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Still from A Bigger Splash, 1976.

COURTESY METROGRAPH PICTURES

Activism

On Tuesday evening, activists held an action at New York’s El Museo del Barrio calling on the museum to address the needs of its community. [ARTnews]

As part of ongoing protests in Hong Kong over a bill that would allow China to extradite fugitives in the region, the Hong Kong Artists Union called on arts organizations to close so that their employees can join the activism. [Artnet News]

Interruptions

A Kentucky art group is appealing the city of Louisville’s decision to move a Confederate monument to a location that has less visibility. [Minneapolis Star Tribune]

The Cleveland Museum of Art in Ohio closed on Tuesday because of a power outage. [Cleveland.com]

The Critics

“Kiss My Genders,” a group show at the Hayward Gallery in London focused on contemporary artists breaking down gender binaries, gets a five-star review from Jonathan Jones, who writes, “It touches, in profound ways, on what it is to be human.” [The Guardian]

Of Life of David Hockney: A Novel, a new book about David Hockney by Catherine Cusset, Deborah Solomon writes, “The book’s title is a droll provocation, as well as a vexing self-contradiction. How can a book about an artist be both a biography and a novel at the same time?” [The New York Times]

Museums

The Golden State Warriors and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art have started a partnership through which four works from the institution’s holdings will be installed at the basketball team’s new arena. [San Francisco Chronicle]

Artists

John Michael Boling and Cory Arcangel discuss Culturesport, an animation studio that produces, among other things, a series about a chatbot seeking world domination, thanks to the help of teenagers. [Interview]

Mary Max, the wife of artist Peter Max, has died in what some reports are calling a suicide. [The New York Times]



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