If Artists Mapped the World

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Daily Newsletter

If Artists Mapped the World

Three shows unravel the politics of cartography. Also, why does a new Messi statue look like … that?

Can artists counter-map the world? Today, Venezuelan writer Clara Maria Apostolatos explores how artists subvert the fraught practices of cartography from the inside out. As relief efforts following last week’s deadly earthquakes lay bare the politics of intervention in Latin America, Apostolatos draws our attention to the quietly rebellious work of Venezuelan conceptual artist Claudio Perna, Chicano artist Sandy Rodriguez, and Dominican artist Firelei Báez, who embrace maps as a way to destabilize the truths we think we know.

Meanwhile, in Upstate New York, artist Steel Stillman and many others mourn the closure of Nancy Shaver’s beloved store, and Taliesin Thomas catches up with the artists who participated in Upstate Art Weekend — from an art show in a stable to a protest exhibition comprised entirely of chairs.

Further down the river, New York City showed out for Pride as virulent legislation takes aim at trans and queer communities. Photographer Arielle Shannon captured some of the intimate, joyous moments at the sweltering parade through Manhattan.

Finally, a new sculpture of soccer legend Lionel Messi has landed in Argentina. It’s phallic, it’s 85 feet tall, and, as Staff Writer Rhea Nayyar explains, it’s the subject of some truly incredible memes. I’ll let you see them for yourself.

—Lakshmi Rivera Amin, associate editor


The Artists Countermapping the World

Maps appear objective, yet they are built from choices that frame a particular view of the world. They are doubly instructional in the knowledge they share and in the ways they orient the viewer, offering a surface on which land appears ordered, bounded, and knowable. A run of recent exhibitions in New York of the works of late Venezuelan conceptual artist Claudio Perna, Chicano artist Sandy Rodriguez, and Dominican artist Firelei Báez brings that charged surface into focus across generations of artists who take up cartography’s capacity for orientation and put it to work otherwise: turning maps from tools of classification into frameworks for examining movement, memory, and power. | Clara Maria Apostolatos

Read More


SPONSORED
CTA Image

Lucid Perturbations: The Sewn Drawings and Books of China Marks

This exhibition at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art marks the first major solo exhibition of the artist’s hypnagogic artworks.

Learn more


News

  • The world’s tallest Lionel Messi statue was unveiled in the Patagonian town of Cutral Có. Featuring a crotch-level and rather phallic World Cup trophy, the sculpture immediately caused a stir online.
  • A Texas tattoo artist has been sentenced to 30 years in federal prison for moving a box of political pamphlets and zines featuring “anti-government and anti-Trump sentiments,” prompting outrage from First Amendment advocates.

Photo Essay

See Photos From a Sweltering, Joyous NYC Pride March

I joined more than 75,000 marchers and one million spectators on Sunday, June 28, to document the parade on Stonewall’s 57th anniversary. | Arielle Shannon

Read More


Upstate New York

At Upstate Art Weekend, Cars and Barns Are Galleries

During the seventh annual event, hundreds of artists proved that art has never been confined to “white cube” galleries. | Taliesin Thomas

Read More

Nancy Shaver’s Beloved Store in Hudson to Close After 30 Years

For many, Henry is a lot more than just another Upstate New York antiques shop. | Steel Stillman

Read More


Member Comment

You inspired me to write my own Congresswoman, Marie Gluesenkamp Perez from Washington’s Third, to educate her on this issue and ask her to support it. She’s VERY pro-worker, which is how she, a Dem, has twice won in this district with a l-o-o-n-g history of electing Republicans. 

If you, dear reader, support artist resale royalties, please write your own Representatives and Senators. Our elected officials most easily grasp what matters to us when we tell them.

Jozanne Rabyor on “Who Will Fight for Artists’ Rights in Congress?”


From the Archive

Did Auguste Rodin Steal From Camille Claudel?

What went so wrong that the brilliant sculptor’s work became so little known? Simply put, she entered Rodin’s studio. | Mary Sherman

Read More

Daily Newsletter

If Artists Mapped the World

Three shows unravel the politics of cartography. Also, why does a new Messi statue look like … that?

Can artists counter-map the world? Today, Venezuelan writer Clara Maria Apostolatos explores how artists subvert the fraught practices of cartography from the inside out. As relief efforts following last week’s deadly earthquakes lay bare the politics of intervention in Latin America, Apostolatos draws our attention to the quietly rebellious work of Venezuelan conceptual artist Claudio Perna, Chicano artist Sandy Rodriguez, and Dominican artist Firelei Báez, who embrace maps as a way to destabilize the truths we think we know.

Meanwhile, in Upstate New York, artist Steel Stillman and many others mourn the closure of Nancy Shaver’s beloved store, and Taliesin Thomas catches up with the artists who participated in Upstate Art Weekend — from an art show in a stable to a protest exhibition comprised entirely of chairs.

Further down the river, New York City showed out for Pride as virulent legislation takes aim at trans and queer communities. Photographer Arielle Shannon captured some of the intimate, joyous moments at the sweltering parade through Manhattan.

Finally, a new sculpture of soccer legend Lionel Messi has landed in Argentina. It’s phallic, it’s 85 feet tall, and, as Staff Writer Rhea Nayyar explains, it’s the subject of some truly incredible memes. I’ll let you see them for yourself.

—Lakshmi Rivera Amin, associate editor


The Artists Countermapping the World

Maps appear objective, yet they are built from choices that frame a particular view of the world. They are doubly instructional in the knowledge they share and in the ways they orient the viewer, offering a surface on which land appears ordered, bounded, and knowable. A run of recent exhibitions in New York of the works of late Venezuelan conceptual artist Claudio Perna, Chicano artist Sandy Rodriguez, and Dominican artist Firelei Báez brings that charged surface into focus across generations of artists who take up cartography’s capacity for orientation and put it to work otherwise: turning maps from tools of classification into frameworks for examining movement, memory, and power. | Clara Maria Apostolatos

Read More


SPONSORED
CTA Image

Lucid Perturbations: The Sewn Drawings and Books of China Marks

This exhibition at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art marks the first major solo exhibition of the artist’s hypnagogic artworks.

Learn more


News

  • The world’s tallest Lionel Messi statue was unveiled in the Patagonian town of Cutral Có. Featuring a crotch-level and rather phallic World Cup trophy, the sculpture immediately caused a stir online.
  • A Texas tattoo artist has been sentenced to 30 years in federal prison for moving a box of political pamphlets and zines featuring “anti-government and anti-Trump sentiments,” prompting outrage from First Amendment advocates.

Photo Essay

See Photos From a Sweltering, Joyous NYC Pride March

I joined more than 75,000 marchers and one million spectators on Sunday, June 28, to document the parade on Stonewall’s 57th anniversary. | Arielle Shannon

Read More


Upstate New York

At Upstate Art Weekend, Cars and Barns Are Galleries

During the seventh annual event, hundreds of artists proved that art has never been confined to “white cube” galleries. | Taliesin Thomas

Read More

Nancy Shaver’s Beloved Store in Hudson to Close After 30 Years

For many, Henry is a lot more than just another Upstate New York antiques shop. | Steel Stillman

Read More


Member Comment

You inspired me to write my own Congresswoman, Marie Gluesenkamp Perez from Washington’s Third, to educate her on this issue and ask her to support it. She’s VERY pro-worker, which is how she, a Dem, has twice won in this district with a l-o-o-n-g history of electing Republicans. 

If you, dear reader, support artist resale royalties, please write your own Representatives and Senators. Our elected officials most easily grasp what matters to us when we tell them.

Jozanne Rabyor on “Who Will Fight for Artists’ Rights in Congress?”


From the Archive

Did Auguste Rodin Steal From Camille Claudel?

What went so wrong that the brilliant sculptor’s work became so little known? Simply put, she entered Rodin’s studio. | Mary Sherman

Read More

Can artists counter-map the world? Today, Venezuelan writer Clara Maria Apostolatos explores how artists subvert the fraught practices of cartography from the inside out. As relief efforts following last week’s deadly earthquakes lay bare the politics of intervention in Latin America, Apostolatos draws our attention to the quietly rebellious work of Venezuelan conceptual artist Claudio Perna, Chicano artist Sandy Rodriguez, and Dominican artist Firelei Báez, who embrace maps as a way to destabilize the truths we think we know.

Meanwhile, in Upstate New York, artist Steel Stillman and many others mourn the closure of Nancy Shaver’s beloved store, and Taliesin Thomas catches up with the artists who participated in Upstate Art Weekend — from an art show in a stable to a protest exhibition comprised entirely of chairs.

Further down the river, New York City showed out for Pride as virulent legislation takes aim at trans and queer communities. Photographer Arielle Shannon captured some of the intimate, joyous moments at the sweltering parade through Manhattan.

Finally, a new sculpture of soccer legend Lionel Messi has landed in Argentina. It’s phallic, it’s 85 feet tall, and, as Staff Writer Rhea Nayyar explains, it’s the subject of some truly incredible memes. I’ll let you see them for yourself.

—Lakshmi Rivera Amin, associate editor


The Artists Countermapping the World

Maps appear objective, yet they are built from choices that frame a particular view of the world. They are doubly instructional in the knowledge they share and in the ways they orient the viewer, offering a surface on which land appears ordered, bounded, and knowable. A run of recent exhibitions in New York of the works of late Venezuelan conceptual artist Claudio Perna, Chicano artist Sandy Rodriguez, and Dominican artist Firelei Báez brings that charged surface into focus across generations of artists who take up cartography’s capacity for orientation and put it to work otherwise: turning maps from tools of classification into frameworks for examining movement, memory, and power. | Clara Maria Apostolatos

Read More


SPONSORED
CTA Image

Lucid Perturbations: The Sewn Drawings and Books of China Marks

This exhibition at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art marks the first major solo exhibition of the artist’s hypnagogic artworks.

Learn more


News

  • The world’s tallest Lionel Messi statue was unveiled in the Patagonian town of Cutral Có. Featuring a crotch-level and rather phallic World Cup trophy, the sculpture immediately caused a stir online.
  • A Texas tattoo artist has been sentenced to 30 years in federal prison for moving a box of political pamphlets and zines featuring “anti-government and anti-Trump sentiments,” prompting outrage from First Amendment advocates.

Photo Essay

See Photos From a Sweltering, Joyous NYC Pride March

I joined more than 75,000 marchers and one million spectators on Sunday, June 28, to document the parade on Stonewall’s 57th anniversary. | Arielle Shannon

Read More


Upstate New York

At Upstate Art Weekend, Cars and Barns Are Galleries

During the seventh annual event, hundreds of artists proved that art has never been confined to “white cube” galleries. | Taliesin Thomas

Read More

Nancy Shaver’s Beloved Store in Hudson to Close After 30 Years

For many, Henry is a lot more than just another Upstate New York antiques shop. | Steel Stillman

Read More


Member Comment

You inspired me to write my own Congresswoman, Marie Gluesenkamp Perez from Washington’s Third, to educate her on this issue and ask her to support it. She’s VERY pro-worker, which is how she, a Dem, has twice won in this district with a l-o-o-n-g history of electing Republicans. 

If you, dear reader, support artist resale royalties, please write your own Representatives and Senators. Our elected officials most easily grasp what matters to us when we tell them.

Jozanne Rabyor on “Who Will Fight for Artists’ Rights in Congress?”


From the Archive

Did Auguste Rodin Steal From Camille Claudel?

What went so wrong that the brilliant sculptor’s work became so little known? Simply put, she entered Rodin’s studio. | Mary Sherman

Read More

A $90,000 Graduate Fellowship for Immigrants & Children of Immigrants in the Visual Arts

A $90,000 Graduate Fellowship for Immigrants & Children of Immigrants in the Visual Arts

The Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans supports immigrants & children of immigrants in MFA, MA, PhD & other graduate programs.

Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans
Pratt Manhattan Gallery Moves “Beyond Digital” in New Exhibition

Pratt Manhattan Gallery Moves “Beyond Digital” in New Exhibition

Exhibition of Pratt Digital Arts alumni explores technology, ecology, and emerging forms of intelligence.

Pratt Manhattan Gallery
Cranbrook Academy of Art Reopens Applications for Fall 2026

Cranbrook Academy of Art Reopens Applications for Fall 2026

The art institution is accepting applications from June 22 through August 15 for artists and designers considering graduate study.

Cranbrook Academy of Art
How the GW Corcoran Is Rethinking Interaction Design Education

How the GW Corcoran Is Rethinking Interaction Design Education

The Interaction Design program at the George Washington University Corcoran School of Arts and Design is utilizing partnerships across DC to encourage its students to develop more inclusive design practices.

George Washington University

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