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Hyperallergic Sensitive to art and its discontents
- A Look Back at the Art That Stayed With Usby Hyperallergic on December 27, 2025 at 11:00 am
Happy last Saturday of the year. We've spent the past few weeks rounding up the best of the best of 2025 — our favorite exhibitions and artworks, the books and films that moved us, memes that made us laugh and helped us process an increasingly dystopian reality. We
- 10 Artworks That Spoke Truth to Power in 2025by Valentina Di Liscia on December 26, 2025 at 9:28 pm
From public murals to museum walls, artists mobilized their practices to call out injustices, expose wrongdoing, and advocate for a better world.
- Hyperallergic’s 20 Most Read Stories of 2025by Hyperallergic on December 26, 2025 at 9:26 pm
From our coverage of the Louvre heist to the rising authoritarianism in the White House, this year has generated plenty of fodder for art discourse, memes, and more.
- A message from our editor-in-chiefby Hakim Bishara on December 26, 2025 at 1:12 pm
I joined Hyperallergic six years ago because I was drawn to its integrity and its commitment to tell stories that no other art publication would. And then I discovered the most rewarding part of working here — the freedom to speak my mind without fear. That’s not
- A Year in Blue and Greenby Lakshmi Rivera Amin on December 26, 2025 at 11:00 am
As writers and artists, we say the quiet part out loud, and we leave a record of our refusals and dreams.
- Art-World Giants We Lost in 2025by Hyperallergic on December 25, 2025 at 6:00 pm
Legendary filmmaker David Lynch, sculptor of skylines Frank Gehry, powerhouse of Indigenous aesthetics Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, beloved curator Koyo Kouoh, and others we’ll carry with us.
- Required Readingby Lisa Yin Zhang on December 25, 2025 at 4:30 pm
Reckoning with Harry Potter fandom as a trans person, Hallmark Christmas movie plot twists, a hard-hitting interview with Santa, and more.
- A View From the Easelby Lakshmi Rivera Amin on December 25, 2025 at 4:00 pm
“My wife and I are both involved in education in the arts, so we see the beginnings of artistic growth.”
- Merry Christmas From Hyperallergicby Lisa Yin Zhang on December 25, 2025 at 11:00 am
From Christo's billowing flags to forgotten oral histories, this year reminded me why art matters: it gives voice, refuses erasure, and makes something beautiful from the wreckage.
- Odd-Shaped Cookie Cutters Spark Community and Creativityby Rhea Nayyar on December 24, 2025 at 10:16 pm
A growing subreddit helps confounded users decipher the mystery cutouts, but not without some imaginative detours.
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- Salvador Dalí’s Surreal Jewelry Designs: From Throbbing Heart Necklaces to Medusa Broochesby Colin Marshall on December 26, 2025 at 9:00 am
Upon hearing the name of Salvador Dalí, even a total layman in the art world is bound to get visions of melting clocks. Surprisingly, for an artist who showed so much self-marketing savvy, Dalí never brought an actual timepiece in that distinctively, even canonically surreal shape to market. But that hardly stopped Cartier from putting
- Discover the First Depiction of Santa Claus (and Its Origins in Civil War Propaganda)by Colin Marshall on December 25, 2025 at 9:00 am
It will no doubt come as a relief to many readers that Santa Claus appears to have been a Union supporter. We know this because he appears distributing gifts to soldiers from that side of the Mason-Dixon in one of his earliest depictions. That illustration, “Santa Claus in Camp” (above), first appeared in the Harper’s Weekly
- Discover 20 Historical Christmas Recipes: Fruitcake, Gingerbread, Figgy Pudding & Moreby Colin Marshall on December 24, 2025 at 9:00 am
One can hardly consider the Christmas season for long, at least in the English-speaking world, without the work of Charles Dickens coming to mind. That owes for the most part, of course, to A Christmas Carol, the novella that revived the public culture of a holiday that had been falling into desuetude by the mid-nineteenth
- Top 10 Alternative Christmas Movie Lists: Horror, Action, Comedy & Moreby Colin Marshall on December 23, 2025 at 3:02 pm
Die Hard is a Christmas movie. That once-contrarian categorization has increasingly been accepted over the past couple of decades, at least since an editor with whom I’ve often worked first declared it in a Slate roundup. As a result, John McTiernan’s sturdy piece of one-building eighties Hollywood action may have displaced It’s a Wonderful Life as a
- The Life and Work of Afrobeat Creator Fela Kuti Explored by Radiolab’s Jad Abumradby Colin Marshall on December 23, 2025 at 9:00 am
When discussing a musician like Fela Kuti, many of our usual terms fail us. They fail us, that is, if we came of age in a musical culture in which artists and bands put out an album of ten or so lyrics-forward songs every two or three years, promoting it on tour while also playing
- What Pompeii Looked Like Hours Before Its Destruction: A Reconstructionby Colin Marshall on December 22, 2025 at 3:41 pm
However celebrated by historians, scrutinized by archaeologists, and descended-upon by tourists it may be, Pompeii is not exceptional — not even in the fate of having been buried in ash by Mount Vesuvius in the year 76, which also happened to the nearby town of Herculaneum. Rather, it is the sheer ordinariness of that medium-sized
- Langston Hughes’ Homemade Christmas Cards From 1950by OC on December 22, 2025 at 9:00 am
Who doesn’t treasure a handmade present? As the years go by, we may begin to offload the ill-fitting sweaters, the never lit sand cast candles, and the Styrofoam ball snowmen. But a present made of words takes up very little space, and it has the Ghost of Christmas Past’s power to instantly evoke the sender as they
- Hunter S. Thompson Sets His Christmas Tree on Fire, Nearly Burning His House Down (1990)by OC on December 19, 2025 at 10:00 am
It was something of a Christmas ritual at Hunter S. Thompson’s Colorado cabin, Owl Farm. Every year, his secretary Deborah Fuller would take down the Christmas tree and leave it on the front porch rather than dispose of it entirely. That’s because Hunter, more often than not, wanted to set it on fire. In 1990,
- A Visual Timeline of World History: Watch the Rise & Fall of Civilizations Over 5,000 Yearsby Colin Marshall on December 18, 2025 at 10:00 am
In the video above, UsefulCharts creator Matt Baker suggests that we not refer to the period spanning the fifth and the late fifteenth centuries as the “dark ages.” In justification, he doesn’t put forth the argument, now fairly common, that the time in question was actually full of subtle innovation occluded by modern prejudice. The
- Hear Debussy Play Debussy: A Vintage Recording from 1913by OC on December 18, 2025 at 9:00 am
A century ago, the great French composer Claude Debussy sat down at a contraption called a Welte-Mignon reproducing piano and recorded a series of performances for posterity. The machine was designed to encode the nuances of a pianist’s playing, including pedaling and dynamics, onto piano rolls for later reproduction. Debussy recorded 14 pieces onto six rolls in



















