Lunar New Year-Ramadan Resolutions

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Daily Newsletter

Lunar New Year-Ramadan Resolutions

The British Museum in hot water over using “Canaan” instead of Palestine in labels, Ocean Vuong’s photography, Lunar New Year celebrations in NYC, and Seph Rodney on the need for art that gives us an “elsewhere to imagine.”

Happy Lunar New Year and Ramadan to our readers who celebrate. May this be a year of peace, health, and prosperity for us all. May it also be a year when artists can make a living from their work, when autocrats are overthrown, when traffickers and their accomplices are brought to justice, when art ceases to be an investment tool, and when bad-faith art writing sponsored by billionaires vanishes from this world. Enjoy reading!

—Hakim Bishara, editor-in-chief


Sarula Bao, Think!Chinatown’s Lantern Residency artist, holds up her handcrafted puppet to celebrate the Year of the Horse on Mott Street in Manhattan. (photo Rhea Nayyar/Hyperallergic)

Chinatown Sets the Year of the Fire Horse Aglow

All along Mott Street yesterday, Manhattan’s Chinatown rang in Lunar New Year with dragon dancers, confetti, and sparklers. Prancing above the crowd was artist Sarula Bao’s embroidered puppet in honor of the Year of the Fire Horse, crafted as part of the annual Lantern Residency organized by nonprofit Think!Chinatown. “I wanted to include some traditional Chinese New Year motifs that are most associated with luck and prosperity, such as mandarins, fish, coins, and the yuanbao, which was historically used as currency,” the artist said.


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Creative Courses and Certificates in a Format That Works for You

Join the creative community at Rhode Island School of Design Continuing Education from anywhere in the world. With in-person and online courses for adult students, along with flexible online certificate programs, you can pursue your passion, launch a career in art and design, or try something new.

Learn more


News

Pro-Palestine activists and climate advocates rally at the British Museum on June 1, 2024. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
  • The British Museum acknowledges that it has updated certain displays in its Middle East Galleries with terms such as “Canaan,” amid news reports accusing the institution of erasing Palestinian history.
  • Turner Prize winner Tai Shani says she has withdrawn a forthcoming monograph with Phaidon, the fine art book publisher owned by Leon Black, in the wake of graphic sexual assault accusations against the private equity billionaire detailed in the latest tranche of Epstein files.
  • A federal judge orders the Trump administration to restore historical slavery exhibits at Philadelphia’s President’s House site, citing George Orwell’s 1984 in the ruling against their removal.

From Our Critics

We Must Do More Than Simply Depict Our Lives
Piero Penizzotto, “Kings of Comedy (Chris, Imani, Bernard, Calvin, D’re)” (2024)(photo by Oriol Tarridas, courtesy The Artist & Primary Gallery)

We Must Do More Than Simply Depict Our Lives

The best work in the Bronx Museum’s biennial indicates aspirations beyond this time and place. | Seph Rodney

Ocean Vuong Is a Legitimately Good Photographer

One might assume that his photography is the nepo baby of his writing, but this is genuinely a great show. | Julia Curl


SPONSORED
CTA Image

Peter Waite: Social Memory, Paintings 1987-2025

Absence is a presence in paintings by artist Peter Waite. Large-scale architectural scenes capture the beauty and poignancy of overlooked corners, faded surfaces, and traces of life that remain when people are gone. On view through March 15, 2026, at The Wadsworth in Hartford, Connecticut.

Learn more


Member Comment

Blaise Tobia on Sarah E. Bond’s “How White Elites Drained Ancient Art of Its Color”:

The Chroma exhibition was fascinating and I look forward to reading the book. Coincidentally, shortly after having seen Chroma, I was in Trieste and came upon the city’s memorial to art historian Johann Winckelmann, who is buried there. Winckelmann was an important proponent of “white” classical sculpture and architecture, even in the face of substantial evidence to the contrary that already existed in the 18th century. Further, as an adopted Philadelphian, I want to point out that the north pediment of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, done in 1937, features a fully polychromed set of classical figures that might be seen as anticipating current art historical trends.

Commenting privileges are reserved for paid members. Join us today!


From the Archive

Times Square in April, 2020 (photo Seph Rodney/Hyperallergic)

Representation Alone Will Not Save Us

We love representation, the power of signifying, and the incisiveness of well-argued critique, but by themselves, these tools won’t effect structural change. | Seph Rodney


Daily Newsletter

Lunar New Year-Ramadan Resolutions

The British Museum in hot water over using “Canaan” instead of Palestine in labels, Ocean Vuong’s photography, Lunar New Year celebrations in NYC, and Seph Rodney on the need for art that gives us an “elsewhere to imagine.”

Happy Lunar New Year and Ramadan to our readers who celebrate. May this be a year of peace, health, and prosperity for us all. May it also be a year when artists can make a living from their work, when autocrats are overthrown, when traffickers and their accomplices are brought to justice, when art ceases to be an investment tool, and when bad-faith art writing sponsored by billionaires vanishes from this world. Enjoy reading!

—Hakim Bishara, editor-in-chief


Sarula Bao, Think!Chinatown’s Lantern Residency artist, holds up her handcrafted puppet to celebrate the Year of the Horse on Mott Street in Manhattan. (photo Rhea Nayyar/Hyperallergic)

Chinatown Sets the Year of the Fire Horse Aglow

All along Mott Street yesterday, Manhattan’s Chinatown rang in Lunar New Year with dragon dancers, confetti, and sparklers. Prancing above the crowd was artist Sarula Bao’s embroidered puppet in honor of the Year of the Fire Horse, crafted as part of the annual Lantern Residency organized by nonprofit Think!Chinatown. “I wanted to include some traditional Chinese New Year motifs that are most associated with luck and prosperity, such as mandarins, fish, coins, and the yuanbao, which was historically used as currency,” the artist said.


SPONSORED
CTA Image

Creative Courses and Certificates in a Format That Works for You

Join the creative community at Rhode Island School of Design Continuing Education from anywhere in the world. With in-person and online courses for adult students, along with flexible online certificate programs, you can pursue your passion, launch a career in art and design, or try something new.

Learn more


News

Pro-Palestine activists and climate advocates rally at the British Museum on June 1, 2024. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
  • The British Museum acknowledges that it has updated certain displays in its Middle East Galleries with terms such as “Canaan,” amid news reports accusing the institution of erasing Palestinian history.
  • Turner Prize winner Tai Shani says she has withdrawn a forthcoming monograph with Phaidon, the fine art book publisher owned by Leon Black, in the wake of graphic sexual assault accusations against the private equity billionaire detailed in the latest tranche of Epstein files.
  • A federal judge orders the Trump administration to restore historical slavery exhibits at Philadelphia’s President’s House site, citing George Orwell’s 1984 in the ruling against their removal.

From Our Critics

We Must Do More Than Simply Depict Our Lives
Piero Penizzotto, “Kings of Comedy (Chris, Imani, Bernard, Calvin, D’re)” (2024)(photo by Oriol Tarridas, courtesy The Artist & Primary Gallery)

We Must Do More Than Simply Depict Our Lives

The best work in the Bronx Museum’s biennial indicates aspirations beyond this time and place. | Seph Rodney

Ocean Vuong Is a Legitimately Good Photographer

One might assume that his photography is the nepo baby of his writing, but this is genuinely a great show. | Julia Curl


SPONSORED
CTA Image

Peter Waite: Social Memory, Paintings 1987-2025

Absence is a presence in paintings by artist Peter Waite. Large-scale architectural scenes capture the beauty and poignancy of overlooked corners, faded surfaces, and traces of life that remain when people are gone. On view through March 15, 2026, at The Wadsworth in Hartford, Connecticut.

Learn more


Member Comment

Blaise Tobia on Sarah E. Bond’s “How White Elites Drained Ancient Art of Its Color”:

The Chroma exhibition was fascinating and I look forward to reading the book. Coincidentally, shortly after having seen Chroma, I was in Trieste and came upon the city’s memorial to art historian Johann Winckelmann, who is buried there. Winckelmann was an important proponent of “white” classical sculpture and architecture, even in the face of substantial evidence to the contrary that already existed in the 18th century. Further, as an adopted Philadelphian, I want to point out that the north pediment of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, done in 1937, features a fully polychromed set of classical figures that might be seen as anticipating current art historical trends.

Commenting privileges are reserved for paid members. Join us today!


From the Archive

Times Square in April, 2020 (photo Seph Rodney/Hyperallergic)

Representation Alone Will Not Save Us

We love representation, the power of signifying, and the incisiveness of well-argued critique, but by themselves, these tools won’t effect structural change. | Seph Rodney


Happy Lunar New Year and Ramadan to our readers who celebrate. May this be a year of peace, health, and prosperity for us all. May it also be a year when artists can make a living from their work, when autocrats are overthrown, when traffickers and their accomplices are brought to justice, when art ceases to be an investment tool, and when bad-faith art writing sponsored by billionaires vanishes from this world. Enjoy reading!

—Hakim Bishara, editor-in-chief


Sarula Bao, Think!Chinatown’s Lantern Residency artist, holds up her handcrafted puppet to celebrate the Year of the Horse on Mott Street in Manhattan. (photo Rhea Nayyar/Hyperallergic)

Chinatown Sets the Year of the Fire Horse Aglow

All along Mott Street yesterday, Manhattan’s Chinatown rang in Lunar New Year with dragon dancers, confetti, and sparklers. Prancing above the crowd was artist Sarula Bao’s embroidered puppet in honor of the Year of the Fire Horse, crafted as part of the annual Lantern Residency organized by nonprofit Think!Chinatown. “I wanted to include some traditional Chinese New Year motifs that are most associated with luck and prosperity, such as mandarins, fish, coins, and the yuanbao, which was historically used as currency,” the artist said.


SPONSORED
CTA Image

Creative Courses and Certificates in a Format That Works for You

Join the creative community at Rhode Island School of Design Continuing Education from anywhere in the world. With in-person and online courses for adult students, along with flexible online certificate programs, you can pursue your passion, launch a career in art and design, or try something new.

Learn more


News

Pro-Palestine activists and climate advocates rally at the British Museum on June 1, 2024. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
  • The British Museum acknowledges that it has updated certain displays in its Middle East Galleries with terms such as “Canaan,” amid news reports accusing the institution of erasing Palestinian history.
  • Turner Prize winner Tai Shani says she has withdrawn a forthcoming monograph with Phaidon, the fine art book publisher owned by Leon Black, in the wake of graphic sexual assault accusations against the private equity billionaire detailed in the latest tranche of Epstein files.
  • A federal judge orders the Trump administration to restore historical slavery exhibits at Philadelphia’s President’s House site, citing George Orwell’s 1984 in the ruling against their removal.

From Our Critics

We Must Do More Than Simply Depict Our Lives
Piero Penizzotto, “Kings of Comedy (Chris, Imani, Bernard, Calvin, D’re)” (2024)(photo by Oriol Tarridas, courtesy The Artist & Primary Gallery)

We Must Do More Than Simply Depict Our Lives

The best work in the Bronx Museum’s biennial indicates aspirations beyond this time and place. | Seph Rodney

Ocean Vuong Is a Legitimately Good Photographer

One might assume that his photography is the nepo baby of his writing, but this is genuinely a great show. | Julia Curl


SPONSORED
CTA Image

Peter Waite: Social Memory, Paintings 1987-2025

Absence is a presence in paintings by artist Peter Waite. Large-scale architectural scenes capture the beauty and poignancy of overlooked corners, faded surfaces, and traces of life that remain when people are gone. On view through March 15, 2026, at The Wadsworth in Hartford, Connecticut.

Learn more


Member Comment

Blaise Tobia on Sarah E. Bond’s “How White Elites Drained Ancient Art of Its Color”:

The Chroma exhibition was fascinating and I look forward to reading the book. Coincidentally, shortly after having seen Chroma, I was in Trieste and came upon the city’s memorial to art historian Johann Winckelmann, who is buried there. Winckelmann was an important proponent of “white” classical sculpture and architecture, even in the face of substantial evidence to the contrary that already existed in the 18th century. Further, as an adopted Philadelphian, I want to point out that the north pediment of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, done in 1937, features a fully polychromed set of classical figures that might be seen as anticipating current art historical trends.

Commenting privileges are reserved for paid members. Join us today!


From the Archive

Times Square in April, 2020 (photo Seph Rodney/Hyperallergic)

Representation Alone Will Not Save Us

We love representation, the power of signifying, and the incisiveness of well-argued critique, but by themselves, these tools won’t effect structural change. | Seph Rodney


Brooklyn Fine Art Print Fair Returns to Powerhouse Arts This Spring

Brooklyn Fine Art Print Fair Returns to Powerhouse Arts This Spring

Over 50 exhibitors, hands-on programming, and a juried print exhibition make up the fair’s expanded second edition. April 9–12, 2026.

Powerhouse Arts
The Museum at FIT Presents “Art X Fashion”

The Museum at FIT Presents “Art X Fashion”

This exhibition explores the entangled and shifting relationship between fine art and fashion, tracing parallel aesthetics from 18th-century Rococo to postmodernism.

The Museum at FIT
Inside Pratt SCPS: Where Practice Meets the Spotlight

Inside Pratt SCPS: Where Practice Meets the Spotlight

Discover what happens when working creatives, career pivoters, and lifelong makers plug into art and design education at Pratt’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies.

Pratt Institute SCPS
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

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