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isaac julien us retrospective de young museum review 1234739199

Isaac Julien’s retrospective at the de Young Museum in San Francisco features 13 multiscreen video installations, including works like *Baltimore* (2003) and *Ten Thousand Waves* (2010). The exhibition blends Renaissance art, Black cinema, science fiction, and documentary, with Julien’s signature use of multiple screens to create an overwhelming visual experience. Curated by Claudia Schmuckli, the show is billed as Julien’s largest in the US, requiring about four and a half hours to view in full.

jaqueline humphries aspen museum review 1234768790

Jacqueline Humphries's survey exhibition at the Aspen Art Museum features her painting installation "TSLA" (2025), a five-panel work hung on bare metal studs that bisects the gallery space. The installation plays with perception through mirrors and anamorphic imagery, including a distorted Tesla logo, and includes a hidden set of red paintings visible only as reflections. The show also presents nine smaller works generated in part by artificial intelligence, housed in a green-walled adjacent room.

claude monet venice brooklyn museum review 1234756443

The Brooklyn Museum's exhibition "Monet and Venice" explores how Claude Monet's 1908 trip to Venice revitalized his creative practice, leading to 37 remarkable paintings that directly influenced his later "Water Lilies" series. The show assembles more than half of these Venice works alongside pieces by Canaletto, J.M.W. Turner, and others, tracing how the sojourn allowed Monet to see his canvases with fresh eyes after a period of creative impasse. Curated by Lisa Small and Melissa Buron, the 100-work survey opens October 11 and is the largest Monet exhibition in New York in over 25 years.

Column: The new LACMA is sleek, splotchy, powerful, jarring, monotonous, appealing and absurd

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) is nearing completion of its new Brutalist building designed by Swiss architect Peter Zumthor, known as the David Geffen Galleries. Museum members will get a sneak peek at the empty interior spaces starting July 3, though the fully finished project with art installed won't open until April 2026. The poured-in-place concrete structure spans 347,500 square feet, including 110,000 square feet of exhibition space across 90 galleries, elevated 30 feet above ground on seven massive piers crossing Wilshire Boulevard. The article offers a critical preview of the building's aesthetics, noting the overwhelming monotony of concrete across floors, walls, and ceilings, while acknowledging some appealing views and powerful visual impact.

I wanted to hate the new LACMA. Then I went back

The article describes the author's evolving impression of the newly opened David Geffen wing at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), designed by architect Peter Zumthor. Initially visiting at 11am, the author found the $724 million, 110,000 sq ft building to be a "dismal, dated, inelegant brute," with thick bronze windows, dark concrete slabs, and bunker-like galleries. However, returning at 4pm, the author experienced a transformation: golden afternoon light warmed the concrete, illuminated the interiors, and revealed the building as a "brilliant innovation and true gift to the city." The article details the building's 20-year design evolution, challenges including fossil discoveries on site, and Zumthor's public frustrations with the compromised details.

smithsonian slavery exhibit slave ship artifact return 1234777204

The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) will remove a significant timber fragment from the São José-Paquete de Africa slave ship on March 22. The artifact, which has been a centerpiece of the "Slavery and Freedom" exhibition since the museum's 2016 opening, is being returned to the Iziko Museums of South Africa following the expiration of a long-term loan agreement. It will be replaced by a cargo manifest documenting the enslaved individuals forced onto the vessel.