If an artist keeps up with their favourite art world blogs and publications, actively attend shows and read catalogues, they’ll easily come away with an understanding of the de rigueur theory. As well, a lot of artist-run centres offer a seasonal slate of professional development workshops that include crash courses on how to write artist’s statement.
2011: Earning Potential Improves Slightly, Slim Job Prospects.
When Paddy surveyed the following art world jobs boosted by a MFA, she reported the following pay grade:
- Art Handler (MFA recommended): $35,000-$60,000 a year
- Visual Arts Professor (MFA/MA required): $50,000-80,000 a year
- Full-Time Artist (MFA not necessary, but having it does improve your chances of commercial gallery representation and being considered for grants and residencies): $47,000 a year
- Art Critic (MA helpful, but not necessary): $30,000-$60,000 a year
2016: Earning Potential Increases for the One Percent.
If the MFA needed to secure a gallery job lands you a position of director at a blue chip contemporary gallery, the degree will more than pay for itself on sale commissions. If you have designs to work as an artist, and are hoping a gallery administrative position will sustain, those days are gone. In AFC’s 2014 interview with arts and culture recruiter Geri Thomas, she notes that the middle class squeeze is problem that affects all industries, including the art world, and administrative positions “have terribly low salaries”.
Updated data on the previously cited art world jobs supports this:
- Art Handler: $30,000 average yearly salary
- Visual Arts Professor: $49,472-$75,018 a year (this ranges from the average salary of an assistant professor to the average salary of a tenured professor)
- Full-Time Artist: $43,000 average yearly salary
- Art Critic: $35,600 average yearly salary [Executive Director’s Note: True, sadly.]
Well, that’s depressing. However, silver lining! While this is mostly focused on the job prospects of museum curators, a good point is made that with the ongoing trend of boomers retiring, there will likely be a “changing of the guard” in the job market.
2011: An MFA is Expensive.
Five years ago, the most inexpensive MFA cost a minimum of 35K. At the time, that kind of debt could be crippling for those entering the job market. There simply weren’t enough entry-level jobs that paid a fair wage. Two years later, this continued to be the takeaway: in a summary of the BFAMFAPhd collective’s Artists Report Back: A National Study on the Lives of Arts Graduates and Working Artists report, it was noted that “our higher education system is producing a vast quantity of workers with educations and expectations for high-level and high-paying jobs that simply do not exist in the quantity needed to employ all these people.”
2015: An MFA is Still Expensive.
In 2014, Jerry Saltz calls a MFA “straight-up highway robbery”. And, as The Atlantic later calculates, with the average tuition for the ten most influential MFA programs (think the usual suspects like Yale, Columbia and Goldsmiths) being 38K per year, artists are likely looking at a two-year program with the addition of room and board costing a grand total of $100,000. The Atlantic notes PayScale continues to rank MFA earnings at the bottom of their Highest Paying Graduate Degrees by Salary Potential List: “Fine Arts” is #257, with an average mid-career pay off of a $61,700 year salary. Increasingly, an MFA accounts for a very small group of the American workforce — 1.3 percent, to be precise — that adds further fuel that only those with an elite status can afford to work in the art world.
2011: Shady For-Profit Schools.
While this wasn’t noted in our piece, around this time, we all started to pick up the stench of sham degrees and schools offering a quality of education not on par with its tuition fees.
2016: Really Shady For-Profit Schools.
If the unethical treatment of USC’s MFA students taught us anything, graduate schools can be shady AF. Last year, Pell Grant Data revealed that even though only 13% of the overall college student population attend for-profit schools, “they account for nearly one-third (31 percent) of all student loans and are responsible for more than half (51 percent) of all student loan defaults”. Meanwhile, Forbes’s expose on San Francisco’s Academy of Art University pulled the curtain back on what an institution with a whopping $22,000 annual tuition offered students: not much in the diploma mill game, especially since only 32% of full-time students actually graduated.
This Week’s Must-See Art Events: Save Yourself for the Weekend
This might seem like a slow week of screenings and talks, but it’s probably best to save your energy for the weekend anyway. Friday night Alt Space says goodbye to Bushwick with a one-night-only exhibition curated by Pictureplane. We sincerely advise against being hungover Saturday. You’ll want to get to Sikkema Jenkins & Co early for a chance at scoring some original Postcards From the Edge from the likes of Hans Haacke and John Baldessari for a mere $85—all to support nonprofit Visual AIDS. Stay in Manhattan for a (indoor, warm) digital arts conference at the New Museum, or head to Brooklyn for an outdoor exhibition at The Java Project deliberately scheduled for a day with crappy weather. Speaking of crappy weather in Brooklyn, let’s hope Carla Gannis’s solo show at TRANSFER doesn’t get snowed-out again—it’s been delayed one week already as a result of the blizzard. From Bushwick, head a little farther West to Trans-Pecos in Ridgewood for Zodiack, an epic performance/installation/costume party that’ll keep you up dancing and gawking well into Sunday.
Mon
Liz Magic Laser
Liz Magic Laser discusses new work that focuses on new production techniques and gestures of world leaders. The New York-based performance artist is best known for employing in her video work the “living newspaper” agitprop theatre technique, where actors are cast in performances entirely scripted from lines lifted directly from mass media and literature. We expect to see a lot of concrete examples of that.
Tue
Hardcore Home Movies DL Volume 1 Launch
Is it a good time or just really awkward to bring your friends to a hardcore home movie screening? Now’s your chance to answer this question: Anthology Film Archives is screening a bunch of queercore (or homocore) movies from the 1990s. The scene, brief albeit fertile, produced a number of explicit short films that made the names of artists many of us know today—Bruce LaBruce and Vaginal Davis to name just two of the better known artists. You’ll see these artists and more get fucked.
Jonesy, Fiend, Super 8 on HD, 3min., 1992
Greta Snider, Hard-Core Home Movie, 16mm, 5min., 1989
Jill Reiter, The Birthday Party, 16mm on video, 9min., 1993
G.B. Jones, The Troublemakers, super 8 on DV, 20min., 1990
Scott Treleaven, The Salivation Army, super 8 and video, 22min., 2001
Rick Castro, “3. Dr. Chris Teen Sex Surrogate” (from Three Faces of Women: a feminine trilogy), VHS, 25min., 1994
Greta Snider, Our Gay Brothers, 16mm, 9min., 1993
Wed
Hito Steyerl: In Free Fall
The life of one Boeing 707 airplane looks something like this: Acquired by TWA–>used in Israeli military operations–>stars in the Hollywood movie Speed (1994)–> heads to a scrap metal yard in the Mojave Desert. Hito Steyerl tracks its story as a means of examining tangled economies. Steyerl excels at pointing out how late-capitalist truth is often stranger than fiction, and here, how those two distinctions often blur.
Thu
Michael Maxwell: Mind in the Cave
Basically an abstract painting show that melds primitivism with modernist abstraction and what’s described as the “Neuropsychology of changing states of consciousness”. Expect thickly painted mixed media canvases, that mimic organic forms. Painterly luminosity define these paintings as powdered quartz crystal, clay, silver leaf, beeswax, rabbit skin glue, oil, acrylic, wheat paste, mineral pigments and plant dyes carpet reflective surfaces.
Fri
Anarchy and Ecstasy
Alt Space, the Bushwick-based gallery and outlet for independent press/fashion/music, is shuttering its Montrose storefront after one year. The space is the physical manifestation of music/culture blog/zine Alt Citizen, who assure us they’ll reopen with a new location somewhere in the early Summer.
To say goodbye, they’re hosting a one-night exhibition curated by Travis Egedy (a.k.a. Pictureplane) featuring work by Alexander Heir, Kelsey Niziolek, Lee Trice, Max Eisenberg, Milton Melvin Croissant III, and Rebecca Fin Simonetti. I personally know half of the artists from their warehouse days in Baltimore, so it’s a fitting finale for a gallery with the soul of a punk house.
Sat
Postcards From the Edge
This is the 18th annual two-day Postcards From the Edge fundraiser for Visual AIDS. Basically, hundreds of artists donate postcard-sized artworks to be sold anonymously for $85 each on Saturday and Sunday. The more you buy, there are discounts. What’s amazing about this tradition (apart from it benefiting a really good cause) is the possibility of buying work from an extremely valuable artist for under $100. This year for example, Martha Wilson, John Baldessari, Barry McGee, and Hans Haacke each donated a tiny artwork to the jumble, so you could end up coming home with a blue-chip piece. Then again, you never know. We recommend getting there as early as possible on Saturday, although there are better bulk discounts on Sunday after the show has been picked-over.
Open Score: Art and Technology 2016
A new art and technology conference launched jointly by The New Museum and Rhizome launches this Saturday. Tickets for the event are sold out, but they do have a standby wait list. (In other words you have to show up Saturday and see if there’s a chair available.) Two panels will take place: Generation You – a discussion, on you guessed it, social media. Speakers include Jacob Ciocci, artist; Simon Denny, artist; Juliana Huxtable, artist; and Cathy Park Hong, poet with moderator Andrew Durbin, (poet and writer). The second discussion takes a look at the effect of social media on critique. Speakers include Brian Droitcour, Art in America; Michelle Kuo, Artforum International; Kimberly Drew, Black Contemporary Art, Laura McLean-Ferris, writer Jerry Saltz, New York magazine with moderator Ed Halter, (Light Industry)
Full-Day Conference Pass
- General Public: $30
- Members: $25
Single Session Pass: First Session / Second Session
- General Public: $20
- Members: $15
Metropolitan Structures Presents: Locus of Control
Metropolitan Structures continues its practice of curating extremely site-specific projects with this show, in which traditional and non-traditional media are positioned outdoors deliberately on a day with crappy, crappy weather. From the curators: “The old almanac forecast for the last weekend in January calls for snow and ice. Scott Keightley, Guy Nelson, Matthew Schrader, and Ashley Zangle have been working under this premise, relying on whatever external realities (snow, slush, a hurricane) present themselves for the exhibition. Locus of control is a term used in psychology to describe how we connect our actions with outcomes. It’s an apt concern here, as it embodies the idea of site contingencies. Indeed, it prompts us to ask, how do we respond when things seem out of control? Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, January 30th, 2-4pm, for an exhibition featuring installation, sculpture, and painting, plus snow and ice (maybe), and hot coffee and donuts (definitely).”
Carla Gannis: A Subject Self-Defined
We listed this show opening for last Saturday, but it didn’t happen due to the snowstorm. So, you’ve got a second chance. Here’s what we said about the show last week:
In 2015, Carla Gannis began her Selfie Drawings series as a so-called 52-week self-promotional digital drawing experiment that saw the artist turn an inward gaze at how female representation. She asked how the framing of our electronic devices informed the representation of women and shared these reflections sequentially over social media. The work has now culminated in a body of new work featured in this second solo show at TRANSFER where the selfies have been re-inserted into looping 4K video works. According to TRANSFER’s Director Kelani Nichole, expect “two monumental projected altarpieces custom designed to the space, constructed specifically to display the four primary self-portraiture pieces, along with their corresponding predellas which extend Gannis’ narratives through her four phases of self-reflection.
ZODIACK PT. IX: No Chill Capricorn
We haven’t been to a ZODIACK event yet, but we’ve been hearing good things. The monthly series purportedly channels AREA, the legendary 1980s pop-up-turned-nightclub that combined installation, performance, artists-in-residence, and nightlife and featured artists such as Keith Haring and Grace Jones in their heyday.
Each month, the curators bring installation artists, musicians, performers, and DJs together over a theme related to a different sign of the Zodiac. This month’s, Capricorn (co-hosted by AFC friend Molly Rhinestones), invites attendees to dress up as one of the following categories:
BERLIN BABIES
METAL WERKERS
NSA OPERATIVES
TECHNO TITANS
DECONSTRUCTIONISTS
We’re not sure what the above categories have to do with mythological goats, but we’re into it. There will also be visual artwork by Kim Tran, Arthur Kozlovsk, OCULUSDRIFT.TV, Lady Olive (EVOO), Michowl, FKA T.A.T.S., Pablito Velez, and Pineapple Dreams along with live performances from Bushwick-art-drag personal Lady Simon, Alexis Convento, and musical acts Pləbeian and VIOLENCE, in addition to industrial DJs. What a perfect way to warm up after a day of schlepping all over the cold, cold city. RSVP on the website for $7 admission (otherwise, it’s $12).
Thursday Links: How Brooklyn Salad Helped Settle A City
- James Rondeau has been appoint the new President and Eloise W. Martin Director of the Art Institute of Chicago. Rondeau will assume his new title and duties at the Board of Trustees meeting on February 16, 2016. [AFC Inbox]
- Mexican women fed up with cat calls and harassers are fighting back with plastic confetti guns and punk rock music. [AJ+]
- Art critic Jerry Saltz has published his endorsement of Hillary Clinton and has dubbed it, “Hilary Clinton,Why I Am Voting for Hillary Clinton; The Smell of Napalm the Morning of November 9, 2016”. The reference to Apocalypse Now and nuclear bombs has offended some, though, who deem the violent reference reprehensible but also sanitized because he calls himself a feminist in the endorsement. Now, Saltz has received dozens of “community standard violation complains”. Good God, people. Get a grip. Let a metaphor be a metaphor. [Facebook]
- Coyotes, possibly high on magic mushrooms, attack cars near Stinson Beach. [SFist]
- “Settlers of Brooklyn” (pronounced Brook-lawn) is new commercial spoofing the board game “Settlers of Catan”. The goal is to be the first to fully gentrify a neighborhood with used record stores, food trucks and Urban Outfitters. In the land of Brooklyn, there are five resources available: Coffee, bicycles, vinyl, skinny jeans and kale. OMG, I so want this game to exist. [Facebook]
- What does selfie culture tell us about difference between Chinese and American beauty standards. The conclusions seems to be that Americans like big butts. [Yahoo]
- An enormous piece on women and gender politics in the food world. If you have a few hours, this piece is for you. [Edible]
- David Zwirner is looking to expand to Hong Kong. [artnet News]
- Interesting: Stephen Jost will replace Matthew Teitelbaum as the director and CEO of the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO). Previously, Jost ran the Honolulu Museum of Art, a low profile position relative to the AGO, but had done exceedingly well in the position by stabalizing and growing the museum’s finances. Teitelbaum was the director for 17 years, and oversaw a $276-million renovation designed by Frank Gehry, so Jost will have some big shoes to fill. [The Globe and Mail]
Thursday Links: Can’t Wait to Put the Armory Show Behind Us

Image via the New York Times
- Charlie is a 1 year old kangaroo currently serving as resident therapy animal at Utah’s William E. Christoffersen Veterans Home. He hops around and gives hugs to the veterans and their families. (Related: What Does a Parrot Know about PTSD) If you’re feeling down, the #therapyanimal hashtag on Twitter should cheer you up. [The Dodo]
- Just in case we were starting to get bored with the whole Scumbag-Martin-Shkreli-Bought-the-Wu-Tang-Clan-Album drama, the plot thickens. Now everyone tangentially related to the album’s creation and ownership are being sued by fan-artist Jason Koza over copyright infringement. Koza refers to himself as “one of the most talented portrait artists of the Second Millennium [sic]”. All parties involved are expected to arrive in court in a clown car. [artnet News]
- “I dig the dopey, doglike look on the swimmer’s face too. It hints at something deeper or more embarrassed. He looks like the kind of straight cute lunkheads in high school who’d let you blow them, you know?” Brandon Soderberg on “Flaming American (Swim Champ)” By Marsden Hartley. [City Paper]
- Neoliberal Lulz is the latest project from London-based Jennifer Lyn Morone™ Inc. The artist now identifies as a corporation, and is selling her personal data—everything from the stuff collected and monetized by Google and Facebook to the information hackers might steal. [The Guardian]
- Long Island City artists are facing the threat of displacement. A dance company had to renegotiate a 70% rent hike to a 40% increase. Following LIC’s 2001 rezoning which led to 35,000 new residents in the area, it appears independent companies are being forced to relocate in order to make way for luxury condos. [LIC Post]
- And what’s heading to LIC? Lots of skyscrapers. There’s currently a race to build Queens’ new tallest building. [Curbed]
- On the emergence of Amish romance novels, and its booming rural, religious mom readership. [The Paris Review]
- Art museum social media producers are really emerging as the new power players, as attested by this recent profile on the MET’s Kimberly Drew. I [Rea] love how Drew’s favourite hashtags are #BlackLivesMatter, #CaughtGrammin and #arthoe. [NBC News]
- “It’s probably the first and last time a magazine has used a Gramsci quotation to introduce its readers to Ice Cube.” This is so amazing: in 1991, Angela Davis interviewed Ice Cube for Transition Magazine. [Dangerous Minds]
- Fascinating video portrait of Zun Lee. The Toronto-based documentarian and photographer co-curated Fade Resistance, an exhibition currently on at Toronto’s Gladstone Hotel of found Polaroid of African-American families from the 1970s and 1980s. [Format Magazine]
- Curator Marta Kuzma has been named dean of the Yale School of Art. She’s the first woman to hold the position. [Yale News]
- Here’s a slideshow of previously unseen Picasso works. In total, 271 unknown Picassos were unveiled by a retired French electrician who once worked for the artist and had a secret stash of his work in his garage. [The Telegraph]
- Eyeroll highlights from the Armory Show talks includes Blake Gopnik discussing his forthcoming Warhol biography with Warhol Museum director Eric Shiner, and Jerry Saltz engaging in a deathmatch with Armory director Ben Genocchio on “visual criticism in the digital age”. [The Observer]
- Cindy Sherman is on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar, part of a photoshoot where the artist poses as the type of groupies one might see outside of NYFW waiting to be documented by street fashion photographers. I hate to love this, but it’s really the most Cindy Sherman thing to do with a fashion mag. [Harper’s Bazaar]
- We wrote about the malware museum on Tuesday, but the Internet Archive has far more than just this available thanks to its 3.1 emulator software. Here is a collection of curated Windows 3.x software that shows the range of software products available in the early 1990s. Does anyone else think Castle of the Winds and Net Hack are remarkably similar? [Internet Archive]
Friday Links: “The Fucked-up-ness of American Culture”

Barkley Hendricks, “In the Crosshairs of the States”
- Iggy Pop was at the MoCA Detroit for the opening of American Valhalla: The Art of Post Pop Depression. The exhibition features photography from Andreas Neumann and Matt Helders, and will be tour the same cities as Iggy Pop’s concerts this year. [Billboard]
- Could the German baugruppe model work here? German would-be homeowners can form LLCs to act as their own developers, building themselves custom, cheaper housing as opposed to buying off-the-rack condos. [Curbed]
- Many in Toronto’s Downtown East are concerned that a new LGBTQ-focused sports center development in Toronto’s Moss Park may not serve the area’s large community of homeless people, sex workers and drug users. The Center is promising to “de-institutionalize” the neighborhood by having all community services under one roof, but the development coincides with an Edmonton developer buying up ten properties across the street to turn into three large condo towers. And so far, the condo development’s language—around “safety” and working “closely” with police “to advance law and order”—is raising concern and fears of displacement for the very community the sports center is supposed to serve. [NOW Magazine]
- Barkley L. Hendricks has a new show of paintings at Jack Shainman, and in an interview with Lee Ann Norman, speaks to about his return to portraiture and “the fucked-up-ness of American culture”. [Hyperallergic]
- The latest art world revelation from the Panama Papers? Turns out billionaire currency trader Joe Lewis bought the Ganz collection before the record-breaking 1997 Christie’s auction with the support of an offshore firm. Lewis bought 100 works from the collection six months before for $168 million, and then set up the Christie’s sale, which then fetched $206 million. [The Guardian]
- James R. Miller is suing the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, Sean Kelly Gallery, Skarstedt, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Guggenheim for copyright infringement. Miller claims he actually staged and shot four iconic Mapplethorpe “self portraits” and is seeking tens of millions in damages. [Hyperallergic]
- Dushko Petrovich’s profile of Jerry Saltz is sadly only available in the latest print issue of Tablet, but M.H. Miller provides some highlights here, along with commentary: “Saltz, as one of the few remaining staff art critics in the country, has a lot of power in the art world. He is also a widely known public figure (uncommon for critics of any genre). Negative criticism of him is rare and largely kept private. I’m sure Saltz’s followers would happily—or, more likely, angrily—debate the profile on social media, though in a strange bit of irony for a subject whose persona is so entwined with his presence online, Petrovich’s piece is only available in print.” [ART News]
- Earlier this week, I (Michael) asked “Is a graphic diamond a symbol we can attach whatever symbolic associations we want to?” Apparently, yes. Olafur Eliasson’s “Green Light” looks very much like the project “Diamonds Light Baltimore”, but this time, the diamond is about the refugee crisis, not police brutality. [artnet News]
- “Any New Yorker who even thinks of voting for Ted Cruz should have their head examined, Really, here’s a guy who refused to sign onto the 9/11 health care act for the cops and fireman. Here’s a guy who talks about New York values.” Even conservatives in New York can’t stand Cruz. That quote’s from Long Island Republican Peter King, who also mocks the Texan’s cowboy boots. [New York Daily News]
Monday Links: James Franco Calls AFC “Particularly Nasty”

- It’s the 10th anniversary of the 2006 Youtube sensation “Shoes” by actor Liam Kyle Sullivan. Not sure the video tells us too much about the internet 10 years ago, though it is a good reminder that Peaches and more generally electroclash were widely popular. The music video, which is about a teenage character named “Kelly” who likes shoes and parties, still holds up. [The Onion AV Club]
- Ann Freedman, former director of the scandal-ridden Knoedler Gallery, has given her side again, and what she reveals, is well, not much. Her much-anticipated testimony in the trial over the $8.3 million sale of a fake Rothko to Domenico and Eleanore De Sole was averted when the gallery and collectors settled out of court in February. Expectedly, Freedman confesses she didn’t know any of the works she sold were fakes, and while she says she’s sorry, adds “but let me be clear, this is [about] works of art. I didn’t slay anybody’s first-born. We have to have some perspective on suffering.” While six lawsuits have been settled against Knoedler for all the fakes they sold, four are still active. [Art Newspaper]
- Finally, a listicle we can get behind: 10 Awful Public Art Pieces. [Houston Press]
- The art market is ripe for abuse, say some. High quality global journalism requires investment. “There were huge steps towards greater transparency in the past 20 years,” says Clare McAndrew, author of the TEFAF Art Market report. “But in the past couple of years it has been going backwards.” Apparently, the trend of private sales at auction houses has created problems as has an unwillingness of private galleries to participate in surveys about purchasing. [FT.com via Art Market Monitor]
- Jerry Saltz interviews James Franco. The crux of it seems to be that Franco has been unfairly persecuted in the art world because he’s an A-List actor who’s also an artist and scored his first show at a blue chip with conceptually weak work. The cruelties of the world continue: Jay Z was also unfairly persecuted, for shooting “Picasso Baby” at Pace filled with art world celeb cameos. What planet are these two on? There’s a tiny bit of talk about how Franco’s work wasn’t that strong, but come on. He remade Cindy Sherman photographs and showed them at Pace. Terrible. Franco says the gallery was embarrassed by the show, which HELLO. Of course they were. James Franco describes Art F City as “particularly nasty”. [NY Magazine]
- Somewhat tangentially related, but Franco’s talent agency, WME | IMG, have bought a stake in in Frieze. The power-house agency, run by the inspiration for Entourage’s Ari Gold, will now sponsor the Frieze Tate Fund, providing the Tate with $213,000 for acquisitions. Beyond that, this all basically means you’ll see more celebrities at the fair previews, and the parties will be even more of a hassle to get into. [Artforum]
- The Art Basel stabber says she attacked a fellow fair goer to prevent an ISIS attack. [The Observer]
- Norwegian grocery baron/art collector Stein Erik Hagen is giving The Norwegian National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design free reign to pick out works from his $120 million collection. [Forbes]
- The dreaded L Train shutdown could begin in 2019. [Curbed]
Wednesday Links: But Some People Do Care

Some view Peregrine Honig’s restroom signs as insensitive.
- Former Work of Art contestant Peregrine Honig’s “We Don’t Care” restroom signs—created in response to North Carolina’s discriminatory transgender bathroom laws—are sparking some heated social media debate that for once doesn’t involve the right wing. Some view the $150 signs as exploitative and dismissive, while others (mostly cisgendered people) support the artist. It’s spread to multiple threads, but in this one we get to watch AFC friend Molly Rhinestones and Jerry Saltz on opposite sides of the debate. [Facebook]
- As the cost of riding the MTA continues to rise, fare evasion on the subway is now the number one cause for arrests in NYC, disproportionately affecting low income people of color. All those arrests cost the city $51 million annually. But it would only cost the city $40.5 million to offer those same 29,000 riders free metrocards instead of arrest records and a night in jail. Activists are trying to call attention to this absurd policy by giving out free metrocard swipes in low-income neighborhoods. [Elite Daily]
- Hate read: this piece equates the late Tony Goldman’s art-branded gentrifications schemes with social practice and community arts. Like, not as a criticism of community arts’ vaguely colonial undertones, but as an endorsement of art as a tool for developers. Seriously? [The Huffington Post]
- Related: a household now needs to earn $158,000 annually to rent a two-bedroom in New York City, according to HUD metrics. This is so unacceptable. [Curbed]
- Who is Yusaku Maezawa, the handsome billionaire from Chiba who pretty much single-handedly rescued the market with almost $100 million in contemporary art purchases last week? He’s a fashion mogul, former musician, and philanthropist with a foundation in Tokyo and a guest house for artists in London. Dear Mr. Maezawa, please bring us to Japan to see your collection, love AFC. [Observer]
- This is adorable. Virginia Beach Arts and Humanities Commissioner Ben Loyola is offended by the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art showing Mark Ryden, who uses Catholic imagery in subversive-cheesy ways, and “paintings of nude portraits in all positions.” He’s upset taxpayer money is funding this. Ben, if you need a theme for a party to raise awareness about your concerns, I suggest the 1980s. [WAVY]
- Unsurprisingly, more powerful figures from the art world have been named in the Panama Papers. The latest are gallerist Dominique Lévy and Miami mega-collector Ella Fontanals-Cisneros. If you really need to stash assets in a non-taxable form, can’t you just buy more art for your personal museum? [artnet News]
- Your animal video of the day: Panda & basket. Cleaning up leaves is a much harder job than it looks when there is a panda involved. [YouTube]
- Hip-hop artist The Game commissioned a $65,000 portrait of Prince from street artist Madsteez. I want to see this on the hood of a car. [Complex]
- Ben Davis thoughtfully reflects on Jordan Wolfson’s installation at David Zwirner, which focuses a human-like robot being tortured. Davis concludes that Wolfson has a violent need to command the attention of the viewer. [artnet News]
- The Handicraft Building in Minneapolis, which was erected in 1907 to house women artists and craftspeople, is being partially demolished and renovated into luxury apartments. This is terrible. Dozens of artists will be displaced, in addition to artist-run galleries. This follows a pattern in downtown Minneapolis, in which small-scaled historic structures are being demolished to make way for larger developments. [City Pages]
- In other real estate news, artist-run space Essex Flowers is relocating to Chinatown, where they’ll have a bigger space. [ARTnews]
Friday Links: The Breakfast of Champions

Credit: Extra Crispy
- How does Jerry Saltz and Roberta Smith do breakfast? Neither cook, so according to this AM-focused interview with Saltz, he goes to a nearby deli and gets four cups of coffee, then puts them in the fridge, and when they’re chill, dump them into big 7-11 Double Gulp cups with ice. Instant iced coffee! [Extra Crispy]
- Photographer Tod Seelie is leaving New York for LA because he’s been outpaced by the cost of living, and LA is similar, except it has “huge communal households that are building crazy bikes and tree forts in their yards.” [Gothamist]
- A week of heavy rains in Europe has led to serious flooding, and its cost is now hitting institutions. The rising levels of the Seine, for instance, has flooded Paris streets, and and is at its highest level in nearly 35 years. Curators at the Louvre moved 250,000 works from its basement storage upstairs to avoid damage. [CTV]
- Early career artists working in digital media, there’s an award for you. Equitable Bank’s Emerging Digital Artists Award is now accepting applications. The award comes with a $5,000 prize, and the judging panel includes myself, artist Alex McLeod and curator Amber Christensen. Deadline is September 15. [EDAA]
- Definitely not attachment parenting here: a 7 year old Japanese boy, who had been missing for nearly a week after his parents left in a forest as punishment, was found unharmed. Even though the forest was known to include bears, the parents left him there because he had been throwing rocks at people and cars while playing at a river. [CBC]
Tuesday Links: Teapot Not Enough Dick-Coverage for Australian Painting

- Headline of the day: “Bob Ross Was a Tyrant and Hated His Perm, Says Former Manager.” [artnet News]
- Police were called to an art gallery in a small town in Australia over a complaint of a nude self-portrait by painter Dennis McIntyre. But you can’t even see his junk in the painting! It’s covered by a teapot. It’s not clear who exactly was so offended by this portrait that they actually called the police. According to gallery volunteer Beryl Ramsay, a group of elderly women recently visited the gallery and were far from offended: “Their only complaint was that they couldn't lift the teapot to see what was behind it.” [The Border Mail]
- Here’s an interview with Rossy de Palma, a.k.a. “Dama Picasso” about her decades of collaborations with Pedro Almodovar and how much fun being an artist was during La Movida Madrileña of the 1980s. [Dazed]
- The Shchukin collection—which makes up the bulk of the Hermitage’s early modernist masterworks—is leaving Russia for the first time in a century for a loan to the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris. There’s a nice irony to this—Shchukin collected mostly Parisian artists during his lifetime and he fled to the French capital during the Russian revolution in which the state seized his art collection. [Bloomberg]
- Lisa Cooley talks to ARTnews about closing her gallery. Cooley cites art fair exhaustion as an issue, as well the rise of social media. Seeing and sharing so many images desensitizes people and erodes community and relationship building. That becomes a huge problem when rent rates demand that prices double or triple every year. “The scale is the problem—whether that is scale of information you have to process, or competing with the larger galleries. You can’t scale relationships.” The business model for smaller galleries isn’t working. Hopefully Cooley will get her artists paid. [ARTnews]
- As much as people like to hate on Santiago Calatrava, the World Trade Center redevelopment’s numerous cost-overruns, delays, and design failures—and malls—there’s no denying that the Transportation Hub oculus looks beautiful. [Dezeen]
- Electric Objects is looking for a Curator-in-Chief. This is a pretty exciting job. It means overseeing the editorial and curatorial direction of the company, setting the direction for their commissions program, and hiring and building a capable team of writers and curators to do the job. [Electric Objects]
- Jerry Saltz got himself into some hot water by posting a doctored image of a female tennis player without underwear. The image is now removed (and we won’t post it because the image is offensive), but there are plenty of women still fuming about this over Facebook. [Facebook]
- The Studio Museum has installed four public artworks across Harlem parks from Rudy Shepherd, Kori Newkirk, Simone Leigh, and Kevin Beasley. [The Wall Street Journal]
- A British community garden features a shed modeled on the cockpit of the Millennium Falcon from Star Wars. Unfortunately, someone broke into the farm and vandalized it. The Stonebridge City Farm plans on fixing it. [BBC News]
Monday Links: Oh Yeah!
- What we’re listening to: Yello’s, “Oh Yeah”. Yello musician Dieter Meier has a show up in Berlin right now, and we’re excited. [Galerie Judin]
- An increasing number of museum workers are heading to jobs at auction houses. The pay is significantly better, reports Julia Halperin. [The Art Newspaper]
- New York City’s Department of Cultural Affairs and the Rockefeller Foundation are investing 1 million in a paid internship program with the hopes of increasing diversity. It’s a good idea, but if something isn’t done about displacement of lower income families due to rent increases and gentrification, they might as well be pouring that money down the drain. [artnet News]
- Jerry Saltz rightly lauds the New Museum’s “The Keeper” exhibition, a show he describes as a “museum full of museums, possible encyclopedias, indexes of other orders, and miniature models of pain.” [Vulture]
- Liberal Arts degrees pay off later in life. [The Wall Street Journal]
- 100 roll down security gates in the Lower East Side have been decorated by artist L’Amour Supreme. Round up of highlights here. [Curbed]