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May 1, 2026 - Week in Review: The Venice Biennale, nude art, and Jimmy Kimmel vs. Trump

55:46 |

About The Episode

On this edition of The Culture Show, Jared Bowen, Callie Crossley, and James Parker, staff writer at The Atlantic, go over the week’s top arts and culture headlines:


The Venice Biennale is often called the Olympics of the art world, but this year its international jury made news before awarding any medals. The jury resigned, saying it would not honor artists from countries whose leaders face international criminal charges — a move effectively pointing to Russia and Israel, and throwing the exhibition into a political and cultural storm.


Robert Indiana’s famous stacked-letter LOVE image has traveled far beyond the art world — onto posters, stamps, T-shirts, tote bags and coffee mugs. Now his legacy is at the center of a major legal fight, after the Morgan Art Foundation was awarded $102 million in a case involving forged works and disputed rights to some of Indiana’s best-known images.


Nudes are nothing new in museums, from Degas’ bathers to Michelangelo’s David. But when performance artist Xandra Ibarra appeared nude in the MFA’s galleries, the reaction was very different — laying bare how complicated our feelings about the human body can be when art steps out of the frame and into the flesh.


Jimmy Kimmel, Donald Trump and the FCC are back in the ring after Kimmel joked about Trump’s mortality and Melania Trump’s future during a mock White House Correspondents’ Dinner roast. The White House called the joke “violent rhetoric,” Trump demanded ABC fire Kimmel, and now critics are questioning the timing of an FCC review of Disney-owned ABC station licenses.

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