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Nan Goldin, Faith Ringgold, and Other Artists Make TIME Magazine’s Annual List of the 100 Most Influential People of the Year
Time journal has unveiled its 2022 checklist of the 100 “Most Influential” individuals of the 12 months, and in addition to bold-confronted names like Volodymyr Zelensky, Zendaya, and Kris Jenner, there are a couple noteworthy artwork-planet stars which includes Religion Ringgold, Maya Lin, Francis Kéré, Nan Goldin, and Elizabeth Alexander. The yearly checklist is divided into categories of artists, innovators, titans, leaders, icons, and pioneers, with images accompanied by quick essays penned by other cultural and political luminaries. In the Artists segment, artist Religion Ringgold is described by Thelma Golden, director and curator of the Studio Museum in Harlem, as a “Renaissance lady born in Harlem during its own Renaissance”…
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Faith Hill’s divisive pastel rainbow dress, plus more 2002 Oscars fashion flashbacks | Gallery
By Wonderwall.com Editors 8:46am PDT, Mar 27, 2022 _ On March 27, 2022, the Oscars will return for the 94th time. In honor of Hollywood’s large night celebrating both of those remarkable acting and decadent fashion, Wonderwall.com is rewinding to 2002 to see what the stars wore to the 74th Annual Academy Awards, starting off with this blast from the past… Faith Hill could not choose a most loved coloration to put on to the 2002 Oscars, so she picked them all, arriving in this rainbow-encouraged pastel Versace search. Preserve reading through to see much more style from the Oscars 20 years ago… Relevant: Greatest Oscars style at any time…
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Andy Warhol as a gay artist in conflict with his Catholic faith
(RNS) — Andy Warhol’s pop-art masterpieces — paintings of Campbell’s soup cans and Brillo boxes and saturated Marilyn Monroe screenprints — deftly thrash American consumerism and celebrity culture with a cynicism carefully disguised as tongue-in-cheek. He was careful to keep his distance as a witty, shameless auteur. The first-ever exhibition to focus on the legendary artist’s Catholic faith at the Brooklyn Museum, “Andy Warhol: Revelation,” sits in stark contrast, almost as if displaying an entirely different artist. Warhol is still plenty tongue-in-cheek: The exhibition opens with “Raphael Madonna — $6.99,” a floor-to-ceiling painting of Madonna and child overshadowed by a bright red price tag. Warhol, the former graphic artist, sketched…