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Archive for July, 2009

Go See – Berlin: The Pietzch Art Collection on Display at the Neue Nationalgalerie through November 22, 2009.

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

57709059
The German business couple Ulla and Heiner Pietzsch have lent significant pieces of Surrealist and early-American Abstract Expressionist art from their own collection for an exhibition entitled “Picture Dreams,” at Berlin’s new National Gallery. The ‘Pietzsch Collection,’ which ranks internationally as one of the most significant assortments of Surrealist and Abstract Expressionist art, was assembled over the course of 45 years to include more than 300 paintings, sculptures, and photos.

Related Links:
Picture Dreams.Ulla and Heiner Pietzsch Collection
. [Neue Nationalgalerie]
Surrealism In All Its Weird Glor
y. [Financial Times]
Berlin, Mon Amour [ArtNet]
Rare Surrealist Art Collection Goes on Display in Berlin [Monsters and Critics]
Interview with Ulla and Heiner Pietzsch. [BilderTraume]

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Go See – Greenwich, Connecticut: ‘TOM SACHS: CAMERAS’ at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum through September 16, 2009

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Tom Sachs Cameras The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum
From “Tom Sachs: Cameras” at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum.

Through September 16, The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum will show pieces  by Tom Sachs that focus on cameras.  Since 1972, Sachs has sporadically produced works that follow the evolution of photography as an art form. The exhibition, which is in collaboration with Sperone Westwater gallery in New York,  follows Sachs’s work in cameras, and will even include an opportunity for patrons to be photographed by the artist.

Related links:
The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum: Tom Sachs: Cameras [Exhibition Page]
Tom Sachs [artist homepage]
Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum Offers a Snapshot of Tom Sachs’s Cameras [ArtDaily]

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Go See – Utrecht: Paul McCarthy ‘AIR PRESSURE’ at De Uithof through September 13, 2009

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Paul McCarthy, Air Pressure, De Uithof
Aerial view, Paul McCarthy’s “Air Pressure”, Mark Vos via Mediacontainer

A Paul McCarthy collection is currently showing at De Uithof, Utrecht.  ”Air Pressure” features enormous inflatables, a medium new to McCarthy shows in the Netherlands.  Drawn from his series “Inflated Histories,” the pieces in the show are classic McCarthy, as they continue to use pop culture figures and tendencies to satirize mass media.

Santa Butt Plug, Paul McCarthy, Air Pressure, De Uithof
Paul McCarthy, Santa Butt Plug (front view), at De Uithof. Courtesy of UtrechtYourWay.

Related links:
Air Pressure [show site]
Paul McCarthy – Biography [Hauser & Wirth]

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Go See – London: Per Kirkeby at the Tate Modern through September 6th 2009

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Per-Kirkebys-The Siege of Constantinople-1995
The Siege of Constantinople (1995) by Per Kerkeby, via The Guardian

Currently on view at the Tate Modern is the first major retrospective of the work of Danish artist Per Kirkeby (b. 1938). The show presents 146 works spanning four decades and bringing together his Pop-inspired paintings from the 1960s with early paintings on canvas and masonite from the late 1970s as well as a group of blackboard works, bronze sculptures, and rarely-seen works on paper as well as a selection of the artist’s writings.

Exhibition Page
Northern Exposure [The Guardian]
Video: Per Kirkeby Exhibition at Tate Modern [The Telegraph]
In Pictures: Per Kirkeby [BBC]
First Major Survey in the UK of the Work of the Danish Artist Per Kirkeby at Tate Modern [ArtDaily]

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AO On Site – New York: PLOT/09 – ‘This World & Nearer Ones’ on Governors Island through the Summer

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Mark Wallinger, Ferry
Mark Wallinger, “Ferry.”

Currently taking place on New York’s Governors Island is “PLOT 09: This World & Nearer Ones,” a public art quadrennial produced and created by Creative Time.  Nineteen international artists were asked by curator Mark Beasley to create site-specific works responding to the particular situation of Governors Island, a 172-acre island in upper New York Bay, one half-mile from the southern tip of Manhattan.  Every Friday, Saturday and Sunday throughout the summer, a seven-minute ferry ride takes visitors to the island, where they can discover installation, performance, auditory and video projects that respond to the developing nature of Governors Island.

Related links:
PLOT 09: This World & Nearer Ones [Creative Time]
Island as Inspiration and Canvas [NY Times]
Ferry Tale
[Art Forum]
PLOT09: Exploring the World of Governors Island
[ArtInfo]
Creative Time Presents New York City’s First Quadrennial on Governor’s Island [ArtDaily]
PLOT/09 Presents a Public Art Extravaganza on NYC’s Governors Island [Flavor Wire]

Tue Greenfort, Project for the New American Century
Tue Greenfort, “Project for the New American Century”

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Go See – Amsterdam: The Russian Hermitage Museum’s new Permanent Site in Amsterdam – Inaugural Exhibition ‘At The Russian Court’ through January 31, 2010

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Hermitage Amsterdam
Hermitage Amsterdam, via HUM3.

The Hermitage Amsterdam opened its doors on June 20, the first branch of the State Museum in the West.  Housed in the Amstelhof, originally built as a charitable home in the the 1680′s, the Hermitage Amsterdam “is the culmination of nearly two decades of planning,” says Ernst W. Veen, Managing Director of Hermitage Amsterdam.  The museum itself will be supported by sponsorship and admission, functioning, continues Veen, as “a continuation of more than 300 years of close ties between Amsterdam and St Petersburg.”  Accordingly, The inaugural exhibition presents over 1,800 works drawn from the holdings of the State Hermitage Museum.  Per Hermitage Amsterdam, the show is “a scholarly researched exploration of the opulent material culture, elaborate social hierarchy and richly layered traditions of the Tsarist court at its height in the 19th century.”

Related links:
Hermitage Amsterdam
The State Hermitage Museum
Ghostly walk among the Tsars
[FT]
Carousel of treasures [Economist]

dding of Nicholas II and Grand Princess Alexandra Fyodorovna at the Grand Church of the Winterpalace, The Russian Court, Hermitage Amsterdam
Wedding of Nicholas II and Grand Princess Alexandra Fyodorovna at the Grand Church of the Winterpalace (1895, oil painting), at Hermitage Amsterdam.

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Go See – London: “One & Other” on The Fourth Plinth by Antony Gormley in Trafalgar Square through October 14th 2009

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Antony Gormley and The Fourth Plinth
Antony Gormley’s and the Fourth Plinth via The Telegraph.

This summer sculptor Antony Gormley invites the public to celebrate a living monument by asking the British people to occupy the empty Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square in London. Once a place reserved for statues of Kings and Generals, the spot will now serve as a way to represent the public and the whole of humanity.

For 24 hours per day for 100 days without a break, different people from all walks of life will inhabit the Plinth to make it their own. Those who have been selected are  able to use the Plinth as they like, to perform or even simply to reflect and meditate.  They have become participants in one of the most publicized works of public art in London in recent memory.

Antony Gormley One & Other
Antony Gormley will ask Trafalgar Square volunteers to climb plinth for art [The Times]
Antony Gormley’s Fourth Plinth, Trafalgar Square [The Telegraph]
Who’s Who on the fourth plinth [The Guardian]
Man Scales Plinth Ahead of Launch [BBC]

Kate-Forshaw-dances-The Plinth
One and Other participant Kate Forshaw dances during a rainshower on the fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square via The Guardian

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New York artist Dash Snow dies from drug overdose at 27

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Dash Snow
Dash Snow via Artinfo

Downtown enfant terrible Dash Snow died early this morning of a heroin overdose.   Gawker broke the news earlier this morning, citing sources on Twitter and a number of sources known to be close to Snow.  At roughly 11am, the New York Times confirmed the death citing that it had made contact with Snow’s grandmother, Christophe de Menil, who confirmed that he had indeed died of a drug overdose on Monday.  The location of the death was reportedly the Layfayette House, a hotel off the Bowery in Lower Manhattan and the time was roughly 5AM according to sources reporting to Art Observed.

The artist was a controversial and somewhat mythical figure of New York’s downtown art scene.  Originally of the de Menil clan, a family prominent in arts patronage, Dash ran away from home to live a controversial life of mischief and art that was open in its reference to drugs.  Coming to prominence out of the graffiti crew he helped found, Irak, as well as through the works of friends and fellow Dan Colen and Ryan McGinley, Snow attracted much attention in the art world, as well as some criticism, when his body fluid-stained newspapers started showing in influential galleries, including Rivington Arms and Peres Projects.  In 2006, Dash Snow was featured in the Whitney Biennial. While his art received mixed reviews, the persona he created through the documentation of his lifestyle had a mythic aura to it, certainly furthered by a long profile by New York Magazine two years ago, where Dash Snow and close knit group were the cover story. Dash Snow was included in a 2006 Wall Street Journal article titled “The 23-Year Old Masters”, counted him among ten top emerging US artists.   Dash Snow first showed at the recently closed Rivington Arms off the Bowery in New York, helmed by Melissa Bent and Mirabelle Marden, daughter of painter Brice Marden.  In 2008 Dash Snow moved to Peres Projects, with galleries in New York, Berlin and Los Angeles under Javier Peres, who was also a close friend.   Dash Snow has had solo exhibitions at Peres Projects, Rivington Arms in New York and Contemporary Fine Arts in Berlin.   His work has been collected by prominent collectors such as Charles Saatchi, Adam Sender and Dakis Joannou.  His work is included in the Whitney Museum of Art and the Brooklyn Museum.

Dash Snow, Ryan McGinley, Dan Colen rooftop New York Magazine
Dash Snow with Dan Colen and Ryan McGinley photographed in New York Magazine

Dash Snow is the son of Taya Thurman and her former husband, Chris Snow.  He is also a great-grandson of the founders of the Menil Collection in Houston, often cited as one of the most significant privately assembled art collections in America, Dominique de Menil and John de Menil, who were French textile and oil-drilling heirs. His maternal grandfather is Buddhist scholar Robert Thurman, his maternal grandmother was set and costume designer Christophe de Menil, and an aunt was actress Uma Thurman.

In 1999 Snow married artist Agathe Snow, who is often referred to as his “ex.”  Dash Snow leaves behind a daughter, Secret Aliester Ramirez Messenger Santa Creeper, whom he fathered with Jade Berreau in 2007.   Dash Snow was 27.

Dash Snow, New York Artist, Dies at 27 [NY Times]
Artist Dash Snow Dead of Drug Overdose [Artinfo]
Dash Snow, Artist Linked to N.Y.C. Downtown Scene, Dies at 27
[Bloomberg]

Dash Snow, Downtown Artist, Said to Be Dead of Overdose [Gawker]
Artist Dash Snow Dead From Drug Overdose [NYMagazine]
In Memoriam | Terence Koh’s Dash Snow Tribute [The Moment]
Subversive artist Dash Snow dies
[Independent]
Chasing Dash Snow (2007) [New York Magazine]
Dash Snow – Whitney Biennial 2006
[Whitney]
Dash Snow Bio – Peres Projects
[Peres Projects]
Dash Snow – Selected Works
[Saatchi Gallery]
Dash Snow Profile [Art Observed]

Newslinks for Tuesday July 14, 2009

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

os-gemeos-ny-mural-141
Os Gemeos at work on their mural in at Houston and Elizabeth via The Art Collectors

Brazilian street art duo Os Gemeos are completing a mural on the corner of Houston and Bowery in New York on the site of the Keith Haring tribute memorial [The Art Collectors]
A rare interview with Bruce Nauman after he was awarded the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale [The Art Newspaper]
The British Museum has raised 2/3 of the $200 million for its new
Herzog & de Meuron-designed wing [Bloomberg]

Damien Hirst Lance Armstrong Livestrong Bike Design 2009
Hirst’s recurring butterfly imagery adorns Lance Armstrong’s bike frame via Designweek

With perhaps one of the more thought provoking of the Livestrong bike creations, Damien Hirst has designed the bike Lance Armstrong will use during the final stage of the Tour de France with his recurring mortality metaphor of butterflies [Galerie Perrotin]
A breakdown of ArtNews’s Top 200 Collectors: 81% collect contemporary, 34% collect modern, 9% collect Impressionist, and 9% collect Old Masters
[ArtNews]

Claude and François-Xavier Lalanne sheep
Digital rendering of Claude and François-Xavier Lalanne’s menagerie on New York’s Park Avenue via NY Times

From Sept. 13 through Nov. 20, Claude and François-Xavier Lalanne’s animal menagerie will adorn the medians between 52nd and 57th Streets in Midtown Manhattan [NY Times]

Franz West the Ego and The Id

Franz West’s The Ego and the Id via the The Public Art Fund

In related, Franz West’s 20 foot ‘The Ego and the Id’ will be installed Central Park at 5th Ave & 60th tomorrow, on loan from Amalia Dayan and Adam Lindemann through March [PublicArtFund]
BBC1 announces a four-part documentary focusing on Picasso, Dali, Matisse and Warhol, airing next year [BBC]
The Castlestone art fund is buying Post War art from deceased and non-producing artists such as Picasso and Warhol as it posits that pricing has dropped 20-40% from last year [International Advisor via ArtMarketMonitor] and a related email gaffe from Castlestone [ArtNewspaper]

Anselm Kiefer am-anfang-visuel
Performance view of Anselm Kiefer’s ‘Am Anfang’ via Opera de Paris

German painter and sculptor Anselm Kiefer directed and designed, ‘Am Anfang,’ or ‘At the Beginning,’ for the Opera de Bastille in Paris, is currently running [TheGuardian]
In related, contemporary artist Zhang Huan will design and direct a 250 year anniversary production of Handel’s Semele in Brussels for the 2009/10 season
[ArtDaily]

Banksy in Africa
A new Banksy mural in Africa via SlamxHype

A number of Banksy murals in Africa have popped up, possibly in Mali [World's Best Ever] and related, 120,000 have visited the artist’s exhibition in his hometown of Bristol [BBC Bristol via FAD]
Charles Saatchi has replaced his Abstract America show his Kings Road gallery for an installation promoting the Jaguar XJ
[Vogue]

john morton sound tunnel
John Morton at the site of his sound installation in Central Park via NY Times

A pedestrian tunnel in Central Park is the site of an immersive sound installation by John Morton [NY Times]
A brush fire near Getty Center caused Getty museum officials to evacuate 1,600 visitors and 800 employees [LA Times]

Michael Jackson Andy Warhol
Michael Jackson series by Andy Warhol via ArtDaily

A portrait of Michael Jackson by Andy Warhol is dropped from a NY auction after overwhelming inquiries [ArtDaily]
Phillips de Pury & Company is launching a series of new theme auctions, including 21st century art and “New York, New York”
[Artdaily]
Abu Dhabi Art, a new art fair, will debut in November [Artinfo]

Lewis Charles Orchard on Antony Gormley's fourth plinth exhibition One & Another
A “plinther” participant in Antony Gormley’s One & Other via The Guardian

Antony Gormley’s ‘One&Other’ continues its 100-day run on the fourth plinth of Trafalgar Square in London [One & Other (livefeed)]
In related participatory British art, 23 museum visitors sufferred minor injuries during Robert Morris’s recent Bodyspacemotionthings reprisal at the Tate Modern
[ArtInfo]
The Tate announces the judges of the 2010 Turner Prize [The Art Newspaper]

Go See – London: Robert Motherwell ‘Open’ at Bernard Jacobson Gallery Through August 28, 2009

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Robert Motherwell, Dover Beach No. III
Robert Motherwell’s Dover Beach No. III, currently showing at the Bernard Jacobson Gallery.

Works from Robert Motherwell’s Open series are on display at the Bernard Jacobson Gallery in London through August 28.  Motherwell worked on the series for nearly two decades, and this exhibition presents part of that collection.  The show is timed to coincide with the release Robert Motherwell: Open, a book on the series from 21 Publishing.

Related links:
Bernard Jacobson Gallery

Robert Motherwell at Bernard Jacobson Gallery, London [ArtInfo]

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Go See – Washington, DC: ‘PAINT MADE FLESH’ at The Phillips Collection through September 13, 2009

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

Jenny Saville, Hyphen 1999, Paint Made Flesh, The Phillips Collection
Jenny Saville’s Hyphen, 1999, part of Paint Made Flesh at The Phillips Collection.

“Paint Made Flesh,” a series of 43 oil paintings that focus on the human body, is showing at The Phillips Collection through September 13.  Featured artists incude Pablo Picasso, Leon Golub, Ivan Albright, Cecily Brown, David Park, Philip Guston, and more.  ”At times when figure painting was considered outdated,” comments Assistant Curator Renee Maurer, these and other artists included in the show “continue to explore the expressive potential of the painted human body.”

Related links:
Current Exhibitions at the Phillips Gallery
Paint Made Flesh [video]
“Paint Made Flesh” Survey opens at The Phillips Collection in Washington, DC [Art Knowledge News]
“Paint Made Flesh” Is More Than Skin-Deep [Washington Post]
“Paint Made Flesh” : Modern Bodies, Naked Eyes [NPR]

john currin, the hobo, paint made flesh, the phillips collection
John Currin, Hobo (1999), via NPR.

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Go See New York and Reykjavik – Anthony McCall and Finnbogi Pétursson at New York’s Sean Kelly Gallery and i8 in Reykjavik, Iceland, through July 31, 2009

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

Finnbogi Pétursson, Anthony McCall, i8
A view of the new exhibition at i8, running concurrently with one at Sean Kelly, that features Anthony McCall and Finnbogi Pétursson.

Installation artists Anthony McCall and Finnbogi Pétursson are showing jointly at Sean Kelly Gallery, and in a concurrent exhibition at i8 Gallery in Reykjavik, Iceland.   Both close on July 31, and explore space, light, and sound in included works, some of which are showing for the first time.

Related links:
Sean Kelly Gallery – Anthony McCall/Finnbogi Pétursson
i8  shows / Anthony McCall, Finnbogi Pétursson
Finnbogi Pétursson [artist homepage]
Anthony McCall [artist homepage]

Finnbogi Pétursson, Sean Kelly Gallery
Finnbogi Pétursson at Sean Kelly Gallery.

 

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Go See – London: Serpentine Gallery Summer Pavilion designed by SANAA through October 18, 2009

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Serpentine-Gallery-pavilion-SANAA
SANAA’s Summer Pavilion at the Serpentine Gallery via The Guardian

The Serpentine Gallery unveiled their 2009 Summer Pavilion yesterday. Designed by Japanese architectural duo SANAA, the pavilion is made of curving, sloping, and highly polished aluminum overhead the gallery’s outdoor café. The mirror effect blends the surrounding park into the café. Ryue Nishizawa, half of SANAA said, “When we started sketching ideas we thought of water, rainbows and leaves.” This is the ninth consecutive summer pavilion at the Serpentine, which invites architects who have not designed buildings in London before to create a temporary structure outside the gallery.  Previous architects include Zaha Hadid, Rem Koolhaas, and Frank Gehry.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2009: Kazuyo Sejima & Ryue Nishizawa of SANAA [Serpentine Gallery]
Sanaa’s summer pavilion brings sunshine to the Serpentine [Guardian]
Serpentine Gallery Pavilion by SANAA, London [Times UK]
A breath of fresh air: The new Serpentine pavilion [Independent]
‘The Serpentine Pavilion is the ideal brief’ [Architects' Journal]
Sanaa’s Serpentine pavilion shows a lightness of touch [BuildingDesign]
Serpentine Gallery ‘reflective cloud’ pavilion unveiled [Guardian]
Serpentine Gallery’s new ‘floating’ pavilion is unveiled [Telegraph]
London Serpentine Gets Mirror Cloud Pavilion by SANAA [Bloomberg]
First images: Serpentine Gallery Pavilion by SANAA [Building]

(more…)

Don’t Miss – Salzburg: Marc Quinn ‘MATERIALIZE DEMATERIALIZE: NEW SCULPTURES AND PAINTINGS’ at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac through July 11, 2009

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Marc Quinn, Materialize Dematerialize New Paintings and Sculptures, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac Salzburg
From the Marc Quinn exhibition currently hosted by the Salzburg branch of Galerie Thaddeus Ropac.

It’s the last chance to view works by Marc Quinn at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac Salzburg.  ”Material Dematerialize” is the artist’s first solo show at the gallery.  It is a mix of painting and sculpture which focuses on the virtual and the real: where they overlap, where the lines blur and where the material dematerializes.  All works in the show are exhibited publicly for the first time.

Related links:
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac – Marc Quinn
Marc Quinn Bio

Marc Quinn, Mirage, Materialize Dematerialize New Sculptures and Paintings, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
Marc Quinn, Mirage, at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac.

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AO Auction Results: Old Masters Week at Christie’s and Sotheby’s in London – Auctions find strength and stability in the classics

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Pieter Brueghel the Younger - a flemish village in winter with the massacre of the innocents
Pieter Brueghel the Younger’s ‘Massacre of the Innocents’ sold for £4.6 million, above estimates of £2.5-3.5 million, via Sotheby’s

Old Masters Week at the auction houses in London finished solidly within estimates and outpacing the summer Impressionist and Contemporary auctions as buyers shift their focus toward the more stable market of old masters.  Christie’s Old Masters and 19th Century Art Evening Sale on Tuesday realized £20.5 million, above the low estimate of £15.5 million. 48 lots out of 63 sold, with a sold-by-lot rate of 76% and a sold-by-value rate of 91%. Sotheby’s Old Master Paintings Evening Sale yesterday realized £26.1 million, within estimates of £24-34.7 million, and the proceeding Renaissance & Baroque Masterworks from the Collection of Barbara Piasecka Johnson realized £9.9 million, considerably above estimates of £5.2-7.7 million, bringing the night’s total to £36 million. The Johnson sale achieved a sold-by-lot rate of 79% and a sold-by-value rate of 95%. The sale of works from individual collections achieved a sold-by-lot rate of 69% and a sold-by-value rate of 82%.

Old Masters & 19th Century Art Evening Sale [Christie's]
Old Master Paintings Evening Sale [Sotheby's]
Christie’s Auction of Old Masters and 19th Century Art Realises $32.8 Million [Artdaily]
Christie’s Auction Sells $32.7 Million of Art as Market Shrinks [Bloomberg]
Christie’s Sees Success With First Combined Sale [Artinfo]
Lot by Lot: Highlights of Christie’s London Old Masters Evening Sale [Art Market Monitor]
Sotheby’s Evening Sales of Old Master Paintings Totals $60 Million [Artdaily]
Lot by Lot: Highlights of Sotheby’s Old Master Sale [Art Market Monitor]
Johnson & Johnson Heiress Raises $15.9 Million at Art Auction [Bloomberg]
Old Masters retain their value [Wealth Bulletin]
Old Master price soars at auction [BBC]
Old Master sells for more than a million above estimate [Telegraph]
Old Masters art sale defies the downturn [Evening Standard]
Christie’s Rakes In $32.7 Million, New Category Said To Be Successful
[Luxist]
Old masters out-perform impressionist and contemporary art in summer sales [The Art Newspaper]
Whither the Old Master Market? [Art Market Monitor]

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Don’t Miss – London: David Hockney ‘Drawing in a Printing Machine’ at Annely Juda Fine Art, through July 11, 2009

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

David Hockney, Maurice Payne, Drawing in a Printing Machine, Annely Juda
David Hockney, Maurice Payne, at Annely Juda.

Annely Juda Fine Art is showing 28 works by David Hockney.  ”Drawing in a Printing Machine” is comprised of pieces made using Photoshop and Graphics Tablet.  The 28 pieces in the series, spread out through two floors of the gallery, betray Hockney’s meticulous attention to detail, and the artistry behind technology.  “There are advantages and disadvantages to anything new in mediums for artists,” says David Hockney, “but the speed allowed here with colour is something new.”

Related links:
Annely Juda
David Hockney Shaves, Doodles With His iPhone: Martin Gayford [Bloomberg]
iHockney: Artist David uses his Apple phone to paint mini masterpieces [TheDailyMail]
David Hockney, Annely Juda Fine Art, London [Financial Times]
David Hockney’s iPhone and Digital Art. Take Two
[ArtFag City]

David Hockney, Drawing in a Printing Machine, Annely Juda
From “Drawing in a Printing Machine,” the new David Hockney show at Annely Juda. Via Financial Times.

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Go See – New York: John Currin Works on Paper, at Andrea Rosen Gallery Through August 21, 2009

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

John Currin, Thanksgiving Study, 2003
John Currin, “Thanksgiving Study” (2003) © courtesy Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York.

Andrea Rosen Gallery is presenting an assortment of works on paper by John Currin, an artist whose renown is in large part due to his talent for blending kitsch and smut with masterly technique often reflective of classical or manneristic imagery.  Women are almost always at the center of Currin’s art, but the way in which he portrays them alters every few years.  The exhibit, aptly titled, “A Fifteen Year Survey of Women,” includes drawings from all of Currin’s various phases of depitions of feminity over the years, from emaciated middle-aged to isolated bare-breasted women reminiscent of Northern Renaissance Madonnas, or extremely bosomy nudes reminiscent of Playboy illustrations.

Related links:
John Currin Works on Paper – A Fifteen Year Survey of Women [Andrea Rosen exhibition page]
Drawings of a New “Old Master”
[New York Observer]
Artist Page [Gagosian Gallery]
Interview with John Currin [Interview Magazine]

John Currin installation view 4
John Currin installation view, photo by Tyler Winston, courtesy Andrea Rosen Gallery.

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AO Auction Preview: Auctions from Christie’s, Sotheby’s and old master gallery fair collaborations mark Old Masters Week in London, beginning this evening

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Jusepe de Ribera - Lo Spagnoletto Prometheus
Lo Spagnoletto’s ‘Prometheus’ from the collection of Barbara Piasecka Johnson, estimated to sell between £800,000-1 million, via Sotheby’s

Old Masters Week begins in London, with auctions at Sotheby’s and Christie’s, and 23 London galleries joining together for the first Masters Painting Week, running July 4-10. running concurrently with Masters Drawing Week, which began in 2001 and offers works on paper from the 14th century to the present day.  Sotheby’s Old Master Paintings Evening Sale takes place tonight, with a special sale of works from the collection of Johnson & Johnson heiress, Barbara Piasecka Johnson. The 51 lots in the Johnson collection evening sale have a low estimate of £5.2 million, with the star lot, Lo Spagnoletto’s ‘Prometheus,’ estimated to bring in between £800,000-1 million. The rest of the evening sale, with 48 lots from other sellers, has a low estimate of £24 million. The four top lots are paintings by Goya, Fragonard, Pieter Brueghel II, and George Stubbs, all with estimates between £2.5-3.5 million. Christie’s Old Masters & 19th Century Art Evening Sale takes place tomorrow, with 66 lots from the 14th century through the late 19th century, designed to encourage cross-over buying. The top lots in that sale are paintings by Michele Giovanni Marieschi and Fra Bartolommeo, both with estimates of £2-3 million. Dealers and the auction houses combined, Master Paintings Week expects to bring in £83.5 million. Strong sales are expected in the wake of the contemporary market’s collapse. While prices for contemporary art dropped 76.2% since May of last year, according to ArtTactic, old masters prices have remained relatively steady, with increased interest by collectors looking for stabilty.

Old Masters & 19th Century Art Evening Sale [Christie's, Wednesday, July 8, 2009]
Old Master Paintings Evening Sale [Sotheby's, Tuesday, July 7, 2009]
Master Paintings Week [July 4-10, 2009]
Old masters challenge contemporary art [Telegraph]
Johnson & Johnson Heiress Paintings Top $136.3 Million Art Sale [Bloomberg]
Old Masters, New Interest [Wall Street Journal]
Art market news: Old Master Week [Telegraph]

(more…)

Go See – New York: “Go Figure” group show at Gagosian Madison Avenue Through July 31, 2009

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Jeff Koons, Pam, 2001
Jeff Koons, “Pam” (2001) via Gagosian Gallery

An assortment of works, all centered on depictions of the human figure, is currently on display at Gagosian’s Madison Avenue gallery until July 31, 2009.  Gagosian has selected pieces from an all-male cast of seminal artists, each tackling the issue of bodily representation in a variety of media.  This relatively small exhibit constitutes an appealing means of considering how male artists have approached the portrayal of both men and women over the course of the twentieth century.

Related links:
Exhibition Page
[Gagosian Gallery]
Artists’ Info
[Gagosian Gallery]

Gerhard Richter, Deck Chair II, 1965
Gerhard Richter, “Deck Chair II” (1965) via Gagosian Gallery

(more…)

Go See – London: Classified at Tate Britain through August 23rd 2009

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Fiona Rae-Untitled-1991-Tate
Untitled (Grey and Brown) (1991) by Fiona Rae, via Tate Britain

Currently on display at Tate Britain “Classified” presents a collection of the Tate’s newest additions featuring the work of British artists such as Damien Hirst, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Jeremy Deller and Tacita Dean. The exhibit will highlight new acquisitions which will be on display for the the first time such as Jake and Dinos Chapman’s Family Collection (2002) and two works from Damien Hirst’s recent gift to Tate: The Accquired Inability to Escape (1991) and Life Without You (1991).

Exhibition Page
Art at Tate Britain: it’s classified [The Guardian]
Damien Hirst v. the Chapmans at Tate Britain [The Guardian]
Culture Minute Video: Classified at Tate Britain [The Telegraph]
Classified: Contemporary Art at Tate Britain [Fadwebsite]

(more…)

Newslinks for Saturday, July 4th, 2009

Saturday, July 4th, 2009

Gilbert and George - Hoi Pollio
Gilbert and George’s ‘Hoi Polloi,’ part of their exhibition ‘Jack Freak Pictures’ via Arndt & Partner

Gilbert and George speak about friendlessness, bigotry in the art world, and their latest exhibition, ‘Jack Freak Pictures,’ opening in London at White Cube next week [Guardian]
Damien Hirst turns down the Royal Academy’s offer to become a Royal Academician
[Artdaily]
Thief sentenced to two and half years in Oslo for the 2004 Munch ‘Scream’ Heist [NY Times]
Haunch of Venison will close its Zürich gallery by 2010
[ArtNewspaper]
After concerted effort by Eli Broad, MOCA announces that its financial troubles are over with a number of new gifts and trustees
[LA Times] and LACMA also announces new trustees, including Dasha Zhukova, founder of Moscow’s Garage Centre [LA Times]
The Metropolitan Museum of Art responds to economic crisis, cuts 357 positions
[Crain's]

Titian - Triumph of Love
Titian’s ‘Triumph of Love’ via Artdaily

Director of Tate Britain Stephen Deuchar is appointed director of Art Fund [ArtReview] in related, the Tate Britain recently bought and secured for Britain Titian’s Triumph of Love [Artdaily] and, finally the Art Fund launched an “Art Saved” resource online [Art Knowledge News]
At least 24 New York galleries have closed since the economic collapse, with a number closing for the summer [Artnet]
Connoisseurs are buying increasingly rare Impressionist and Modern masterpieces
[NYTimes]
Why auctions may not be the best method for museums’ deaccessioning
[Wall Street Journal]


Cai Guo-Qiang and Shen Wei speaking Lincoln Center via WSJ

Choreographer Shen Wei and artist Cai Guo-Qiang discuss their role in the 2008 Beijing Olympics opening ceremonies and how changing attitudes in China have affected their work [Wall Street Journal]
ArtTactic’s Art Market Confidence Indicator shows increased confidence in the contemporary art market, with 2/3 of those survey predicting a rebound by 2011 [ArtTactic via The Art Collectors] and more cautious indicators of a rebound [Artnet]

Ji Lee - Duchamp Reloaded
Ji Lee’s ‘Duchamp Reloaded’ via Wooster Collective

Duchampian street sculpture in front of MoMA [Wooster Collective]
Bravo’s art reality show holds open calls and Paddy Johnson speaks with the casting director [Art Fag City]
A work painted in 1623-24 by a fellow scholar depicts Rembrandt at 16
[TheIndependent]
The Pietzch Collection, which includes many rare surrealist art works, opens to public display in Berlin
[Monsters and Critics via Art Market Monitor]

Adam Kimmel Dan Colen
Adam Kimmel stands in front of a photo of Dan Colen as the Marlboro Man via Purple

Riffing on Richard Prince, fashion designer Adam Kimmel has Dan Colen as the Marlboro Man in a series of photos by the creator of the original ads, Jim Krantz [Purple]
A look at what the latest auctions in London could mean for the outlook of the art market [Financial Times]
How London’s proximity to emerging market art buyers from Middle East, Russia and Asia may now have negative effect [Wall Street Journal]

Rachel-Wardell-fourth plinth Antony Gormley
Rachel Wardell, the first participant in Antony Gormley’s ‘One and Other’ via The GuardianUK

The first participants are announced in Antony Gormley’s ‘One and Other’ on the fourth plinth in Traflagar Square [Guardian]
More Intelligent Life investigates the increased interest in Picasso’s late musketeer paintings and finds links between the artist’s pacifism, the mood of the 1960s and younger collectors today [Economist]

Banksy Bristol Mural vandalized
A vandalized Banksy mural in Bristol via Bristol Evening Post

A popular Banksy mural in Bristol is vandalized as the Bristol Museum currently holds a major exhibition of the grafitti artist’s work [Bristol Evening Post via Arts Journal]
Jeff Koons describes Michael Jackson as a “contemporary Christ figure”
[Bloomberg]
and Koons is now collaborating with watchmaker Ikepod to make a titanium watch [Newsweek]

Terence Koh white
Terence Koh in his studio via Whitewall

Terence Koh in his all white studio in New York [Whitewall]
Critic Jerry Saltz initiates a discussion with MoMA Chief Curator Ann Tempkin over the museum’s lack of female artists through Facebook
[Edward Winkleman]
A Holocaust conference including 46 nations urges more efforts to restitute art stolen by Nazis [Bloomberg]

Go See – London: Duveens’ Commission presents Eva Rothschild ‘Cold Corners’ at Tate Britain through November 29, 2009

Saturday, July 4th, 2009

Eva Rothschild, Duveens Commission, Tate Britian, Cold Corners
Eva Rothschild at Tate Britain. Via Art Knowledge News.

The Duveen Comission series presents a hitherto relatively unknown artist, Eva Rothschild, at the Tate Britain.  The exhibition consists of just one work, which fills the 70-meter space.  Accordingly, the piece explores volume and space, as it (per Tate) “fills and disrupts the grandeur of these neoclassical galleries with a chaotic, energetic presence.”  Says the artist, “I’m hoping to create something that will agitate the architecture of the Duveens Galleries, tangling with your perception of the space.”

Related links:
Tate Britain: British Art from 1500
Tate: Tate Britian Duveens Commission 2009 Supported by Sotheby’s
Lost in triangulation [The Guardian UK]
Eva Rothschild’s Tate Britain girders get an angle on high-minded art [Times UK]
Eva Rothschild to Create Tate Britain Duveens Commission 2009 [FineArtPublicity]
Little-known artist takes over the Tate [The Independent]

Eva Rothschild, Cold Corners, Tate Britain, Duveens Commission
Eva Rothschild at Tate Britian, via The Guardian.

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Go See – Madrid: Henri Matisse at Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza Through September 20, 2009

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

Henri Matisse, Odalisca y butaca turca
Henri Matisse, Odalisque au fauteuil turc (Odalisque with a Turkish Chair) (1928), currently showing at Museo Thyseen-Bornemisza.

A collection of works by Henri Matisse is currently showing at Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza in Madrid.  Comprised of 74 paintings, drawings, and sculptures, the exhibition focuses on works of two subjects: odalisques and the sea, as seen through the windows of Nice.  The show runs through September 20, 2009.

Related links:
Matisse: 1917 – 1941 : Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza
Henri Matisse
Thyssen-Bornemisza Examines Matisse’s Work During the Central Period of His Career [ArtDaily]

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AO On Site – Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, Wednesday, July 1st, ‘The Living and the Dead’

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009
Just Trying To Break The Ice... by Michael Caputo.  Photo by Michael Bartelle
Just Trying To Break The Ice… by Michael Caputo.

“The Living and the Dead” is a collaborative show of over 50 artists, including Amy Yao, Brian Belott, Anicka Yi, Uri Aran, George Condo, Justin Matherly, Haim Steinback, and dozens of others. The art is an almost bewildering mix of styles and mediums, ranging from wooden statues to fishing poles, giant ice cubes, elastic, and deep-fried q-tips.  The show opened last night at Gavin Brown`s Enterprises, and runs from July 1st – Aug. 7th.

Related Links:
Gavin Brown’s Enterprise
[Official Site]
Summer Group Shows, Part II
[Artnet]

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