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Daily Newsletter
Chronicles of a Needless War
DC’s “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame,” a major ruling on copyrights for AI art, Israel-US strikes damage a historic site in Tehran, exhibitions to visit in Los Angeles this month, and more.
As Lunar New Year celebrations continue across the world, nobody embodies the holiday spirit quite like New Yorkers. Case in point: AX Mina visited Abrons Arts Center for its annual mutual aid initiative and art exhibition. With Love, From Chinatown celebrates the kaleidoscope of queer, working-class imagery and art that makes the community so special — and amid a world in turmoil, Mina’s reflections remind us of what the Year of the Fire Horse truly represents.
Meanwhile, Israel and US airstrikes on Tehran damage priceless artifacts in the Qajar-era Golestan Palace as a “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame” guerrilla installation in DC reminds us of the real reason why Trump waged this needless war.
—Lakshmi Rivera Amin, associate editor

The Political Potential of the Chinatown Storefront
Abrons Arts Center is hosting its annual Lunar New Year mutual aid initiative, where art highlights and supports local businesses. | AX Mina

Artists Thinking Out Loud: The IFPDA Returns to the Park Avenue Armory this April
The fair will bring together 80 exhibitors and an expanded focus on drawings in a nod to the medium’s long-standing relationship with printmaking.
Learn more
News

- Israeli and American airstrikes on Iran have caused significant damage to the Qajar-eraartifacts, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the heart of Tehran.
- In Washington, DC, a “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame” includes “stars” for MoMA trustee Leon Black, arts patron Les Wexner, and others mentioned in the Epstein files.
- Computer scientist Stephen Thaler struck out once again this week after the US Supreme Court declined to hear his appeal on the years-long legal battle to secure copyright protections for an AI-generated “artwork.”
From Our Critics

Petrit Halilaj’s Opera of Kosovan Memory and Myth
Through his fantastical vignettes, Halilaj suggests curiosity about others as a way to neutralize the forces that lead to difference-based violence. | Cat Dawson

Prisoners of Love: Until the Sun of Freedom
The only US presentation of this exhibition by renowned artists Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme is on view at The Bell Gallery, Brown University.
Learn more
What to See in LA

10 Art Shows to See in Los Angeles This March
The artists of Nature Morte gallery, Hayv Kahraman’s painted libations, Jesse Wiedel’s screwball American dream, the late Nona Olabisi’s homegrown muralism, and more. | Matt Stromberg
Member Comment
Stephencribari on Bella Bromberg’s “Suffering From ‘Creative Hangover’? You’re Not Alone”:
From the Archive

Targeting Iran’s Cultural Heritage Means Targeting Human Beings
Targeting Iranian cultural heritage is first and foremost bad because of the devastating effects it would have on Iranians. We in the rest of the world may feel a real loss, but that is secondary at best. | Michael Press
Daily Newsletter
Chronicles of a Needless War
DC’s “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame,” a major ruling on copyrights for AI art, Israel-US strikes damage a historic site in Tehran, exhibitions to visit in Los Angeles this month, and more.
As Lunar New Year celebrations continue across the world, nobody embodies the holiday spirit quite like New Yorkers. Case in point: AX Mina visited Abrons Arts Center for its annual mutual aid initiative and art exhibition. With Love, From Chinatown celebrates the kaleidoscope of queer, working-class imagery and art that makes the community so special — and amid a world in turmoil, Mina’s reflections remind us of what the Year of the Fire Horse truly represents.
Meanwhile, Israel and US airstrikes on Tehran damage priceless artifacts in the Qajar-era Golestan Palace as a “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame” guerrilla installation in DC reminds us of the real reason why Trump waged this needless war.
—Lakshmi Rivera Amin, associate editor

The Political Potential of the Chinatown Storefront
Abrons Arts Center is hosting its annual Lunar New Year mutual aid initiative, where art highlights and supports local businesses. | AX Mina

Artists Thinking Out Loud: The IFPDA Returns to the Park Avenue Armory this April
The fair will bring together 80 exhibitors and an expanded focus on drawings in a nod to the medium’s long-standing relationship with printmaking.
Learn more
News

- Israeli and American airstrikes on Iran have caused significant damage to the Qajar-eraartifacts, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the heart of Tehran.
- In Washington, DC, a “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame” includes “stars” for MoMA trustee Leon Black, arts patron Les Wexner, and others mentioned in the Epstein files.
- Computer scientist Stephen Thaler struck out once again this week after the US Supreme Court declined to hear his appeal on the years-long legal battle to secure copyright protections for an AI-generated “artwork.”
From Our Critics

Petrit Halilaj’s Opera of Kosovan Memory and Myth
Through his fantastical vignettes, Halilaj suggests curiosity about others as a way to neutralize the forces that lead to difference-based violence. | Cat Dawson

Prisoners of Love: Until the Sun of Freedom
The only US presentation of this exhibition by renowned artists Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme is on view at The Bell Gallery, Brown University.
Learn more
What to See in LA

10 Art Shows to See in Los Angeles This March
The artists of Nature Morte gallery, Hayv Kahraman’s painted libations, Jesse Wiedel’s screwball American dream, the late Nona Olabisi’s homegrown muralism, and more. | Matt Stromberg
Member Comment
Stephencribari on Bella Bromberg’s “Suffering From ‘Creative Hangover’? You’re Not Alone”:
From the Archive

Targeting Iran’s Cultural Heritage Means Targeting Human Beings
Targeting Iranian cultural heritage is first and foremost bad because of the devastating effects it would have on Iranians. We in the rest of the world may feel a real loss, but that is secondary at best. | Michael Press
As Lunar New Year celebrations continue across the world, nobody embodies the holiday spirit quite like New Yorkers. Case in point: AX Mina visited Abrons Arts Center for its annual mutual aid initiative and art exhibition. With Love, From Chinatown celebrates the kaleidoscope of queer, working-class imagery and art that makes the community so special — and amid a world in turmoil, Mina’s reflections remind us of what the Year of the Fire Horse truly represents.
Meanwhile, Israel and US airstrikes on Tehran damage priceless artifacts in the Qajar-era Golestan Palace as a “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame” guerrilla installation in DC reminds us of the real reason why Trump waged this needless war.
—Lakshmi Rivera Amin, associate editor

The Political Potential of the Chinatown Storefront
Abrons Arts Center is hosting its annual Lunar New Year mutual aid initiative, where art highlights and supports local businesses. | AX Mina

Artists Thinking Out Loud: The IFPDA Returns to the Park Avenue Armory this April
The fair will bring together 80 exhibitors and an expanded focus on drawings in a nod to the medium’s long-standing relationship with printmaking.
Learn more
News

- Israeli and American airstrikes on Iran have caused significant damage to the Qajar-eraartifacts, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the heart of Tehran.
- In Washington, DC, a “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame” includes “stars” for MoMA trustee Leon Black, arts patron Les Wexner, and others mentioned in the Epstein files.
- Computer scientist Stephen Thaler struck out once again this week after the US Supreme Court declined to hear his appeal on the years-long legal battle to secure copyright protections for an AI-generated “artwork.”
From Our Critics

Petrit Halilaj’s Opera of Kosovan Memory and Myth
Through his fantastical vignettes, Halilaj suggests curiosity about others as a way to neutralize the forces that lead to difference-based violence. | Cat Dawson

Prisoners of Love: Until the Sun of Freedom
The only US presentation of this exhibition by renowned artists Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme is on view at The Bell Gallery, Brown University.
Learn more
What to See in LA

10 Art Shows to See in Los Angeles This March
The artists of Nature Morte gallery, Hayv Kahraman’s painted libations, Jesse Wiedel’s screwball American dream, the late Nona Olabisi’s homegrown muralism, and more. | Matt Stromberg
Member Comment
Stephencribari on Bella Bromberg’s “Suffering From ‘Creative Hangover’? You’re Not Alone”:
From the Archive

Targeting Iran’s Cultural Heritage Means Targeting Human Beings
Targeting Iranian cultural heritage is first and foremost bad because of the devastating effects it would have on Iranians. We in the rest of the world may feel a real loss, but that is secondary at best. | Michael Press

Olafur Eliasson: A symphony of disappearing sounds for the Great Salt Lake
As the lake’s ecological crisis worsens, the artist’s new site-specific installation in Salt Lake City renders audible what is increasingly at risk of vanishing.

Interdimensional Timelines: Hartford Art School Exhibits Liz Nielsen’s Photograms
As she concludes her term as the university’s Distinguished Chair in Photography, Nielsen’s “light paintings” are on view this spring in West Hartford, Connecticut.

Call for Applications: 2026 Craft Archive Fellowship
The Center for Craft will award up to four $5,000 fellowships to support research on underrepresented craft histories, culminating in an article on Hyperallergic.

In Conversation: Will Wilson
In partnership with Art Bridges, the Visual Arts Center of New Jersey presents works by Will Wilson alongside historic photographs by Edward Sheriff Curtis. On view through August 23.
[analyse_source url=”https://hyperallergic.com/chronicles-of-a-needless-war/”]