The News In Art

Fred Phelps, The Marcel Duchamp of Hate

Every week Carl Wilson looks at the events of the past seven days in the mirror of art and culture. This week: The only one who could ever reach us was that sunuvabitch of a preacher man. (Or, The Rotten of the Patriarchs.)

Songs From The Mines: Making Music Out Of Tragedy

Every week Carl Wilson looks at the events of the past seven days in the mirror of art and culture. This week: Farewell to Springhill, Nova Scotia.

Your Pet’s Sixth Sense

Every week Carl Wilson looks at the events of the past seven days in the mirror of art and culture. This week: psychic animals.

||via Baltimore Sun
The Weather Retort

Every weekend Carl Wilson looks at the events of the past seven days in the mirror of art and culture. This week: extreme weather everywhere and a little help getting through it.

Your Big Gay Olympics Soundtrack

Twenty protest, queer and sporting songs to which to watch the Sochi Games—or, maybe better, not to watch

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Le Super Bowl

Out of respect for tomorrow's Super Bowl, we put our misgivings about the sport aside and attempt an endzone-to-endzone punt return through the annals and allegories of art about football.

Fake Pat-Wha'?

The most remarked upon feature of the latest Rob Ford video is his attempt at Jamaican patois, or “fratois.” But Ford's Ja-fakin’ is just another instance in a long line of people rasta-playacting. We look back at our history of ethnic-dialect humour, racial stereotyping for entertainment, and that itch to mimic.

||Angela Davis in a still image from the documentary Black Power Mixtape
With Friends Like These...

The United States has a long and ugly history of spying on its own citizens. Last week, as the surviving members of a daring 1971 operation to expose FBI dirty tricks finally went public, revelations about present day NSA spying continued to mount. A tour through some of the art inspired by America’s obsession with enemies-within.

The Gifts Fakes, Frauds, and Charlatans Give Us

Thamsanqa Jantjie’s sign-language gibberish at Nelson Mandela’s funeral stole headlines, offended many, and raised real alarm, but isn’t there something to be gained from seeing the tablecloth yanked out from beneath settled social consensus?

Avant-(Ap)art(heid): South African Protest Punk in a Dangerous Time

While Nelson Mandela sat in prison, cultural authorities in South Africa clamped down on “subversive” music, banning albums and raiding gigs. Warrick Sony’s Kalahari Surfers, however, found a way through.