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Arts and Entertainment
Four mini-reviews of singles that were released in October.
Issue 5, Volume 115
Amanda Ba: Developing Desire presents a cryptic look at the current state of Chinese urbanization and development.
Issue 4, Volume 115
JPEGMafia I Lay Down My Life For You shines a new light on the notorious Left-Wing Hades’s inner psyche.
Issue 1, Volume 115
Four reviews of singles released in May. Do they rock or suck?
Issue 17, Volume 114
A review of the 2024 Whitney Biennial: Even Better than the Real Thing
Issue 14, Volume 114
Five NYC exhibitions you must see this month!
Issue 12, Volume 114
The Society of Illustrators presented a collection of digital artist Tomer Hanuka’s illustrations from the past decade
Glenn Kaino’s Walking With a Tiger grapples with the complicatedness of Asian American identity.
Issue 10, Volume 114
The Gagosian’s A Foreigner Called Picasso sheds light on Pablo Picasso’s struggle to be recognized as an artist, kept under watch by the police for his anarchist ties.
Issue 8, Volume 114
Max Beckmann: The Formative Years, 1915-1925 explores the dark early works of an artist traumatized by World War I.
Issue 6, Volume 114
Art for the Millions at the Metropolitan Museum of Art showcases the radical political works stemming from the Great Depression.
Issue 4, Volume 114
Hayao Miyazaki produced yet another heavy-hitting, entrancing animated feature—The Boy and the Heron—after unexpectedly coming out of retirement.
The Guggenheim debuted an overlooked collection of South Korean art from a time of military dictatorship.
Issue 2, Volume 114
Sarah Sze: Timelapse will captivate anyone who stumbles across the top of the Guggenheim Museum’s rotunda.
Issue 17, Volume 113
Artist Jaune Quick-to-See Smith’s striking insight into the devastating history of oppression and current political struggles of indigenous populations in the United States.
Issue 15, Volume 113
Claude Gillot: the French artist with a tendency for sarcasm and a love of musical theater.
Issue 13, Volume 113
A character-focused review of HBO Max’s controversial new animated series, Velma.
Issue 11, Volume 113
A review of The Eveillard Gift and the ideas it emphasizes about different mediums in art.
Issue 10, Volume 113
A review of Alex Katz: Gathering, and the improvement, changes, and regressions it shows in his style.
Issue 8, Volume 113