Artists at Studio in a School Consider Joining a Union
The artists and some staff at the organization, which teaches art to school students, would join workers at other New York cultural institutions who have joined unions in recent years.
A “Studio in a School” art installation at Christie s in New York City in 2017. The organization’s instructors teach drawing, painting and print making to about 30,000 students.Credit.Patti McConville/Alamy
March 9, 2021
Workers and artists at Studio in a School, a nonprofit group founded more than 40 years ago to teach art in public schools, have organized an effort to join a union.
The Columbus Museum of Art receives $1 million for fellowship program
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LongHouse Reserve Winter Benefit Love Song To Jack : A Virtual Event In Honor Of LongHouse s Beloved Founder Jack Lenor Larsen
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January 27, 2021
Join Next City for the first of two virtual conversations in our series, “The Future of Monumentality,” as we examine the past, present, and future of public monuments from the unique intersection of art, design, and urbanism. The speaker series, moderated by New York Times critic Salamishah Tillet, is co-presented in partnership with the High Line.
In 2020 communities around the world protested the institutional racism of police violence toward Black, Latinx, and Indigenous people the same people who have experienced disproportionately devastating health effects and economic hardship during the COVID-19 pandemic. Among the most powerful symbols engaged by these protests has been the removal and defacing of monuments, as well as their use as focal points and backdrops for rallies, speeches, performances, and collections of protest signs. And as the disturbing insurrection in Washington, D.C., has shown, white supremacists continue to wield and deface monuments