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Hyperallergic Sensitive to art and its discontents
- Dance Your Way to the Museumby Hyperallergic on April 21, 2026 at 10:00 am
The benefits of rave culture, Genesis P-Orridge's subversive mail art, Jean Shin’s memorial to the trees of a New York cemetery, and more.
- Jean Shin’s Living Memorial to the Trees of Green-Wood Cemeteryby Jerry Elengical on April 20, 2026 at 8:23 pm
Inspired by Korean funerary practices, the artist's new works examine how ritual and reflection mark the cycles of time.
- Mexico to Divert Train Route After Cave Art Discoveryby Isa Farfan on April 20, 2026 at 8:18 pm
Archaeologists found 16 drawings and petroglyphs along the route of a forthcoming high-speed passenger train.
- Jule Korneffel Finds Meaning at the End of Lightby John Yau on April 20, 2026 at 8:07 pm
Her paintings compress Roman mythology, Italian Renaissance paintings, color relationships, and that moment before disappearance.
- Ai Weiwei Wrote the Book on Censorshipby Lisa Yin Zhang on April 20, 2026 at 8:00 pm
Plus, inside a Black Panther family album, predatory art-world relationships, and the unknown Qing Dynasty trade portraitists.
- Leonardo Madriz’s Monuments to the Precarity of Nowby Jonah Goldman Kay on April 20, 2026 at 7:47 pm
His sculptures are a striking metaphor for the fragile equilibrium of American life.
- Genesis P-Orridge’s Subversive Mail Art Goes on Viewby Rhea Nayyar on April 20, 2026 at 5:33 pm
The late artist’s submissions to General Idea in the 1970s are the subject of a focused exhibition at Art Metropole in Toronto.
- The Future of Museums Is a Dance Floorby Naz Cuguoğlu on April 20, 2026 at 3:35 pm
The rave offers a temporary homeland, a space where belonging is felt rather than declared.
- Art by Graphic Rewilding Blooms at Brookfield Place in New York Cityby Brookfield Place on April 20, 2026 at 3:00 pm
Bold and vibrant large-scale installations featuring blossoming flowers celebrate the natural world and bring the outside indoors.
- Joan Semmel Kicks Ass at 93by Hyperallergic on April 20, 2026 at 10:00 am
An intimate profile of the body painter, Hungary's art world post-Orbán, and Lebanese artist Tania El Khoury's life amid war.
Open Culture The best free cultural & educational media on the web
- Gandhi Writes Letters to Hitler: “We Have Found in Non-Violence a Force Which Can Match the Most Violent Forces in the World” (1939/40)by OC on April 21, 2026 at 9:00 am
Image via Wikimedia Commons It must come up in every single argument, from sophisticated to sophomoric, about the practicability of non-violent pacifism. “Look what Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. were able to achieve!” “Yes, but what about Hitler? What do you do about the Nazis?” The rebuttal implies future Nazi-like entities looming on the
- The Greatest Documentary You’ve Never Heard Of: An Introduction to Wang Bing’s Nine-Hour Tie Xi Quby Colin Marshall on April 21, 2026 at 8:00 am
The Chinese filmmaker Wang Bing’s ‘Til Madness Do Us Part, a documentary about a mental institution in Yunnan, runs three hours and 48 minutes. Beauty Lives in Freedom, on the life of imprisoned artist Gao Ertai, is five and a half hours long; Dead Souls, on the survivors of a hard-labor camp in the Gobi Desert,
- Try the Oldest Known Recipe For Toothpaste: From Ancient Egypt, Circa the 4th Century BCby OC on April 20, 2026 at 9:00 am
Image of Ancient Egyptian Dentistry, via Wikimedia Commons When we assume that modern improvements are far superior to the practices of the ancients, we might do well to actually learn how people in the distant past lived before indulging in “chronological snobbery.” Take, for example, the area of dental hygiene. We might imagine the ancient
- The $666 Board That Built Apple: How the Apple I Changed Computing 50 Years Agoby Colin Marshall on April 20, 2026 at 8:00 am
Americans of a certain age may well remember growing up with an Apple II in the classroom, and the perpetual temptation it held out to play The Oregon Trail, Number Munchers, or perhaps Lode Runner. More than a few recess gamers went on to computer-oriented careers, but only the most curious sought an answer to the question
- A Newly Discovered Recording Lets You Hear Delta Blues Legend Robert Johnson in Stunning Clarityby Colin Marshall on April 17, 2026 at 8:00 am
Great swathes of rock music since the nineteen-sixties would never have existed, we’re sometimes told, were it not for the recordings of Robert Johnson. Certainly the likes of Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Robert Plant, and Bob Dylan have never hesitated to acknowledge his influence. “From the first note the vibrations from the loudspeaker made my
- How George Orwell Predicted the Rise of “AI Slop” in Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949)by Colin Marshall on April 16, 2026 at 9:00 am
We’ve lived but a few years so far into the age when artificial intelligence can produce convincing stories, songs, essays, poems, novels, and even films. For many of us, these recently implemented functions have already come to feel necessary in our daily life, but it may surprise us to consider how many people had long
- Watch La Linea, the Popular 1970s Italian Animations Drawn with a Single Lineby OC on April 16, 2026 at 8:00 am
Simplicity is not the goal. It is the by-product of a good idea and modest expectations. Thus spake designer Paul Rand, a man who knew something about making an impression, having created iconic logos for such immediately recognizable brands as ABC, IBM, and UPS. An example of Rand’s observation, La Linea, aka Mr. Line, a
- 10,000 Chicago Concert Recordings Are Being Uploaded to the Internet Archive: Nirvana, Phish, Sonic Youth, They Might Be Giants & Moreby Colin Marshall on April 15, 2026 at 2:48 pm
Perhaps you’ve had the experience of moving to a new city and immediately being told that you’ve missed its golden age of live music. To an extent, this has happened in more or less every period of the past fifty or sixty years. But what if the person regaling you with those stories had an
- Leo Tolstoy Calls Shakespeare an ‘Insignificant, Inartistic Writer.’ Then George Orwell Fires Backby OC on April 15, 2026 at 9:00 am
After his radical conversion to Christian anarchism, Leo Tolstoy adopted a deeply contrarian attitude. The vehemence of his attacks on the class and traditions that produced him were so vigorous that certain critics, now mostly obsolete, might call his struggle Oedipal. Tolstoy thoroughly opposed the patriarchal institutions he saw oppressing working people and constraining the spiritual life
- Watch 35 Short Films by Charles and Ray Eames: “Powers of Ten,” the History of the Computer & Moreby Colin Marshall on April 14, 2026 at 7:43 am
The Pacific Palisades fire of January 25 destroyed much of that coastal Los Angeles neighborhood, but it somehow spared the Charles and Ray Eames house. Anyone who’s paid it a visit, or at least pored over the many photos of it in existence, knows that it’s more than a preserved work of California modernism once



















