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Daily Newsletter
WTF Is an “A-Corp”?
Hyperallergic wins a journalism award, hilarious new protest art against Trump, and should you start an Artist Corporation?
Good news: Hyperallergic has just received another journalism award. Noah Fischer’s comic “Prospect Heights Ghost Story,” published last year in collaboration with the Economic Hardship Project (EHRP), won a 2026 New York Press Club Award. Congrats to Noah and big thanks to Alissa Quart from EHRP for the successful collaboration.
Today in the news, anti-Trump guerrilla protest art in DC keeps getting more creative. The latest is an arcade game that lets you choose between ordering a Diet Coke or invading Iran. It’s satire at its finest.
Also in this edition: The Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood emerges as the city’s new art hotspot, a peek inside Mozart’s life, and Michael Glover on the religious paintings of Francisco de Zurbarán, aka the “Caravaggio of Spain.” Plus, Paddy Johnson explains what on earth an “A-Corp” is, and whether you should start one.
—Hakim Bishara, editor-in-chief

Art Problems: WTF Is an A-Corp?
What exactly is an Artist Corporation, and should you start one? Paddy Johnson has your back.

Mary Sully at James Cohan’s 52 Walker Street Gallery
James Cohan presents an exhibition by Mary Sully, opening May 15. In the late 1920s, Sully began a series of inventive drawings, each portraying a celebrity. Mixing both representative and abstract elements with patterning, the artist merged her knowledge of modern art and design with Native American forms to create dazzling works.
Learn more
News

- As the Venice Biennale opened its doors to the public, almost half of the artists in the international exhibition plus 22 national pavilions issued their withdrawal from awards consideration in solidarity with the jury’s resignation.
- As Somalia’s first-ever national pavilion debuts at the 61st Venice Biennale, some local cultural organizations say they were not “meaningfully consulted” or “included” in the selection process for the exhibition.
- Three arcade cabinets appeared at the DC War Memorial, inviting visitors to play “Operation Epic Furious: Strait to Hell,” which mirrors the White House’s trivialization of death and suffering amid the US and Israel’s prolonged war on Iran.
Artists Up Close

Did Zurbarán Believe What He Painted?
An exhibition about the Spanish painter in London made me ponder whether belief actually makes a difference in how well you paint. | Michael Glover
What Did Mozart’s Life Look Like?
An exhibition at the Morgan Library guides visitors through the life and career of the virtuoso via art and well-preserved ephemera. | Greta Rainbow
Sophia Rivera’s Mythology of Everyday New York
Her photos are unresolvable, driving the viewer through wonder, horror, and laughter without necessarily leading one to acceptance. | Julia Curl
Ridgewood’s Thriving Art Scene Steps Out of Bushwick’s Shadow
Ridgewood Open Studios drew hundreds to explore hidden alcoves in converted factories, basement spaces teeming with sculptures, and printmaking workshops in playgrounds. | Aaron Short

Rising Up: Rocky and the Making of Monuments
Featuring works from antiquity to today, the exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art explores the Rocky statue and its impact on the city’s culture, community, and public art.
Learn more
Memorable Moment

ICYMI

A Prospect Heights Ghost Story
The final part of our NYC Housing Stories series focused on its creator, who was displaced from his Brooklyn brownstone. | Noah Fischer
Daily Newsletter
WTF Is an “A-Corp”?
Hyperallergic wins a journalism award, hilarious new protest art against Trump, and should you start an Artist Corporation?
Good news: Hyperallergic has just received another journalism award. Noah Fischer’s comic “Prospect Heights Ghost Story,” published last year in collaboration with the Economic Hardship Project (EHRP), won a 2026 New York Press Club Award. Congrats to Noah and big thanks to Alissa Quart from EHRP for the successful collaboration.
Today in the news, anti-Trump guerrilla protest art in DC keeps getting more creative. The latest is an arcade game that lets you choose between ordering a Diet Coke or invading Iran. It’s satire at its finest.
Also in this edition: The Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood emerges as the city’s new art hotspot, a peek inside Mozart’s life, and Michael Glover on the religious paintings of Francisco de Zurbarán, aka the “Caravaggio of Spain.” Plus, Paddy Johnson explains what on earth an “A-Corp” is, and whether you should start one.
—Hakim Bishara, editor-in-chief

Art Problems: WTF Is an A-Corp?
What exactly is an Artist Corporation, and should you start one? Paddy Johnson has your back.

Mary Sully at James Cohan’s 52 Walker Street Gallery
James Cohan presents an exhibition by Mary Sully, opening May 15. In the late 1920s, Sully began a series of inventive drawings, each portraying a celebrity. Mixing both representative and abstract elements with patterning, the artist merged her knowledge of modern art and design with Native American forms to create dazzling works.
Learn more
News

- As the Venice Biennale opened its doors to the public, almost half of the artists in the international exhibition plus 22 national pavilions issued their withdrawal from awards consideration in solidarity with the jury’s resignation.
- As Somalia’s first-ever national pavilion debuts at the 61st Venice Biennale, some local cultural organizations say they were not “meaningfully consulted” or “included” in the selection process for the exhibition.
- Three arcade cabinets appeared at the DC War Memorial, inviting visitors to play “Operation Epic Furious: Strait to Hell,” which mirrors the White House’s trivialization of death and suffering amid the US and Israel’s prolonged war on Iran.
Artists Up Close

Did Zurbarán Believe What He Painted?
An exhibition about the Spanish painter in London made me ponder whether belief actually makes a difference in how well you paint. | Michael Glover
What Did Mozart’s Life Look Like?
An exhibition at the Morgan Library guides visitors through the life and career of the virtuoso via art and well-preserved ephemera. | Greta Rainbow
Sophia Rivera’s Mythology of Everyday New York
Her photos are unresolvable, driving the viewer through wonder, horror, and laughter without necessarily leading one to acceptance. | Julia Curl
Ridgewood’s Thriving Art Scene Steps Out of Bushwick’s Shadow
Ridgewood Open Studios drew hundreds to explore hidden alcoves in converted factories, basement spaces teeming with sculptures, and printmaking workshops in playgrounds. | Aaron Short

Rising Up: Rocky and the Making of Monuments
Featuring works from antiquity to today, the exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art explores the Rocky statue and its impact on the city’s culture, community, and public art.
Learn more
Memorable Moment

ICYMI

A Prospect Heights Ghost Story
The final part of our NYC Housing Stories series focused on its creator, who was displaced from his Brooklyn brownstone. | Noah Fischer
Good news: Hyperallergic has just received another journalism award. Noah Fischer’s comic “Prospect Heights Ghost Story,” published last year in collaboration with the Economic Hardship Project (EHRP), won a 2026 New York Press Club Award. Congrats to Noah and big thanks to Alissa Quart from EHRP for the successful collaboration.
Today in the news, anti-Trump guerrilla protest art in DC keeps getting more creative. The latest is an arcade game that lets you choose between ordering a Diet Coke or invading Iran. It’s satire at its finest.
Also in this edition: The Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood emerges as the city’s new art hotspot, a peek inside Mozart’s life, and Michael Glover on the religious paintings of Francisco de Zurbarán, aka the “Caravaggio of Spain.” Plus, Paddy Johnson explains what on earth an “A-Corp” is, and whether you should start one.
—Hakim Bishara, editor-in-chief

Art Problems: WTF Is an A-Corp?
What exactly is an Artist Corporation, and should you start one? Paddy Johnson has your back.

Mary Sully at James Cohan’s 52 Walker Street Gallery
James Cohan presents an exhibition by Mary Sully, opening May 15. In the late 1920s, Sully began a series of inventive drawings, each portraying a celebrity. Mixing both representative and abstract elements with patterning, the artist merged her knowledge of modern art and design with Native American forms to create dazzling works.
Learn more
News

- As the Venice Biennale opened its doors to the public, almost half of the artists in the international exhibition plus 22 national pavilions issued their withdrawal from awards consideration in solidarity with the jury’s resignation.
- As Somalia’s first-ever national pavilion debuts at the 61st Venice Biennale, some local cultural organizations say they were not “meaningfully consulted” or “included” in the selection process for the exhibition.
- Three arcade cabinets appeared at the DC War Memorial, inviting visitors to play “Operation Epic Furious: Strait to Hell,” which mirrors the White House’s trivialization of death and suffering amid the US and Israel’s prolonged war on Iran.
Artists Up Close

Did Zurbarán Believe What He Painted?
An exhibition about the Spanish painter in London made me ponder whether belief actually makes a difference in how well you paint. | Michael Glover
What Did Mozart’s Life Look Like?
An exhibition at the Morgan Library guides visitors through the life and career of the virtuoso via art and well-preserved ephemera. | Greta Rainbow
Sophia Rivera’s Mythology of Everyday New York
Her photos are unresolvable, driving the viewer through wonder, horror, and laughter without necessarily leading one to acceptance. | Julia Curl
Ridgewood’s Thriving Art Scene Steps Out of Bushwick’s Shadow
Ridgewood Open Studios drew hundreds to explore hidden alcoves in converted factories, basement spaces teeming with sculptures, and printmaking workshops in playgrounds. | Aaron Short

Rising Up: Rocky and the Making of Monuments
Featuring works from antiquity to today, the exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art explores the Rocky statue and its impact on the city’s culture, community, and public art.
Learn more
Memorable Moment

ICYMI

A Prospect Heights Ghost Story
The final part of our NYC Housing Stories series focused on its creator, who was displaced from his Brooklyn brownstone. | Noah Fischer

Taiwan Presents “Screen Melancholy: Li Yi-Fan” at the Venice Biennale
Presented by the Taipei Fine Arts Museum, the Taiwan Collateral Event transforms the space into a dynamic stage at the Palazzo delle Prigioni.

Steel And Shadows Converge in “Larry Kagan: Men”
Opening May 9 at Louis K. Meisel Gallery in New York City, this exhibition invites viewers to reconsider sculpture and perception.

SMFA at Tufts Presents Passages, the 2026 MFA Thesis Exhibition
On view from May 5 to 17 in Medford, Massachusetts, this exhibition represents the graduating class and their journeys through worlds visited and imaged.

Five Independent Souls: The Signers from New Jersey
This exhibition at Morven Museum & Garden in Princeton examines the lives of the Declaration’s signers, and those they enslaved, through over 100 historic artifacts.
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