Welcome to “Just Looking,” the Review’s new newsletter dedicated exclusively to visual art. Since the Review’s first issue, in 1963, when James Ackerman wrote about The Eternal Present Volume I: The Beginning of Art—“to confront Miro and Klee with cave painting is no more revealing than to confront Picasso’s classicizing figures with the Parthenon pediments”—the magazine has made art one of its primary concerns. Contributors initially covered books about art (here’s Clement Greenberg, under the guise of reviewing four photo books, on the art of the photograph), but soon enough they ventured into museums and galleries as well (here’s Francis Haskell in 1965 traipsing about the Hermitage in “Leningrad”). In our pages and on our website, distinguished art historians rub shoulders with critics, poets, and artists. Today they include David Salle, Susan Tallman, Ben Lerner, Jenny Uglow, Jarrett Earnest, Ingrid D. Rowland, and dozens more. Here in “Just Looking,” every month we’ll collect the magazine’s reviews of gallery and museum shows alongside in-depth writing about artists and art history. This April, we are pleased to bring you the inaugural installment of “At the Galleries,” as well as some of the most exciting essays we’ve published this year, including, from our Art Issue, Jed Perl on the Whitney Biennial and “New Humans: Memories of the Future” at the reopened New Museum; Coco Fusco on “Wifredo Lam: When I Don’t Sleep, I Dream” at MoMA; and Elaine Blair on “How to Be a Guerrilla Girl” at the Getty Center in Los Angeles. We hope you enjoy just looking…
David Teniers the Younger: Archduke Leopold Wilhelm in his Painting Gallery in Brussels, 1651 (detail) Dawn Chan
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ALIAZON REVISTAS
jueves, 30 de abril de 2026
Just Looking…
martes, 21 de abril de 2026
This Wednesday: “Why This War?” Pankaj Mishra, Ben Rhodes, and Suzy Hansen on Iran
Why This War?
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viernes, 17 de abril de 2026
Why This War? Pankaj Mishra, Ben Rhodes, and Suzy Hansen on Iran
Why This War?
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