The Art World After Epstein

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Daily Newsletter

The Art World After Epstein

How can art institutions reject corrupt funding, the Washington Post lays off its art critic, art books to read this month, and our weekly community columns.

We knew everything we needed to know about the art world before the Epstein Files dropped. Before heinous allegations against Museum of Modern Art trustee Leon Black emerged, or School of Visual Arts chair David A. Ross’s sympathetic endorsement of Epstein came out, we knew about the intimate connections between institutional heads and donors and trustees. The exchanges of money, donations, or favors that bind them.

So what do we do about it? In an opinion piece today, Editor-at-Large Hrag Vartanian asks a crucial question: How do we empower arts leaders to reject funding from corrupt individuals in favor of civic leaders we can be proud of?

We’re living in a world where — speaking of evil billionaires — the Jeff Bezos-owned Washington Post just laid off 300 people, including its Pulitzer Prize-winning art critic Sebastian Smee. But Vartanian’s piece refuses pessimism — the old and defeated adage that the system has always and therefore will always be this way. Democracy dies in darkness, as the tagline of a once-venerated newspaper goes. Let’s make our way into the light.

Lisa Yin Zhang, associate editor


Disgraced billionaire and MoMA trustee Leon Black (edit Shari Flores and Hrag Vartanian/Hyperallergic)

Epstein Files Expose the Depths of the Art World’s Rot

“The culture that Jeffrey Epstein represents is deeply embedded in the art establishment power structures that force themselves onto the rest of us, creating dynamics that exploit, degrade, and turn us all into cynics,” Editor-at-Large Hrag Vartanian writes. He asks all of us in the art world to return to that fundamental question: Who are we making art for? What are we willing to give up?


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News

Former Washington Post art critic Sebastian Smee (photo by Amber Davis Tourlentes, courtesy Sebastian Smee)
  • The Washington Post lays off its art critic Sebastian Smee in what’s been described as a “bloodbath” at the Jeff Bezos-owned paper. All of the Post’s staff photographers were also eliminated, raising questions about the future of the publication’s visual strategy.
  • The National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, acquires Italian Baroque master Artemisia Gentileschi’s “Mary Magdalene in Ecstasy” (c. 1625). The painting depicts the biblical character amid experiencing a divine vision.

SPONSORED
CTA Image

Frankenthaler Climate Initiative Opens Applications for Sixth Grant Cycle

The program has awarded more than $17.5 million to US visual arts organizations pursuing energy efficiency assessments and projects.

Learn more


Books Guide

Art-related books spanning centuries, countries, and subjects! (edit Shari Flores/Hyperallergic)

8 Art Books to Read This February

Recommendations from our editors this month include a history of the Parisian artist hub of Montmartre, a colorful monograph by Yankunytjatjara artist Kaylene Whiskey, and Joseph Grigley’s poignant book about how his loss of hearing inflected his creative life.


Community

Yep, one of our readers gets to make art here. Enjoy vicariously.

A View From the Easel

This week, Pitseolak Qimirpik makes graphic art and carvings (and watches beautiful sunsets, apparently) from their snow-bound studio in Kinngait, Canada, and Pau Tiu and Felize Camille Tolentino-Tiu share a cozy (actually cozy, not realtor-speak “cozy”) studio in Queens. Yours could be next!

Required Reading

The politics of love letters, the blossoming of Black-owned bookstores, and a spoof of Melania Trump’s new movie are just some of the gems from Associate Editor Lakshmi River Amin’s weekly round-up of must-reads from around the internet.

Art Movements

In this week’s edition of Senior Editor Valentina Di Liscia’s round-up of must-know industry news, British curator Ekow Eshun will curate the 13th SITE SANTA FE International Biennial, Mnuchin Gallery shutters, the Warhol Foundation expands its grant program, and Michelangelo’s foot drawing sells at Christie’s.


Member Comment

Joel Becktell on Julia Curl’s “Eugène Atget, Readymade Icon”:

That is some excellent writing. I feel informed and educated about an artist I already appreciate, and entertained by the deft translation of the writer’s experience and knowledge into personal but helpful criticism. That’s good enough, as far as it goes, but maybe best of all, the freshness and the skillful combination of the writer’s expertise and strong-but-flexible viewpoint will inspire me to better viewing at other exhibitions in the future. Congratulations, and thanks.

From the Archive

Art Historian May Have Discovered Two Artemisia Gentileschi Paintings in Beirut

After Gregory Buchakjian’s discovery laid largely dormat for decades, his research has been renewed and well-received by scholars of the Baroque artist. | Hrag Vartanian

Daily Newsletter

The Art World After Epstein

How can art institutions reject corrupt funding, the Washington Post lays off its art critic, art books to read this month, and our weekly community columns.

We knew everything we needed to know about the art world before the Epstein Files dropped. Before heinous allegations against Museum of Modern Art trustee Leon Black emerged, or School of Visual Arts chair David A. Ross’s sympathetic endorsement of Epstein came out, we knew about the intimate connections between institutional heads and donors and trustees. The exchanges of money, donations, or favors that bind them.

So what do we do about it? In an opinion piece today, Editor-at-Large Hrag Vartanian asks a crucial question: How do we empower arts leaders to reject funding from corrupt individuals in favor of civic leaders we can be proud of?

We’re living in a world where — speaking of evil billionaires — the Jeff Bezos-owned Washington Post just laid off 300 people, including its Pulitzer Prize-winning art critic Sebastian Smee. But Vartanian’s piece refuses pessimism — the old and defeated adage that the system has always and therefore will always be this way. Democracy dies in darkness, as the tagline of a once-venerated newspaper goes. Let’s make our way into the light.

Lisa Yin Zhang, associate editor


Disgraced billionaire and MoMA trustee Leon Black (edit Shari Flores and Hrag Vartanian/Hyperallergic)

Epstein Files Expose the Depths of the Art World’s Rot

“The culture that Jeffrey Epstein represents is deeply embedded in the art establishment power structures that force themselves onto the rest of us, creating dynamics that exploit, degrade, and turn us all into cynics,” Editor-at-Large Hrag Vartanian writes. He asks all of us in the art world to return to that fundamental question: Who are we making art for? What are we willing to give up?


SPONSORED
CTA Image

Learn more


News

Former Washington Post art critic Sebastian Smee (photo by Amber Davis Tourlentes, courtesy Sebastian Smee)
  • The Washington Post lays off its art critic Sebastian Smee in what’s been described as a “bloodbath” at the Jeff Bezos-owned paper. All of the Post’s staff photographers were also eliminated, raising questions about the future of the publication’s visual strategy.
  • The National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, acquires Italian Baroque master Artemisia Gentileschi’s “Mary Magdalene in Ecstasy” (c. 1625). The painting depicts the biblical character amid experiencing a divine vision.

SPONSORED
CTA Image

Frankenthaler Climate Initiative Opens Applications for Sixth Grant Cycle

The program has awarded more than $17.5 million to US visual arts organizations pursuing energy efficiency assessments and projects.

Learn more


Books Guide

Art-related books spanning centuries, countries, and subjects! (edit Shari Flores/Hyperallergic)

8 Art Books to Read This February

Recommendations from our editors this month include a history of the Parisian artist hub of Montmartre, a colorful monograph by Yankunytjatjara artist Kaylene Whiskey, and Joseph Grigley’s poignant book about how his loss of hearing inflected his creative life.


Community

Yep, one of our readers gets to make art here. Enjoy vicariously.

A View From the Easel

This week, Pitseolak Qimirpik makes graphic art and carvings (and watches beautiful sunsets, apparently) from their snow-bound studio in Kinngait, Canada, and Pau Tiu and Felize Camille Tolentino-Tiu share a cozy (actually cozy, not realtor-speak “cozy”) studio in Queens. Yours could be next!

Required Reading

The politics of love letters, the blossoming of Black-owned bookstores, and a spoof of Melania Trump’s new movie are just some of the gems from Associate Editor Lakshmi River Amin’s weekly round-up of must-reads from around the internet.

Art Movements

In this week’s edition of Senior Editor Valentina Di Liscia’s round-up of must-know industry news, British curator Ekow Eshun will curate the 13th SITE SANTA FE International Biennial, Mnuchin Gallery shutters, the Warhol Foundation expands its grant program, and Michelangelo’s foot drawing sells at Christie’s.


Member Comment

Joel Becktell on Julia Curl’s “Eugène Atget, Readymade Icon”:

That is some excellent writing. I feel informed and educated about an artist I already appreciate, and entertained by the deft translation of the writer’s experience and knowledge into personal but helpful criticism. That’s good enough, as far as it goes, but maybe best of all, the freshness and the skillful combination of the writer’s expertise and strong-but-flexible viewpoint will inspire me to better viewing at other exhibitions in the future. Congratulations, and thanks.

From the Archive

Art Historian May Have Discovered Two Artemisia Gentileschi Paintings in Beirut

After Gregory Buchakjian’s discovery laid largely dormat for decades, his research has been renewed and well-received by scholars of the Baroque artist. | Hrag Vartanian

We knew everything we needed to know about the art world before the Epstein Files dropped. Before heinous allegations against Museum of Modern Art trustee Leon Black emerged, or School of Visual Arts chair David A. Ross’s sympathetic endorsement of Epstein came out, we knew about the intimate connections between institutional heads and donors and trustees. The exchanges of money, donations, or favors that bind them.

So what do we do about it? In an opinion piece today, Editor-at-Large Hrag Vartanian asks a crucial question: How do we empower arts leaders to reject funding from corrupt individuals in favor of civic leaders we can be proud of?

We’re living in a world where — speaking of evil billionaires — the Jeff Bezos-owned Washington Post just laid off 300 people, including its Pulitzer Prize-winning art critic Sebastian Smee. But Vartanian’s piece refuses pessimism — the old and defeated adage that the system has always and therefore will always be this way. Democracy dies in darkness, as the tagline of a once-venerated newspaper goes. Let’s make our way into the light.

Lisa Yin Zhang, associate editor


Disgraced billionaire and MoMA trustee Leon Black (edit Shari Flores and Hrag Vartanian/Hyperallergic)

Epstein Files Expose the Depths of the Art World’s Rot

“The culture that Jeffrey Epstein represents is deeply embedded in the art establishment power structures that force themselves onto the rest of us, creating dynamics that exploit, degrade, and turn us all into cynics,” Editor-at-Large Hrag Vartanian writes. He asks all of us in the art world to return to that fundamental question: Who are we making art for? What are we willing to give up?


SPONSORED
CTA Image

Learn more


News

Former Washington Post art critic Sebastian Smee (photo by Amber Davis Tourlentes, courtesy Sebastian Smee)
  • The Washington Post lays off its art critic Sebastian Smee in what’s been described as a “bloodbath” at the Jeff Bezos-owned paper. All of the Post’s staff photographers were also eliminated, raising questions about the future of the publication’s visual strategy.
  • The National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, acquires Italian Baroque master Artemisia Gentileschi’s “Mary Magdalene in Ecstasy” (c. 1625). The painting depicts the biblical character amid experiencing a divine vision.

SPONSORED
CTA Image

Frankenthaler Climate Initiative Opens Applications for Sixth Grant Cycle

The program has awarded more than $17.5 million to US visual arts organizations pursuing energy efficiency assessments and projects.

Learn more


Books Guide

Art-related books spanning centuries, countries, and subjects! (edit Shari Flores/Hyperallergic)

8 Art Books to Read This February

Recommendations from our editors this month include a history of the Parisian artist hub of Montmartre, a colorful monograph by Yankunytjatjara artist Kaylene Whiskey, and Joseph Grigley’s poignant book about how his loss of hearing inflected his creative life.


Community

Yep, one of our readers gets to make art here. Enjoy vicariously.

A View From the Easel

This week, Pitseolak Qimirpik makes graphic art and carvings (and watches beautiful sunsets, apparently) from their snow-bound studio in Kinngait, Canada, and Pau Tiu and Felize Camille Tolentino-Tiu share a cozy (actually cozy, not realtor-speak “cozy”) studio in Queens. Yours could be next!

Required Reading

The politics of love letters, the blossoming of Black-owned bookstores, and a spoof of Melania Trump’s new movie are just some of the gems from Associate Editor Lakshmi River Amin’s weekly round-up of must-reads from around the internet.

Art Movements

In this week’s edition of Senior Editor Valentina Di Liscia’s round-up of must-know industry news, British curator Ekow Eshun will curate the 13th SITE SANTA FE International Biennial, Mnuchin Gallery shutters, the Warhol Foundation expands its grant program, and Michelangelo’s foot drawing sells at Christie’s.


Member Comment

Joel Becktell on Julia Curl’s “Eugène Atget, Readymade Icon”:

That is some excellent writing. I feel informed and educated about an artist I already appreciate, and entertained by the deft translation of the writer’s experience and knowledge into personal but helpful criticism. That’s good enough, as far as it goes, but maybe best of all, the freshness and the skillful combination of the writer’s expertise and strong-but-flexible viewpoint will inspire me to better viewing at other exhibitions in the future. Congratulations, and thanks.

From the Archive

Art Historian May Have Discovered Two Artemisia Gentileschi Paintings in Beirut

After Gregory Buchakjian’s discovery laid largely dormat for decades, his research has been renewed and well-received by scholars of the Baroque artist. | Hrag Vartanian

Naoto Nakagawa 2026 Is on View at KAPOW

Naoto Nakagawa 2026 Is on View at KAPOW

The Lower East Side gallery presents new works by an artist who has shown in major US museums since the 1960s. The exhibition is open through February 22.

KAPOW
The Biennale Certificate in Philosophy and Art

The Biennale Certificate in Philosophy and Art

The Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts (IDSVA) invites creatives from all backgrounds to apply for this four-day summer program in Venice.

Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts (IDSVA)
Matthew Bogdanos Awarded Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History for Repatriation of Stolen Artifacts

Matthew Bogdanos Awarded Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History for Repatriation of Stolen Artifacts

The leader of the Manhattan DA’s Antiquities Trafficking Unit is acknowledged for his lifelong dedication to recovering and safeguarding looted antiquities.

The Vilcek Foundation
Interdisciplinary Graduate Programs at SFU’s School for the Contemporary Arts

Interdisciplinary Graduate Programs at SFU’s School for the Contemporary Arts

Transform your art practice with access to internationally-recognized faculty and state-of-the-art facilities in downtown Vancouver. MFA and MA applications are accepted through February 15.

Simon Fraser University

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