The Activists Targeting Companies That Make Money From Israel’s War

Early on the morning of July 31, a group of about 70 people arrived at the anodyne office of the cargo company Atlas Air, in White Plains, New York. 

They were members of Jews for Racial and Economic Justice (JFREJ)—an activist group that focuses on equity issues in New York City—there to stage a fake “press conference” to highlight the Department of Defense’s contracts with Atlas Air.

A man in a gray pinstripe suit played the CEO of the company, which is the single largest operator of 747 freighter jets in the world. “Atlas Air is so proud to do its part to support the US military,” the actor enthused. “I am especially proud that, through our DoD contracts, Atlas Air has made multiple deliveries to Israel in the last 10 months.” He added with gusto: “As the bombs keep raining on Gaza, the dividends keep raining on our shareholders!” 

Those behind him, dressed as pilots complete with sewn-on epaulets, cheered as he held up a graph with a line going up—“more bombs equals higher profits!”

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Why Does “Weird” Work?

It began with Tim Walz on Morning Joe. 

Auditioning for the Democratic nod for vice president, the Minnesota governor steamed through complaints about the Republican politics of the present. Sen. JD Vance, Walz said, “gets it all wrong” when he talks about small-town values. “It’s not about hate. It’s not about collapsing in. The golden rule [in rural America] is mind your own damn business.”

Walz argued Republican policies had destroyed Vance’s imagined idyllic America; conservatives had pushed division through book bans and an isolated world wrought by trickle-down economics. “We do not like what has happened,” Walz said, seeming to speak for an unmentioned mass of people, “where we can’t even go to Thanksgiving dinner with our uncle because you end in some weird fight that is unnecessary.” 

The host laughed.

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Actor and Art Collector Steve Martin Organizes a Love Letter to LA with Hauser & Wirth

L.A. Story is the name of a 1991 movie written by Steve Martin that the Los Angeles Times once voted the greatest Los Angeles–set film of the 20th century. It will also be the name of a Hauser & Wirth show co-organized by Martin with curator Ingrid Schaffner and senior director Mike Davis. The show will kick off the fall season in LA this year.

The show, due to open September 12 at the gallery giant’s West Hollywood location, will feature landscapes, abstractions, and more that all contain an Angeleno flavor, per the gallery. Although there will be representations of Los Angeles landmarks here, the gallery allows that some works will not explicitly depict the city, since the show’s approach is “far from literal.”

Certain works, such as paintings of rippling water by David Hockney and Calida Rawles, will allude to the backyards of many Los Angeles homes that have swimming pools. And a Vija Celmins painting of a hand firing a gun will be enlisted to speak to Hollywood genre filmmaking. Naturally, a number of famed LA-based artists, from Mark Bradford to Ed Ruscha, will figure in the exhibition.

Martin said in a statement, “I’m thrilled that ‘L.A. Story’ is the focus of so many wonderful artists and a wonderful gallery, Hauser & Wirth, which is just across the street from the Troubadour, where I first stepped foot on Santa Monica Blvd., which began my L.A. sojourn.”

Martin, who appeared several times on the ARTnews Top 200 Collectors list during the 1990s, has some prior curatorial experience: he helped organize the Hammer Museum’s Lawren Harris show in 2016.

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Pace Gallery Lets Go of Global Sales VP Hired Six Months Ago, Loses Two More Senior Staffers

Three senior staffers no longer work at Pace Gallery, one of the biggest galleries in the world, ARTnews has learned.

Gary Waterston has left the gallery, just six months after he was hired for the newly created position of executive vice president of global sales and operations. Pace’s senior director , curatorial, and artist management – Sarah Levine – and curatorial director Mark Beasley have also both departed.

When Waterston, a former director at Gagosian, was hired earlier this year, Pace said he was “among the most senior level of the leadership team, working closely with Samanthe Rubell and Marc Glimcher,” Pace’s president and CEO, respectively

Levine, who was the global director of marketing and communications at Lehmann Maupin, was hired by Pace in the summer of 2023, while Beasley was appointed to his post in 2019, having previously been a curator at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. Beasley was picked to lead Pace Live, a newly unveiled program of performances and other events.

“I confirm the departures of Gary Waterston, Sarah Levine, and Mark Beasley,” a Pace spokesperson said. “We parted ways [with Waterston] through a mutual and amicable decision that the newly created global role was not going to be successful based in London. We wish him the best in his next ventures.”

When asked about the reason for Levine and Beasley’s exit, Pace said, “As all businesses do, we regularly evaluate our priorities which occasionally necessitates staffing changes—including making new hires as well as identifying redundant roles. This is standard practice and ensures we’re delivering the results we strive for as a gallery.”

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Johnny Cash Statue to Replace Racist Politician in US Capitol

Country music legend Johnny Cash will receive a statue in his honor in the United States capitol. It will be unveiled next month, House speaker Mike Johnson and Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries announced on Thursday, NBC reported.

Cash was born February 26, 1932, in Kingsland, a small town roughly 60 miles south of Little Rock, Arkansas. During his lifetime, he sold 90 million records worldwide. His music spanning the genres of country, blues, rock, and gospel, Cash was inducted into Country Music Hall of Fame in 1980, and into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1992. He received numerous awards, among them, 13 Grammys and 9 Country Music Association Awards. Cash died in 2003 at age 71 from diabetes-related complications.

His statue joins that of another Arkansas native, Daisy Bates, a civil rights leader who headed the state’s NAACP chapter and mentored the Black students who came to be known as the Little Rock Nine, and integrated Central High School in 1957. Her statue was unveiled on May 8 in National Statuary Hall.

The two replace monuments of 19th-century American Bar Association president and Confederate sympathizer Uriah M. Rose and James P. Clarke, a late 17th-century and early 18th-century governor and US senator, and a white supremacist. Clarke’s racist remarks included calling on the Democratic Party to preserve “white standards of civilization.”

The work of Little Rock sculptor Kevin Kresse, Cash’s eight-foot-tall statue depicts him with a guitar across his back and a Bible in hand. The unveiling is slated to occur in Emancipation Hall September 24.

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Russian Artist Included in Historic Prisoner Swap Between Russia and the West

An artist from St. Petersburg who was arrested in 2022 for protesting against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was included in the biggest prisoner exchange since the Cold War between Russia and the West.

The swap happened on Thursday when 16 people from the US, Germany, and Russia—including the American journalist Evan Gershkovich—were exchanged for eight Russian prisoners, hit men and spies among them.

The deal came after years of complex negotiations between Washington and Moscow, and culminated in emotional scenes as the prisoners walked free on a runway in the Turkish capital of Ankara. The swap was meant to have included Russian opposition leader Aleksei Navalny, who died in an Arctic jail before the agreement was concluded.

US President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris were on hand to personally welcome the trio of freed Americans when they finally landed back on US soil, while Russian leader Vladimir Putin greeted the returning Russians in Moscow. Vadim Krasikov, the Russian assassin who murdered an anti-Kremlin Chechen fighter in Berlin, was included in the deal.  

The Russian artist, Sasha Skochilenko, was arrested for replacing supermarket labels with information about the Kremlin’s assault on the eastern Ukrainian city of Mariupol. Russia nearly razed the city soon after invading Ukraine in early 2022. On one label, Skochilenko allegedly wrote, “the Russian army bombed an art school in Mariupol. About 400 people were hiding from shelling in it.” She reportedly wanted to demonstrate how free speech has been curtailed under Putin’s rule.

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Hard Truths: Should an Artist Sell Out to Get Some Decent Studio Space?

With a world in crisis and an art market spinning out of control, ace art-world consultants Chen & Lampert deliver hard truths in response to questions sent by Art in America readers from far and wide.

I lost the lease on my studio and can’t afford another in today’s market. There is half a room at home that I can take over, but it isn’t big enough to both work in and store all my art. My wife is suggesting that I have a sale on Instagram, but I don’t want to give the impression of being desperate or cheap. My only other option is to discard a lot of art since I don’t have space or money to keep it all anymore. The idea of doing this depresses me to no end. What should I do?

Your depression must be deeply debilitating because we are experiencing serious secondhand fatigue trying to gloss up an answer that won’t hurt your feelings. The loss of your studio has forced you to reckon with a chilling reality that every financially strapped creative spirit must eventually face: all art is landfill unless someone cherishes it. Love might be a lot to ask for, but, luckily, people, especially family members, also hold onto art because of guilt. Take solace in knowing that the canvases you don’t trash will eventually be the storage headache of your beloved wife or a grieving friend you appoint in your elaborate will.

Never forget that in the world of collecting, you are the biggest collector of your own art. No one has a collection as encyclopedic as yours. The problem with monopolizing your own market is that other potentially interested parties cannot consider its aesthetic, cultural, or financial value. We don’t know your background: perhaps you are represented by a gallery, and maybe your work has sold in the past. If so, you might be justified in not wanting to offer these works up as BOGO specials on your socials. That said, if you haven’t sold much work and are not currently (or ever) showing in galleries, it doesn’t feel like a fire sale would tank your career. Your pride may be knocked a little, but this could also open up a door, or at least reduce clutter.

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Has anyone ever said anything nice about your art? Congrats to them—now they get to own a piece of it. Share both the care and the burden with those who have bare walls and empty basements. Think of your family, friends, coworkers, colleagues, and acquaintances as your elite new patrons and benefactors. They won’t be paying for your work, but they will be saving you money that would otherwise get blown on storage and therapy bills.

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Golf Course on Native American Earthworks to Move, Ending a Long-Running Legal Battle

An Ohio golf course situated atop a set of Native American earthworks will close, bringing an end to a legal battle over the land that has stretched on for years.

The private course, located in the city of Newark, opened in 1910, and ever since, golfers have been allowed to play on earthworks that are thought to have been built somewhere between 2,000 and 1,600 years ago. The Ohio Historical Connection, a historical society that manages cultural heritage in the state, acquired the deed to the land in 1933 and has leased it to the Moundbuilders Country Club ever since.

The earthworks, formally known as the Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks and more casually called the Octagon Earthworks, are considered historically important. They were nominated in 2018 for inclusion on the UNESCO list of World Heritage sites, although their status is still pending.

UNESCO’s citation for the earthworks labels them the “most representative surviving expressions of the Indigenous tradition now referred to as the Hopewell culture.” They create rolling hills and uneven surfaces, and are thought to envision the cycles of the Sun and the Moon.

In 2018, after UNESCO began to consider the earthworks for World Heritage status, the Ohio History Connection sued Moundbuilders, seeking the full rights to the land. The suit was meant to ensure greater public access to these earthworks, which have historically been off limits for much of the year to those who aren’t members of Moundbuilders.

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The Private Life: On James Baldwin

JAMES BALDWIN IN HYDE PARK, LONDON. PHOTOGRAPH BY ALLAN WARREN. Via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

 

In his review of James Baldwin’s third novel, Another Country, Lionel Trilling asked: “How, in the extravagant publicness in which Mr. Baldwin lives, is he to find the inwardness which we take to be the condition of truth in the writer?”

But Baldwin’s sense of inwardness had been nourished as much as it had been damaged by the excitement and danger that came from what was public and urgent. Go Tell It on the Mountain and Giovanni’s Room dramatized the conflict between a longing for a private life, even a spiritual life, and the ways in which history and politics intrude most insidiously into the very rooms we try hardest to shut them out of.

Baldwin had, early in his career, elements of what T. S. Eliot attributed to Henry James, “a mind so fine that it could not be penetrated by an idea.” The rest of the time, however, he did not have this luxury, as public events pressed in on his imagination.

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Church Makeover Goes Wrong, Giant Pigeon Lands on NYC High Line, BM & AG to Reopen Partially, and More: Morning Links for August 3, 2024

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THE HEADLINES

THE IRE OF RESTORERS. The Ermita de Nuestra Señora del Mirón, an 18th-century Spanish church in the northeastern city of Soria, was given a bold makeover that has left the building’s cherubim looking startled and local architecture lovers outraged. Professional restorers in Spain have even demanded explanations. The online newspaper El Confidencial, which describes the makeover as “a crime against heritage,” picked up on the concerns of a group, Soria Patrimonio (Soria Heritage) that had posted before-and-after pictures of the paint job on X, showing how the once white nave had been striped a dusky pink and its cherubim crudely freshened up. “What have they done to the Ermita de Nuestra Señora del Mirón?” the group asked. “It’s a listed building, but even if it weren’t, any work on a monument such as this had to be subject to minimum guarantees.” Soria Patrimonio told El Confidencia that the work was unsatisfactory, as it had been carried out without the necessary preliminary studies, and had altered the appearance that the church had had for the past century. “We’ve ended up with the decorative elements being outlined and the cherubs – which were white before – becoming caricature-like.”

NO MORE PIGEONHOLING. Urban birds are often pigeonholed as “flying rats,” but Iván Argote’s giant pigeon is called “Dinosaur,” in reference to its size. The sculpture is 21 feet tall, including the 5-foot-tall plinth where it will perch on New York’s Highline. In October, the gigantic aluminum installation will replace Pamela Rosenkranz’s Old Tree, at the intersection of 10th Avenue and 30th Street, and remain there for 18 months. This artwork isn’t just a hyper-realistic rendering of the pigeon; instead it will challenge traditions of who and what we monumentalize, as well as explore ideas around migration and the long view of history. “Iván Argote’s ‘Dinosaur’ will add great wit to the skyline of New York,” said Cecilia Alemani, the Donald R. Mullen Jr. Director & Chief Curator of High Line Art. “Iván has a charming ability as an artist to take something familiar and make us consider it anew in profound ways.” The pigeon statue was one of the most polarizing proposals when High Line Art shared artwork suggestions a few years ago, so it’s sure to ruffle some feathers.

THE DIGEST

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