Archive for November, 2012

AO Newslink

Friday, November 9th, 2012

Gabriel Orozco is profiled in the Wall Street Journal, as his show, Asterisms, opens tonight at the Guggenheim. The show contains photographs and sculptural vignettes of thousands of pieces of debris collected by the artist from the wildlife reserve Isla Arena in Mexico and from Pier 40 in Manhattan. “It’s amazing how the nature, and the accident, and the sand, the elements make them look very—they’re very suggestive of things you know,” he said.

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New York – AO On Site: The 2012 Guggenheim International Gala, Thursday, November 8th, 2012

Friday, November 9th, 2012


Maria Gutierrez and Gabriel Orozco

All photos by C. Daleli for ArtObserved

The 2012 Guggenheim International Gala took place Thursday, November 8th in celebration of Picasso: Black and White organized by Carmen Giménez. Guests were able to view artworks for the upcoming benefit auction at Sotheby’s on November 13-14th with lots by Gabriel Orozco, Georg Baselitz, Roy Lichtenstein, Richard Prince, and James Turrell, among others. Funds raised at the gala and auction are in support of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation.


Atmosphere

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New York – AO On Site: Sotheby’s Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale Results, Thursday November 8th, 2012

Friday, November 9th, 2012


Sotheby’s saleroom

Last night Sotheby’s Impressionist & Modern evening sale was consistent throughout, despite an overall lower sale total than Christie’s the previous night. Although there was no blizzard for the crowds to push through, the overall buyer interest and sell through rates similar: Sotheby’s achieved a total of $163 million, with a sell through rate of 68.7% and sell by value of 79.2%. Over the course of the day, Sotheby’s achieved a total of over $203 for both the day and evening sales of Impressionist and Modern Art. The first half of the sale was decidedly lively in bidding, whereas most of the unsold lots took place in the second half of the evening.


Pablo Picasso, Nature Morte Aux Tulipes (1932) Image courtesy of Sotheby’s (more…)

AO Newslink

Friday, November 9th, 2012

The Metropolitan Museum has acquired an early Jusepe de Ribera painting, a 1612-13 depiction of St. Peter praying on a rock, painted when the artist was in his early 20s. Paintings from this period rarely come on the market; about 10 years ago an Italian scholar named Gianni Papi reattributed several paintings to the young Ribera. This particular painting was only discovered last year and was offered through Madrid dealers Coll & Cortés. (more…)

AO Newslink

Friday, November 9th, 2012

Takashi Murakami is suing Marianne Boesky over the right to lend his limited edition wallpaper design to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The artist is demanding that Boesky return the digital master file and cease reproductions. The “Cosmos” wallpaper was an artwork which came with strict provisions regarding its reproduction: it could only be sold to 15 collectors. Boesky asserts that she and the artist had an oral agreement to loan the work to the Met. (more…)

AO Newslink

Friday, November 9th, 2012

The inaugural Untitled fair in Miami has announced its exhibitor list, among them Art in General, DODGE, Lu Magnus and The Hole, among others. Mostly from New York (and within that group, mostly from the Lower East Side), there are also a handful of international galleries. The fair will be curated by Omar Lopez-Chahoud in a beachfront tent at 12th Street and Ocean Drive and runs from December 5-9. (more…)

New York – John Baldessari: “Double Play” at Marian Goodman through November 21st, 2012

Thursday, November 8th, 2012


John Baldessari, Eggs and Sausage (2012). All images courtesy Marian Goodman

On view through November 21st, 2012 at the Marian Goodman Gallery is Double Play, John Baldessari’s newest series of paintings that draws from art historical and popular culture resources to once again arrive at new meaning through the reconfiguration of disparate parts.


John Baldessari, Feelings (2012).

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AO Newslink

Thursday, November 8th, 2012

A London borough in financial straits decided on Wednesday to sell a Henry Moore sculpture valued at up to £20 million despite opposition from the art community. Mayor Lutfur Rahman called it a “tough decision” to sell the 1957 sculpture, Draped Seated Woman, which is affectionately known by locals as “Old Flo”.
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AO Newslink

Thursday, November 8th, 2012

In a deposition this week, Larry Gagosian stated that he frequently represents both parties – buyer and consignor – in sale transactions that he brokers. The case brought forth by Jan Cowles, who sued Gagosian for selling a work she owned without her consent, involves a painting that sold for below market value at $2 million, and whereby Gagosian earned an unusually high relative fee of $1 million.  Mrs. Cowles’s lawyer, David Baum, claims that representation of both parties without disclosure is “blatantly unlawful under New York agency law.” The gallery asserted that its “practices are fully consistent with both the law and the standards in the art world.” (more…)

New York – AO Auction Results: Christie’s Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale, Wednesday, November 7th, 2012, Fluctuating sales with records achieved.

Thursday, November 8th, 2012


Wassily Kandinsky, Studie für Improvisation 8 (1909)  which sold for a record breaking $23,042,500, image courtesy Christie’s

Despite a nor’easter last night in New York, Christie’s had a full house for its Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale, which boasted a sale total of $204, 800,000 with just 48 of 69 lots sold.  The sales achieved were not always consistent but very high numbers were reached during many bids.  The value sold by lot was 80%, with most of the works that did sell achieving their high estimate or beyond.  Head of the Department, Brooke Lampley, declared it a “strong sale” in the post auction press conference.


Sale room at Christie’s, photo by ArtObserved

The major excitement of the sale came with the record-breaking price of $23 million for Kandinsky’s Studie für Improvisation 8  – the highest price ever paid at auction for a work by the artist. The painting is an early figurative example of the artist’s transition to abstraction. (more…)

New York – AO Auction Results: Sotheby’s Impressionist & Modern Day Sales, November 7th, 2012

Wednesday, November 7th, 2012


Kees Van Dongen, Deux Nus Aux Ballons Courtesy Sotheby’s
LOT SOLD. 1,314,500 USD  (Hammer Price with Buyer’s Premium)

Sotheby’s concluded its Impressionist  & Modern day sale today, with a sale total (including buyer’s premium) of $39,910,775. The auction house sold 73% of lots in the morning session and 62% in the afternoon session.


Pablo Picasso, Tête d’homme Courtesy Sotheby’s
LOT SOLD. 1,142,500 USD  (Hammer Price with Buyer’s Premium) (more…)

New York – AO Auction Preview: Impressionist and Modern Evening Sales at Christie’s and Sotheby’s, November 7th & 8th, 2012

Wednesday, November 7th, 2012


Pablo Picasso, Femme à la Fenêtre (Marie-Thérèse) courtesy Sotheby’s

Christie’s Impressionist and Modern sale will commence this evening; due to the destruction from the hurricane, Sotheby’s rescheduled its Impressionist sale from November 5th to tomorrow, Thursday the 8th. Airport closures and power outages worried many that the international collecting crowd would not be able to attend. In a season that boasts over a possible billion dollars in revenue and a possible record breaking year at auction, postponement was inevitable.

Both houses are flush with important and iconic works by a plethora of leading artists such as Picasso, Monet, Kandinsky, Miro, Brancusi and Cézanne.


Wassily Kandinsky, Studie für Improvisation 8 courtesy Christie’s
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AO On Site – New York: “Discovering Columbus” Installation By Tatzu Nishi,Through November 18th, 2012

Wednesday, November 7th, 2012


Installation view, Tatsu Nishi, Discovering Columbus

All photos by Elene Damenia for Art Observed

Through November 18th, New Yorkers and visitors to the city will be able to see what mayor Bloomberg calls “one of the icons of our city,” within the setting of a living room designed by Japanese artist Tatzu Nishi. (more…)

AO Newslink

Wednesday, November 7th, 2012

A catalogue of mishaps in art handling has been released, with victims ranging from Poussin to Roy Lichtenstein damaged. One example is Roy Lichtenstein’s early famous painting Whaam!, which was defaced by a visitor disposing their chewing gum on the painting’s surface. Tate Britain, which suffered the vandalism against a £50 million Rothko, is now planning an exhibition called Art Under Attack. (more…)

AO Newslink

Wednesday, November 7th, 2012

Conservators are overwhelmed with the aftermath of Chelsea flooding. AXA said that they made a list of the 300 most critical locations; although many works are salvageable, the costs are too great, with restoration fees ranging from $1 – 100,000. Zach Feuer alone reportedly had 550 artworks damaged. The Gloria Velandia Art Conservation company is working on pieces by Andy Warhol, James Rosenquist, Lucio Fontana and Joel Shapiro. (more…)

AO Newslink

Tuesday, November 6th, 2012

Creative Time will launch a new work by artist Trevor Paglen into outer space on November 21, 2012. The Last Pictures will enter perpetual orbit and remain on view for five billion years, affixed to the exterior of the communications satellite EchoStar XVI. The work consists of one hundred photographs micro-etched onto a silicon disc encased in a gold-plated shell. (more…)

London – “Chris Ofili: To Take and To Give” at Victoria Miro, Through November 10th, 2012

Tuesday, November 6th, 2012


Chris Ofili, installation view(2012) courtesyVictoria Miro/The National Gallery

Chris Ofili’s latest collection of works  on display at Victoria Miro in London are actually intended for use as backdrops for a collaborative piece that involved The Royal Opera House, The Royal Ballet and the National Gallery. The project, involving artists, choreographers and dancers, depicts scenes from Ovid’s Metamorphosis that were in turn been recreated by Titian in a trilogy of paintings recounting stories of Diana and Actaeon, Diana and Callisto and The Death of Actaeon.

The narratives recall Diana’s nude encounter with Actaeon upon which she turns him into a deer and he is consequently killed by his fellow hunters; the revelation that Callisto, one of Diana’s nymphs who is sworn to chastity, is impregnated by the god Jupiter and subsequently banished; and finally a depiction of Actaeon’s gory death.


Chris Ofili, Stag (2012) courtesy Victoria Miro/The National Gallery

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AO Newslink

Monday, November 5th, 2012

The Smithsonian American Art Museum has granted Kathy Butterly its Contemporary Artist Award. Butterly will receive $25,000 as the winner of the award, granted annually to an artist younger than fifty who demonstrates exceptional creativity and has produced a significant body of artwork that is considered emblematic of this period in contemporary art. The jurors stated that “her small, nuanced, labor-intensive sculptures are richly communicative and …each enigmatic work balances between humor and horror, seduction and repulsion, abstraction and figuration”. (more…)

AO Newslink

Monday, November 5th, 2012

A $13 million public art project in Atlantic City, NJ called “Artlantic,” in a 7 acre lot just off the Boardwalk in town will be inaugurated on Friday. “Artlantic: wonder,” is the two-site first phase of the project, which was unaffected by Hurricane Sandy. One component of the installation is a sculpture by Kiki Smith, “Her” (2003), which will be installed in a “red garden,” also designed by the artist, and will change with the seasons. (more…)

Málaga, Spain – “Erwin Wurm: Am I a House?” at Centro de Arte Contemporáneo de Málaga, through November 11th, 2012

Monday, November 5th, 2012


The artist – Erwin Wurm, Am I a House? at CAC Málaga

The first major exhibition in Spain of the work of Austrian artist Erwin Wurm is now on view at El Centro de Arte Contemporáneo de Málaga. The exhibition consists of video, sculpture and large-scale installation, including quotidian objects and buildings deformed so extremely that they remain almost unrecognizable. Wurm’s work addresses media saturation in contemporary society and exaggerated values, as well as political scandals and human rights.


Erwin Wurm, Am I a House? at CAC Málaga

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AO Newslink

Monday, November 5th, 2012

MoMA has just published a new book called “What Is Contemporary Art? A Guide for Kids,” ($19.95), featuring the work of over 70 artists, such as Gillian WearingLouise Bourgeois, Bruce Nauman, Olafur Eliasson, Andreas Gursky and Jeff Koons. It is written to make contemporary art more understandable and accessible. (more…)

New York – “Come Closer: Art Around the Bowery 1969-1989″ at the New Museum through January 6th, 2012

Monday, November 5th, 2012


Arturo Vega, Photo Booth Self Portraits (ca. 1974). Courtesy Arturo Vega

Come Closer: Art Around the Bowery 1969-1989 at the New Museum presents ephemera, artwork, films, and performance footage of twenty artists that lived or worked in the Bowery over the course of two decades.  The exhibition documents the influence of the neighborhood on artists during a time when the area was notoriously derelict and neglected.


Coleen Fitzgibbon installing the exhibition “Income and Wealth”. Courtesy Coleen Fitzgibbon

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AO Newslink

Sunday, November 4th, 2012

As White Cube leaves London’s Hoxton Square, the BBC reports on the history – and future – of the neighborhood. When art dealer Jay Jopling opened White Cube in 2000, the neighborhood of Shoreditch transformed into an expensive art and media center, now many galleries are leaving East London with rising prices.
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AO Newslink

Sunday, November 4th, 2012

The Ydessa Hendeles Art Foundation in Toronto has closed its doors, the eponymous space of the collector, curator, and artist. She was recently named as one of the 50 most influential people in the art world by ARTnews. She cited reasons of development on Toronto’s King Street as being overdeveloped and said the 25-year old foundation will continue, regardless of its physical location. (more…)