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Visitor Sues Walker Art Center In Minneapolis, Saying She Was Forbidden To Breastfeed Her Baby In A Gallery

When her infant daughter became hungry at the museum, says Megan Mzenga, she sat down on the nearest couch to nurse; a male staff member then told her — contrary to the Walker's policy, it turns out — that she had to do that elsewhere in the building and called an escort. - ARTnews

A Short History Of Over-The-Top Art World Feuds

Here are four more beefs between art-world honchos, spanning from the ‘50s to the aughts, that are, regardless of when they took place, truly for the ages. - Artnet

Christie’s Auction Sale Has Good Night, Despite Cyber Attack

It was a "reassuringly solid result of $346.5m ($413.3m with fees) from its Modern evening sale—within its pre-sale estimate of $340m-$493.5m (calculated without fees)." - The Art Newspaper

Orlando Museum Of Art, In Financial Trouble, Asks Court To Modify Bequest Dedicated To Purchasing New Art

Reeling with a $1 million budget deficit on a $4 million budget due largely to "the Basquiat fiasco," the museum wants to re-allocate the $1.8 million it was given from the estate of Margaret Young from its designated purpose of acquiring new works for the permanent collection. - The New York Times

The British Museum Keeps Finding Its Missing Items All Over The World

Though, well, “due to the lack of cataloguing and records, the museum has had trouble proving which of the recovered items came from its collections, so for now, it is receiving these objects back as donations.” - BBC

Was The 1960 Venice Biennale Rigged To Choose Rauschenberg?

“Taking Venice” doesn’t take a position on whether dishonest mischief sullied the jury’s process of choosing Rauschenberg, although it does leave the appropriate sense that the artist easily measured up to the honor. - Los Angeles Times

What King Charles’ First Portrait Is Meant To Convey About Him

It’s worth putting this into the context of “self-fashioning” in portraiture, succinctly described by the literary scholar Stephen Greenblatt in 1980 as a process where identity is constructed as a pastiche of carefully selected details. - The Conversation

Why Did A Portland Suburb’s Innovative Public-Private Gallery Suddenly Close Last Month?

"It’s hard to think of another artist-run institution that simultaneously featured publicly open studio spaces for working artists, an art sales gallery connected to the studios, and classrooms for beginning and advanced fine arts instruction for children and adults." - Oregon ArtsWatch

The Cartoon That Has Inspired Protestors Across The Globe

The 1969 cartoon of a perpetually 10-year-old boy known as Handala is by artist Naji Al-Ali. After 1973, Ali "depicted Handala with his back turned, a gesture that transformed him into a silent witness of the horrors and outrages going on around him." - The New York Times

The Artist Who Created Barbie’s Fake Food

Honestly, who knew this was a thing? Yet: Kerry Samantha Boyes “now has her own fake food store and studio set-up in south-west Scotland with an ever-growing list of illustrious clients all around the world.” - BBC

Parsons Students Withdraw From BFA Exhibition As They Pressure New School To Divest

Instead, the students opened their own show. "Seeds of Solidarity was organized to support Students for Justice in Palestine’s ongoing general strike and boycott against the New School, which calls for no entry to the school’s premises or ‘use of school facilities for academic or labor purposes.’” - Hyperallergic

Norway Has A Huge New Rich Guy Museum

That’s the one in the grain silo. Why not? Like the Tate Modern’s building, the former power station, the silo wasn’t being used for its original purpose. - The Guardian (UK)

Photos That Changed The Way The World Saw Women

From “ecstatic reminders” to paparazzi shots that became court cases, these photos altered the world’s conception of at least some of their subjects’ lives. - The Guardian (UK)

How In The World Did The Royal Portrait Of Charles Turn Into The King In Something That Looks Like A Pool Of Blood?

"The kind of people who deign to sit for portraits think of themselves, to quote a Shakespearean sonnet, as ‘lords and owners of their faces,’ and they tend be riled if they don’t see their self-image reflected back.” - The Observer (UK)

Cities Have Become Obsessed With Taller Buildings

Seven times more buildings of 150 metres or taller have sprung up since 2000 than were constructed in the entire 20th century. Five decades ago, the height of the tallest building completed each year globally averaged around 250 metres (55-60 storeys). Nowadays, they are typically double that height. - Dezeen

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