#8641
Jason Farago (ed.)
#7
THE STETTHEIMER SET
Not just Duchamp, not just Picabia: Florine
Stettheimer, painter of parties and department
stores, is a modernist master. And today’s
artists know it
by Matthew J. Abrams
ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT
South Korea’s first female president is behind
bars; Samsung’s chief might end up there too.
For the directors of the country’s cult film
scene, Seoul is a viper pit and gangsters are in
charge
by Michelle Cho
ORDINARY BEAUTY
The new US president plans, among other
outrages, to kill the National Endowment for
the Arts. Who would miss it most? A visit to
central Iowa
by Emmett Rensin
INTERVIEWS
CHARLINE VON HEYL
CHRISTODOULOS PANAYIOTOU
NEGATIVES
Rei Kawakubo’s marriage advice
A studio visit with São Paulo’s first lady
Hong Kong’s forbidden palace
Eurovision and the new cold war
Emmanuel Macron, culture vulture
REVIEWS
I. The Russian revolution sent art history
charging down a new track; the Putin
government declined to commemorate it. In
New York, Paris, and Moscow, three views of a
Soviet century
by Zoë Lescaze
II. Not all artists can travel; but sometimes, a
sculpture can stand in their place. LA
rediscovers an exiled American; chocolate
statues from the Congo have the whiff of
colonialism
by Joanna Fiduccia
III. Hollywood air-kisses China’s censors; the
Met calls Beijing for its spring blockbuster. At
the museum and the multiplex, it’s tough to
divide China’s past glories from the Party’s
present aims
by Kanishk Tharoor
IV. Goya’s etchings of broken bodies defended
the Enlightenment against an army of
unreason. But for his American students,
violence is a subtler thing, and images can be
complicit in the war
by Travis Diehl
EVEN MORE
Counsel for the months ahead
JUNE
JULY
AUGUST
SEPTEMBER
PORTFOLIO
The art of JANE CHANG MI, and what you
find underwater
15.00 €
In stock