Global contemporary art events and news observed from New York City. Suggestion? Email us.

Paris – Kehinde Wiley: “The World Stage: France, 1880 – 1960” at Galerie Daniel Templon Through December 24th, 2012

Friday, December 21st, 2012


Kehinde Wiley, The Three Graces, all images courtesy Galerie Daniel Templon

Galerie Daniel Templon in Paris is presenting Kehinde Wiley’s first solo show in France, entitled The World Stage: France, 1880-1960. Wiley’s portraits feature mostly black and brown men on elaborate, baroque backgrounds, their natural stances modified by Wiley to echo the Napoleonic, kingly gestures of traditional portraits like those of Anthony van Dyck.


Kehinde Wiley, Bonaparte in the Great Mosque of Cairo

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AO On Site Photoset – Brooklyn Artist’s Ball co-hosted by Sarah Jessica Parker and Liv Tyler, April 27th

Saturday, April 30th, 2011

The Brooklyn Artist’s Ball 2011 took place at The Brooklyn Museum on April 27th.  It was chaired by museum trustee Stephanie Ingrassia, and  co-hosted by actresses Sarah Jessica Parker and Liv Tyler.  The traditional annual gala of the museum was given a twist this year in order to celebrate the creative and influence of Brooklyn’s artists. This year’s honorees were the artists Fred Tomaselli, Lorna Simpson, and Fred Wilson, as well as the retiring Brooklyn Museum Chair, Norman M. Feinberg. The Ball was followed by an after party in the Museum’s Great Hall, and featured live DJs.

More images after the jump…

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Go See – New York: Kiki Smith at The Pace Gallery on 22nd Street through June 19th, 2010

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Kiki Smith, Pilgrim, 2007-2010, leaded stained glass in steel frames, installation dimensions variable. All installation images courtesy G.R. Christmas courtesy The Pace Gallery.

Currently on view at The Pace Gallery‘s location on 545 W 22nd Street is Kiki Smith: “Lodestar.” A parallel narrative to this exhibition can be found in “Sojourn,” Smith’s concurrent solo show now on view at the Brooklyn Museum (through Sept 12). “Sojourn” marks the artist’s first major museum show in New York since a mid-career survey at the Whitney Museum in 2006. “You have to hit the ground running,” Smith recently told the New York Times, in reference to her process. Ever busy, the artist has also recently been commissioned to design a 16-foot-high window for the Eldridge Street Synagogue in New York’s Lower East Side. The historic landmark is scheduled for completion later this year.

The west coast also welcomes the artist’s presence this year: through August 15, 2010, Seattle’s Henry Art Gallery is showing “Kiki Smith: I Myself Have Seen It,” which explores the role of photography in the development of Smith’s aesthetic. The exhibition will travel to the Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College in the fall and to the Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University in the spring of 2011.

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Go See – New York: Ida Applebroog “Monalisa” at Hauser & Wirth through March 6, 2010

Monday, March 1st, 2010


Ida Applebroog’ s ‘MONALISA” 2009 Installation View All images via Hauser and Wirth unless otherwise noted

Currently showing at Hauser and Wirth Gallery, 32 East 69 St., New York, NY is “MONALISA”, an exhibition of works by an American artist  Ida Applebroog. The present exhibition is a debut of the entirely new body of work, with a centerpiece of a rudimentary wooden structure that the artist’s calls “MONALISA’s House”. The structure’s walls are covered by one hundred drawings of the artist’s genitals that she produced in the seclusion of her bathroom, while living in California in 1969. The artist speaks about her work: “It was a certain period of my life and before I got into the tub I’d sit with a full-length mirror on the floor. It was before my own radicalization.”

Ida Applebroog’ s ‘MONALISA” 2009 Installation View

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Go See: Hernan Bas at the Brooklyn Museum, New York, through May 24, 2009

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

Hernan Bas - The Burden (I Shall Leave No Memoirs), 2006. The Rubell Family Collection, Miami

Hernan Bas: Works from the Rubell Family Collection” at the Brooklyn Museum includes 38 works by Miami’s native son Hernan Bas, collected over a ten-year period by the seminal Rubell family.  His work, which incorporates romantic and classical imagery, finds inspiration in youth and Goth culture, fashion layouts, and books, among them the Hardy Boys series, Oscar Wilde, and Huysmans as reimagined from the perspective of a young gay artist. At the center of the exhibition is a specially commissioned, grand-scale video and sculpture installation, Ocean’s Symphony, a “sumptuous tribute to the myth of the mermaid.”

Brooklyn Museum
Hernan Bas: Works from the Rubell Family Collection
February 27-May 24, 2009
Morris A. and Meyer Schapiro Wing, 4th Floor

RELATED LINKS

Exhibition page [Brooklyn Museum]
Exclusive: Miami Native Hernan Bas Brings Decadence to Brooklyn Museum [Flavorwire]
Hernan Bas at the Brooklyn Museum [Flash Art]
Getting Lushy: Hernan Bas at the Brooklyn Museum [C-Monster]
Overview: Hernan Bas [ArtInfo]
Hernan Bas Exhibit Opens at The Brooklyn Museum [WWD]

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Newslinks for Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009


Richard Serra’s Equal Parallel: Guernica-Bengasi, 1986, returned to El Museo Nacional Centro de Art Reina Sofia, Madrid via Art Daily

Missing Sculptures by Richard Serra are replaced at El Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia [ArtDaily]
How Art Capital Group is providing liquidity backed by significant fine art
[The New York Times]
A new book on the world’s largest unsolved art theft, the Gardner Museum Heist [Wall Street Journal]
A new Julian Schnabel-designed steak house back room?
[NYMag]
The Moscow Art Fair has been postponed
[Bloomberg]


A still from the Marcel Dzama video via Pitchfork

Animated Marcel Dzama for NASA’s video [TheWorldsBestEver]
The Prado’s conclusion that Colossus is not a Goya is brought into question
[Wall Street Journal]
How the Brooklyn Museum’s Shelly Bernstein expands the institutions presence via internet outreach [New York Observer]
Francis Bacon, and a new exhbition in the unlikely city of his death [New York Times]
An agreement reached with further clarifies the collection boundaries between the UK’s National Gallery and the Tate
[Guardian UK]


Assume Vivid Astro focus via the TheMoment

Assume Vivid Astro focus collaborates with the New York Times [TheMoment]
The last days of Soho’s Guild and Greyshkul gallery
[New York Times]
A detailed new report on the growing impact of China, Russia, India and the Middle East in the global art market [ArtDaily]
How the fall of the art boom is useful to trim the movement of blockbuster art to the only fleetingly interested masses
[Newsweek]
Mega dealer David Nahmad on the market’s rise and fall: “It’s almost a fraud. I would never advise my clients to buy contemporary art.”
[IndependentUK]

Lucian Freud has painted a wine label for Chateau Mouton Rothschild 2006 [Forbes]
Sotheby’s reports $2.8 billion in sales in 2008
[ArtDaily]
UK Government cuts VAT taxes after court rules that video and light art is sculpture in a case involving Dan Flavin and Bill Viola works imported by Haunch of Venison [The Art Newspaper]
How the Whitney recently benefited from the weakness of the corporate system [NYTimes]
The Times UK and Saatchi Gallery begin a top 200 artist survey with results to be announced in May [TimesUK]

Go See: Gilbert & George Retrospective at the Brooklyn Museum, from October 3 to January 11, 2009

Monday, October 6th, 2008


Life
by Gilbert and George, part of Death Hope Life Fear series, via the Brooklyn Museum

The Brooklyn Museum is the final stop in the global tour of the Gilbert and George retrospective, offering a comprehensive overview of the art the British duo has been making since 1970. Many of the 90 pieces on display will only be shown in Brooklyn. The pair’s work encompasses performance art and charcoal sketches as well as large, monument-scale digital picture installations which address politics, sexuality, race, identity faith, and other aspects of modern life in a very idiosyncratic, provocative way. Gilbert and George met at Central St. Martin’s College in 1967 and have been working exclusively with each other ever since, winning the Turner Prize in 1986 and representing Britain at the Venice Biennale in 2005.

Brooklyn Museum Exhibits: Gilbert & George
Gilbert and George Retro at Brooklyn Museum Begins
[Gothamist]
Provocative Duo, Naked and Natty
[New York Times]
Gilbert & George Retrospective At The Brooklyn Museum
[rawArt]
Gilbert and George Retrospective
[The Art Newspapers]

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Murakami keeping it surreal in Brooklyn

Monday, April 7th, 2008


Murakami’s work via New York Times

“©Murakami,” a retrospective of 16 years of Takashi Murakami’s art, had a star-studded opening at the Brooklyn Museum of Art this Friday, after a strong showing on the West Coast.

Murakami’ s opening [Bloomberg]
Murakami at the Brooklyn Museum [New York Times]
Takashi Murakami’s opening [Supertouch]
Kanye West, Marc Jacobs at Murakami’s opening [New York Magazine]
Brooklyn Museum [Brooklyn Museum]
Murakami’s opening [Wall street Journal]

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©Murakami Exhibit in Brooklyn Museum to feature Louis Vuitton Pop-Up Store

Monday, March 31st, 2008


Murakami’s Flowerball (3D) 2002 – to be shown at Brooklyn Museum via ArtDaily.org

©Murakami (See Murakami), which has garnered much hype leading up to its debut, April 5th, will feature in addition to ©Murakami, a fully operational Louis Vuitton store featuring a series of Murakami-styled bags, limited edition canvases featuring “Monogramouflage”, a collaboration between Murakami and Vuitton’s artistic director, Marc Jacobs.

Brooklyn Museum announces Vuitton store within murakami exhibition [ArtDaily.org]
Vuitton Sales benefit little-known charity [NY Sun]
Murakami Vuitton bags for sale at Brooklyn Museum [NY Daily News]
Louis Vuitton at Brooklyn Museum, brought to you by Takashi Murakami [ArtInfo]

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NEWSLINKS 02.26.08

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008


Yayoi Kusama via T-Magazine

An interview with “dot” artist,Yayoi Kusama [T Magazine]
Louis Vuitton’s boutique controversy at Brooklyn’s Murakami Show [Arts Journal]
On “looted” Russian & French Paintings at Royal Academy of Art [NY Times]
Update: Critique of Jasper John’s recent show [Financial Times]
Wealthy eclipsing public funding for commissioning new works? [Financial Times]

Murakami Coming to Brooklyn Museum

Saturday, January 5th, 2008


–>
Brooklyn Museum via ArcSpace

Murakami will display over 90 works at the Brooklyn Museum this spring, April 5th through July 15th. The exhibition was originally created by the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. The exhibition will debut there in February. The Brooklyn Museum of Art is the only other venue currently slated to display the works.

NY Times
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Huliq
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BrooklynMuseum.org

Movie review sites.(Link-Up @ Home: Your Personal Guide to the Web)

Information Today September 1, 2006 | Pack, Thomas “Critics’ clout has gone down,” according to movie reviewer Harry Kloman in an article in USA TODAY (May 31, 2006). “With the advent of new media and the Internet, studios know they can reach the audience they want to reach. They don’t need us for big movies.” The article (“A Teflon summer season?” by Scott Bowles) pointed out that even though critics panned several summer movies, the flicks were doing quite well at the box office.

A large segment of the movie-going audience seems to blithely accept whatever summer fare Hollywood produces. To get those patrons into theater seats, the studios only have to put out the word through the Internet and other marketing channels that their movie is the next big, noisy, star-studded blockbuster.

The USA TODAY article said that critics still matter “for smaller movies.” Of course, some moviegoers prefer smaller, quieter, more thoughtful films, but they also like thrillers, action-adventure potboilers, romantic comedies, and even the occasional horror flick, as long as the movies have interesting characters and don’t insult our intelligence too much. We simply don’t have the time or money to spend on fluff, unless it’s high-quality fluff.

For us, the advent of the Internet is more of a boon than it is to the studios. As they flex their marketing muscles to reach uncritical audiences, we can avoid their grasp by visiting a few of the hundreds of Web sites that offer to guide us to movies worth our time and our box-office bucks.

Your Friend, the Critic Reviewing the book American Movie Critic for The New York Times, Clive James said that “since all of us are deeply learned experts on the movies even when we don’t know much about anything else, people wishing to make their mark as movie critics must either be able to express opinions like ours better than we can, or else they must be in charge of a big idea, preferably one that can be dignified by being called a theory.” James also noted that the critics “without theories write better. You already knew that your friend who’s so funny about the Star Wars tradition of frightful hairstyles for women (in the corrected sequence of sequel and prequel, Natalie Portman must have passed the bad-hair gene down to Carrie Fisher) is much less boring than your other friend who can tell you how science fiction movies mirror the dynamics of American imperialism.” The friend/reviewer who doesn’t bore me is Roger Ebert. He’s plainspoken, but he expresses opinions (such as mine) better than I can, and I almost always agree with the direction in which he points his thumb. He’s like a friend who has promised to be ever vigilant about getting me the most bang for my box-office buck. this web site hairstyles for women

But Ebert does inject just enough theory–just the right amount of observation on the ways in which movies reflect and explore big issues–to bring a bit of weight to even the fluffiest of flicks.

For instance, after pointing out that actor Cameron Bright has “large dark eyes and ominously sober features that make you think he might grow up to become chairman of the Federal Reserve, or a serial killer,” Ebert’s review of X-Men: The Last Stand, noted that the film (when it isn’t “distracted by the need to be an action movie”) raises questions about numerous political and social issues, including “abortion, gun control, stem cell research, the ‘gay gene,’ and the Minutemen.” Ebert added that “‘curing’ mutants is obviously a form of genetic engineering, and stirs thoughts of ‘cures’ for many other conditions humans are born with, which could be loosely defined as anything that prevents you from being just like George or Georgette Clooney. The fact is, most people grow accustomed to the hands they’ve been dealt and rather resent the opportunity to become ‘normal.’ (Normal in this context is whatever makes you more like them and less like yourself.)” All the Reviews Fit to Print And, of course, you get The Times’ insightful, often witty reviews of recent releases. In a review of The Da Vinci Code, A. O. Scott pointed out that actress Audrey Tautou, “determined to ensure that her name will never again come up in an Internet search for the word ‘gamine,’ affects a look of worried fatigue.” He also noted that “not even a glimmer of eroticism flickers” between the stars of the film–Tautou and Tom Hanks–but “perhaps it’s just as well. When a cryptographer and a symbologist get together, it usually ends in tears.” Besides the printed reviews, The New York Times site also offers Movie Minutes–short, video-based reviews that include scenes from movie trailers. here hairstyles for women

How to Avoid Rotten Fruit A movie must have a minimum of five ratings from Approved Tomatometer Critics to be listed on the Tomatometer, which means that many older movies aren’t reviewed on the site. “We’re working on fixing this,” according to the site’s editors.

A good example of the tone and tenor of the site is found in Teddy Blanks’ review of the film Husbands. According to Blanks, director John Cassavetes “worked hard to make his pictures as frustrating to their audiences as they are” and the director “would mock, confuse, and torment his actors until their faces settled into an expression he was interested in filming.” Not Coming to a Theater Near You also offers A Guide to Twin Peaks, which asserts that the show “single-handedly enabled the television drama to branch out of the temporary mainstream and into the arena of art.” by THOMAS PACK Pack, Thomas