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Yesomi Umolu joins Serpentine Galleries as director of curatorial affairs and public practice.
Yesomi Umolu has been appointed the director of curatorial affairs and public practice for London’s Serpentine Galleries. In the new position, which the institution created to meet Arts Council England’s diversity targets, Umolu will spearhead the development of editorial and educational content for exhibitions, events and other curatorial initiatives. The native Londoner, who most recently curated the 2019 Chicago Architecture Biennial, is expected to start in January. “Yesomi’s appointment reinforces a structural trajectory for the organization that fuses curatorial affairs and public practice,” CEO Bettina Korek and artistic director Hans Ulrich Obrist said in a joint statement. “We’re excited to work with her to innovate around centering audience experience and community engagement in all that we do.” Adds Umolu: “I’m eager to partner with the Serpentine’s team, its audiences, and artists to envision new forms of creativity and community building that can shepherd us through the profound changes facing our city and the world at large.”
After building Manhattan’s real estate empire for 50 years, Sheldon H. Solow dies at 92.
The Manhattan real estate developer Sheldon H. Solow built a legacy of commercial and residential real estate from the bottom up for five decades straight. When he died on Tuesday, at age 92, he left behind his most ambitious project yet: an unfinished line of towers down the East River from the United Nations. Born in Brooklyn, in 1928, Solow left New York University in 1949 to pursue real estate ventures with his father, Isaac, a former bricklayer. With a panache for litigation and unbridled confidence, Solow built a multitude of rental towers, including his namesake Solow Building, a 50-story office tower that has become one of the city’s most well-known. He also established the Solow Art and Architecture Foundation, which offers funding to educational and creative institutions and houses pieces by Jean-Michel Basquiat, Roy Lichtenstein and Cy Twombly from his robust art collection.
Banana Republic is embroiled in a legal battle over the use of a fancy ampersand.
The global apparel brand Banana Republic is in hot water after using a fancy ampersand in a global campaign. According to the graphic designer Moshik Nadav, who owns an eponymous design business and the Paris Pro font family, the Gap-owned retailer has been using his typographic property without permission. A legal claim says that Banana Republic failed to seek permission to use the ligature before they began using it “in extensive digital marketing and on worldwide social media platforms.” And because of the scale of the misuse—Banana Republic has 176,000 followers on Twitter and 1.5 million on Instagram—Nadav is seeking $75,000 worth of damages. “No other font or typeface includes the same artistic ligatures and logograms set forth in the Paris Pro FS and Paris Pro Typeface,” reads Nadav’s legal claim. “Nadav spent countless hours creating and perfecting these artistic ligatures and logograms.” The case has yet to reach a conclusion, but we won’t hesitate to admit the two ampersands look awfully similar.