Two exhibitions in Los Angeles respond to the racist monuments to Confederate soldiers that have been erected all over the United States. Carolina A. Miranda considers what makes them so impactful:

“MONUMENTS” was originally scheduled to open in 2023, but the complicated logistics—including the shipping of so many oversize works, along with the implementation of additional security protocols—delayed the opening by two years. An exhibition about Confederate monuments, however, is never not timely. Last year the Trump administration announced the reinstallation of various Confederate artifacts that had been removed from the D.C. area, including a monument to Albert Pike, who briefly served as a general in the Confederate Army, and the towering Confederate monument at Arlington created by the sculptor Moses Ezekiel. The latter is particularly egregious; it features tropes of the nurturing “mammy” and the “faithful slave.” Trump has described Confederate monuments as “our heritage” and praised their “artistic beauty.” His romanticization of these objects, along with his ongoing suppression of Black history, recently led the writer and television host Baratunde Thurston to describe him as the “president of the Confederacy.”

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Is Yoko Ono the Most Radical Artist of the Trump Era?

Amanda Fortini | T Magazine | April 30, 2026 | 3,017 words

“In the 1960s, she invited an audience to cut off her clothes. As attacks on women’s rights escalate, ‘Cut Piece’ and other decades-old works of feminist art feel more relevant than ever.”

The Hiding Man of Griffith Park

Anna Holmes | L.A. Material | May 5, 2026 | 3,014 words

“A guerrilla artist has made the Eastside his canvas. His medium: Strange signs.”