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April 8, 2021
In April 2021, The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum will inaugurate Aldrich Projects, a single-artist series that spotlights a singular work or a focused body of work by an artist every four months on the Museum s campus. The first in this series is Clarity Haynes: Collective Transmission. Sited in the Leir Atrium, Haynes debuts two new paintings, Birth Altar, 2020–2021 (2021) and Altar for Femme Joy (2020), from her ongoing Altar series, 2000 . Haynes describes her Altars as queer feminist spaces liberated from patriarchy. She says: In a time of toxic masculinity and violence, to put forth joyful feminist principles feels radical. To create one s own archive, altar, cosmology, autonomous space is an act of taking care. Clarity Haynes: Collective Transmission will be on view at The Aldrich April 28 to September 6, 2021.
Clarity Haynes: Collective Transmission Opens April 28 at The Aldrich hamlethub.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hamlethub.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
PAFA announces new additions to the permanent collection
Dyani White Hawk, (b. 1976), She Gives (Quiet Strength VII), 2020. Acrylic on canvas, 84 x 120 in. (213.36 x 304.8 cm.) Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia. Museum Purchase, 2020.17.
PHILADELPHIA, PA
.-The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts announced its latest acquisitions of a wide range of artworks that significantly enhance its renowned American art collection. Ranging in date from 1869 to 2020, the museum acquired 168 works of art through purchase and gift. These new additions include historic, 20th century, and contemporary art in the form of paintings, sculptures, photographs, and works on paper. Works by 62 living artists have joined the permanent collection, and 98% of the acquisitions represent the 20th and 21st centuries.
Two-Thirds of PAFA s New Acquisitions Are By Women and African American Artists
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania
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Kwame Brathwaite (b. 1938) Untitled [Pat on car] ca.1968. Archival pigment print, ed. 5/10, printed 2016, 15 x 15 in. (38.1 x 38.1 cm.) Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia . Museum Purchase, 2020.28.3
The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts has announced its latest acquisitions of a wide range of artworks that significantly enhance its renowned American art collection. Ranging in date from 1869 to 2020, the museum acquired 168 works of art through purchase and gift. These new additions include historic, 20th-century, and contemporary art in the form of paintings, sculptures, photographs, and works on paper. Works by 62 living artists have joined the permanent collection, and 98% of the acquisitions represent the 20th and 21st centuries.
The New York-based advocacy group Don’t Delete Art has launched a guide aimed at helping artists avoid censorship online, giving advice in areas such as self-censorship and pixilation along with details on “shadowbanning” (removal of banned hashtags linked to “borderline content”). The move comes after hundreds of artists complained that their appeals to social media giants, such as Facebook and Instagram, about removing their works were ignored.
“This new guide combines advice from Facebook and Instagram staff, with insights from arts advocates and artists about how to comply with the vague, and often capriciously-applied, rules that govern what art is allowed on social media,” says a campaign statement.