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Go See: Wassily Kandinsky at the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris through August 10th, 2009

Monday, May 4th, 2009

kandinsky_first_abstract_watercolour_1910

Kandinsky’s “First Abstract Watercolor 1910″ via abcgallery

After showing at Munich’s Städtische galerie im Lembachhaus and before moving to New York’s Guggenheim Museum (autumn 2009) the international retrospective of Wassily Kandinsky will spend the spring and summer months at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris (8 April – 10 August 2009).  The exhibition, showcasing some hundred of Kandinsky’s paintings, will offer a comprehensive chronological survey of the Russian Artist’s contribution to modern art while investigating his formal and conceptual offerings to the course of 20th century abstraction.  Kandinsky is noted for striving to give painting the freedom from nature he felt in music.

Pompidou Offers Comprehensive Overview of the Work of Russian Artist Wassily Kandinsky [Art Daily]       
“Kandinsky” at Centre Georges-Pompidou, April 8–August 10, 2009
[ArtInfo]
Kandinsky’s Squiggles, Amoeba Delight in Paris Show: Review [Bloomberg]                                                                    
Landmark Kandinsky Retrospective Planned for Guggenheim Museum’s 50th
[Guggenheim]

(more…)

Newslinks for Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

supreme x damien hirst decks
Damien Hirst’s skateboard decks for Supreme, via The Hundreds

Damien Hirst launches a new line of skate decks for Supreme [Hypebeast] plus a Glenn Brown interview with Supreme [Interview]
Turner prize winning British artist Steve McQueen debuts Hunger.
[W Magazine via C-Monster]

john-baldessari-haus-lange-mies-germany
John Baldessari at Mies van der Rohe’s Haus Lange of 1928, in Krefeld, Germany, via Edward Lifson

John Baldessari transforms a Mies van der Rohe house [Edward Lifson]
Metropolitan Opera puts up two Chagalls as collateral for loan in the face of a shrunken endowment
[Crain's]
Art In America launches its new website
[Art Fag City]

jeff-koons-train
A model of Jeff Koons’s ‘Train’ to be built at Los Angeles County Museum of Art, via LACMA

LACMA moves forward with record $25 million sculpture by Jeff Koons [The Art Newspaper]
Gold Bars for a Chris Burden show at Gagosian held up in Stanford fraud case [Culture Monster]
A negative forecast for the recession’s impact on art [NewYorkMagazine]

banksy
Banksy in London, via Wooster Collective

New Banksy works appear in London [Wooster Collective]
A profile of the Guggenheim’s Richard Armstrong, a modest museum head compared to his controversial predecessor
[Wall Street Journal]

kaws cover new york magazine
KAWS’s cover for the current issue of New York, via SuperTouch

KAWS designs New York Magazine’s cover for their ‘Best of New York 2009′ issue [SuperTouch]
Jackie Wullschlager looks at the exhibitions that have come about after Anthony d’Offay’s gift of his collection to Britain
[Financial Times]

gang-gang-dance
Gang Gang Dance, via The Social Registry

Armory Show preview and party at MoMA featuring a performance by Gang Gang Dance [MoMA]
A profile of art collecting Mugrabi family [NY Times]
Second ever newspaper interview of Charles Saatchi
[London Times]

jake-and-dinos-chapman-hell
Jake and Dinos Chapman’s remade ‘Hell’ via The Guardian

Jonathan Jones on why the Chapman Brothers’ Hell deserves to be shown at the National Gallery [Guardian]
Munich gallery Andreas Grimm shutters NY location [Hintmag]
SANAA, architects of the New Museum, to design Serpentine Pavilion [Icon]

francis-bacon-rug
A rug made by Francis Bacon, via London Times

Rediscovered Francis Bacon rugs are up for auction at a relative pittance versus his canvases [London Times]
Alex Katz models for J. Crew [MediaBistro]
A trend of wealthy collectors building museums to open their collections to the public [Fortune]

Newslinks for Sunday, January 18th, 2009

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

francis-bacon-man-in-blue-iv1
Francis Bacon – Man in Blue VI via TimesUK

Francis Bacon’s ‘Man in Blue VI’ highlights Christie’s February 11th sale [BBC]
Museums cut budgets as endowments shrink
[Art Newspaper]

jay-jopling-and-sam-tayor-wood

Art Dealer and White Cube Gallery owner Jay Jopling and Artist Sam Taylor-Wood via the DailyMail

On the fractious Jay Jopling and Sam Taylor-Wood “£100m divorce” and a brief history of the couple [DailyMail]
Art galleries Guild & Greyshkul, Cohan and Leslie, and Roebling Hall are the latest to close
[Artnet]
The Guggenheim museum sets record attendance [Cranes] as does The Louvre [ArtInfo]
Fashion brand Lucien Pellat-Finet to collaborate with artist Marc Quinn [Vogue]

lucio-fontana-concetto-spaziale-19611
Lucio Fontana – Concetto spaziale, 1961 via ArtDaily

Sotheby’s
February 5 London Contemporary Art Evening auction to sell
Lucio Fontana’s rediscovered Concetto spaziale (1961) at at estimate of £5-7 million
[Reuters]
The total value of London’s art auctions in February are a mere 23% of 2008 levels [Bloomberg]
Scores of artists settle in Sunset Park, Brooklyn’s “Industry City” [NYMag]
Art colleges as hype machines? [GuardianUK]

no-line-on-the-horizon-u2-hiroshi-sugimoto
Hiroshi Sugimoto’s cover for U2 via Blitz.pt

Hiroshi Sugimoto is the cover art for U2 new album [Rolling Stone]
Edward Winkleman offers tactics for art galleries to weather a recession
[ArtworldSalon]

AO November Auction Roundup 3 of 5: Christie’s Post-War and Contemporary Art, New York, Wednesday, November 12th: Basquiat’s “Boxer” sells while the Bacon does not, “The market is adjusting down”

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

"Untitled, Boxer" (1982) by Jean-Michel Basquiat, via artnet.com
“Untitled, boxer” (1982) by Jean-Michel Basquiat, sold by Metallica band member Lars Ulrich for $13.5 million via Artnet

CHRISTIE’S POST-WAR AND CONTEMPORARY ART, New York, Wednesday, November 12th

Total Lots Offered: 75
Total Lots Sold: 51
Total Sales Value: $113.62 million
Total Sales Pre-Auction Estimate: $227 million

Christie’s New York sale of contemporary art, held on the evening of Nov. 12, 2008, was dominated by American buyers and totaled $98,480,000 ($113,627,500 with premium) or about half of the low value of its estimate of $227,150,000 to $321,350,000. 51 of 75 lots sold, or 68%, with nearly a third failing to sell. Two lots sold for over $10 million, and 32 lots sold for over 1 million dollars. Buyers were 60% American, 18% European and Russian, 0% Asian and 24% “other.” Notable attendees were tennis legend John McEnroe and billionaire Eli Broad.

Like Sotheby’s evening sale a day before, Christie’s was also damaged by its guarantees of 39 lots when 12 were brought in with a combined low estimate of $48 million, (typically a price near where an auction house will guarantee). The total guaranteed low estimate was $90 million. Overall, 24 of the 75 lots failed to find buyers which indicates a buy-in rate of 32% by lot and 55% by value. The total for this sale does not compare well to Christie’s fall contemporary sale in 2007 which totaled $325 million. Christie’s reportedly reduced their reserves and as such 52% of the lots sold below the low estimate.

Several new auction records were set, including those by Paul McCarthy and Robert Irwin, however, prices were generally below pre-sale low estimates. Some positives came from the sale including a $15 million Richter and a $13.5 million Basquiat as well as new auction records for Joseph Cornell and Yayoi Kusama. The headliner lot Francis Bacon’s Study for Self-Portrait was unsold against a low estimate $40 million or more, but no bid approached even $30 million. Many other major lots went unsold, including five sequential lots including three Warhols and a Richter valued at up to $10.0 million to $15 million.

Credit crunch hits the art market [Guardian]
Mixed Results for Contemporary Art Sale at Christie’s [NY Times]
Christie’s New York Auction Sells 68% of Contemporary Artworks [Bloomberg]
Lehman’s Fuld and Wife Sell Drawings Below Estimate [Bloomberg]
Francis Bacon portrait pulled from sale after failing to attract bids
[Telegraph UK]
Art market in shock as Christie’s calls halt to Francis Bacon sale
[TimesUK]
Art Market Watch – $113.6 million at Christie’s Contemporary
[ArtNet]
Crappy Art Market Fails to Take Revenge on Richard Fuld [NYMag]
No Bailout at Christie’s [Artinfo]
The art of avoiding the credit crunch
[GuardianUK]
Credit crunch hits the art market [GuardianUK]

more with pictures after the jump…

(more…)

Go See: ‘theancyspacewhatever’ at the Guggenheim, New York, through January 7, 2009

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

carsten-holler-revolving-hotel-room
‘Revolving Hotel Room,’ by Carsten Holler, on display at ‘theanyspacewhatever’ at the Guggenheim, via New York Times

‘theanyspacewhatever,’ which opened at the Guggenheim on October 24th, aims to capture and evoke the zeitgeist of the early 1990s art world. The exhibition contains installations, pieces, and performances by Pierre Huyghe, Angela Bulloch, Liam Gillick, Maurizio Cattelan, Carsten Höller, Jorge Pardo, Philippe Parreno, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Douglas Gordon, and Rirkrit Tiravanija–artists who primarily come from the non-visual arts. The opening event, entitled ‘Opening,’ was a participatory piece by Pierre Huyghe where most of the museum’s lights were shut off, with the only illumination coming from headlights distributed to the attendees. The gaze of those in attendance defines the artwork both literally and figuratively–a self-consciously contrived conceit which reflects the spirit of the exhibition. ‘Opening’ will occur again on November 17th and December 8th. Another notable piece is the Revolving Hotel Room by Carsten Höller, a rotating bed and hotel room set that can be booked by visitors who wish to sleep there, offering a chance to live at the Guggenheim, if only for a night (unfortunately however, it’s sold out).

theanyspacewhatever
through January 7th, 2009
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 5th Avenue at 89th Street, New York, NY

Exhibition page: theanyspacewhatever
A Nighttime Spin at the Guggenheim
[New York Times]
Museum as Romantic Comedy
[New York Times]
Night at the Museum
[ArtForum]
Night at the Museum [NewYorkMagazine]
theanyspacewhatever at the Guggenheim Museum [VernissageTV]

(more…)

Go See: Catherine Opie’s Midcareer Survey at Guggeinheim Museum, New York, through January 7, 2009

Monday, October 27th, 2008

Self Portrait / Cutting (1993) by Catherine Opie
Self Portrait / Cutting (1993) by Catherine Opie

The Guggenheim Museum on Manhattan’s Upper East Side is currently featuring a comprehensive midcareer survey of Catherine Opie’s work, which blends high formalism with unconventional subjects, often from society’s margins. The exhibition encompasses most of the photographer’s output, which ranges from portraiture to urban landscape photography, and includes more than 200 works. Opie first came to prominence after ‘Being and Having’ (1991) and ‘Portraits’ (1993-1997), shows that focused on queer communities and culture in San Francisco and Los Angeles, with many of the heavily pierced and tattooed sitters coming from the queer artist and sadomasochist subcultures.  The artist also gave her subjects exaggerated facial hair to make their gender even more opaque and transmutable, exposing the subjectivity of sexual and gender ideology.

Guggenheim Museum: Catherine Opie: American Photographer
Regen Projects: Catherine Opie
A Retrospective of Many Artists, All of Them One Woman
[New York Times]
Shock and awe of another age [Financial Times]
Doug McClemont on Catherine Opie at the Guggenheim [Saatchi Online]
The AI Interview: Catherine Opie [ArtInfo]
Dykes! Tutus! Off-ramps! The Guggenheim Mounts a Catherine Opie Retrospective [Village Voice]

(more…)

Newslinks for Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

The Peaceable Kingdom, by Edward Hicks
The Peaceable Kingdom, by Edward Hicks, the subject of a dispute between Halsey Minor and Sotheby’s, via Wikimedia

The founder of CNET sues Sotheby’s, citing non-disclosure of its economic interest in a painting sold to him, which he has withheld payment for [Bloomberg] more on this here [LATimes] and here [Wall Street Journal] and here [New York Times]
A prediction that the new leadership of the MoMA and Guggenheim will broaden and focus each institution respectively [NewYorkMag]
A profile of the emerging Zoo Fair artists at the National Academy in London [Guardian]
In a recent interview, Tracey Emin addresses her being raped at age 13 in Margate as well as her being a victim of child abuse [ThisisKent]
Artist builds a custom environment to work for 3 months at the Whitney for an upcoming exhibit of photographs of the happenings
[ArtInfo] more on this here [New York Times]

Newslinks for Tuesday, September 30th 2008

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008


\
“Concetto spaziale, La fine di Dio” by Lucio Fontana via Christie’s

Highest-valued sale Christie’s has yet to auction during Frieze Art week will be a Lucio Fontana egg-shaped canvas estimated at $21.8 million [Bloomberg]
LACMA announces $55 million gift directed toward new pavilion amongst other endeavors from POM Wonderful and Fiji water owners [ArtDaily]
Street artist Kaws, now at Emmanuel Perrotin in Miami (as covered by AO here), collaborates on shoes with Marc Jacobs [TheWorldsBestEver]
An interview with Catherine Opie, whose work can now be seen at the Guggenheim [Artforum]
Ukrainian (not Russian, as cited in linked article) steel oligarch Victor Pinchuk announces Director for his new Kiev museum and that he was in fact a major buyer at Hirst’s Sotheby’s auction [ArtInfo]

Newslinks for Friday, September 26, 2008

Friday, September 26th, 2008

Catherine Opie
Catherine Opie via NYTimes

On Catherine Opie, whose exhibition opens at the Guggenheim today [NY Times]
Sotheby’s: Cat painting by 17-year old Damien Hirst is worthless [Guardian]
Auction of purported artist friend-of-Andy Warhol blocked by Warhol foundation due to its never having heard of the man [New York Post]
A review of “After Nature”- an apocalyptic themed exhibition at the New Museum [NYMag]
Accusations of a conflict of Interest concerning François Pinault and Jeff Koons at Versailles exhibition [ArtForum]
A full 1/2 of Gagosian Gallery’s London sales are to Russians [ArtInfo]


Go See: Jenny Holzer's 'For the Guggenheim' Fridays sunset through 11 PM through New Year's Eve

Friday, September 26th, 2008


Jenny Holzer’s light projection For the Guggenheim via Art Daily.

Jenny Holzer’s site-specific design for the facade of the Soloman R. Guggenheim museum is now on display. The Guggenheim commissioned the piece to mark the completion of the museum’s three-year restoration project.  The piece is a light projection of political statements about terrorism and the Iraq war along with poems by Nobel Prize recipient and Polish poet Wislawa Szymborska.  The work was inaugurated September 22 when Mayor Bloomberg switched on the installation causing the epigrams of white capital letters to cascade down the building.  The work entitled “For the Guggenheim” will be on display from sunset to 11 PM every Friday through December with a special showing on New Year’s Eve.
Jenny Holzer to Light Up Facade of Guggenheim Museum [Art Info]
Guggenheim Marks Completion of Restoration With First Public Viewing of Work by Artist Jenny Holzer [Art Daily]
Guggenheim Museum to display text art to celebrate renovation [USA Today]
Guggenheim Museum Marks Completion Of Building Restoration With First Public Viewing Of Commissioned Work By Artist Jenny Holzer [Guggenheim Press Release]

(more…)

Richard Armstrong named new Director of the Guggenheim Foundation

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008


Richard Armstrong, the new Director of the Guggenheim via NY Times.

As anticipated by Art Observed earlier this month in a report here, Richard Armstrong of the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh has been named the new Director of the Soloman R. Guggenheim Foundation and its flagship the Soloman R. Guggenheim Museum in New York.  The announcement made yesterday by the Board of Trustees follows an extensive seven-month international search. The search begin February 2008 after Thomas Krens resigned as Director of the Guggenheim after nearly 20 years. Armstrong served four years as Chief Curator and Curator of Contemporary Art at the Carnegie Museum prior to his appointment as director there. He has also worked previously as the curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art where he organized four biennials and as curator at La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art, California.

Guggenheim Chooses a Curator, Not a Showman [NYTimes]
Guggenheim Foundation Names New Director Richard Armstrong [Art Daily]
Richard Armstrong appointed director of the Guggenheim [The Art Newspaper]

(more…)

Go See: Louise Bourgeois ‘Echo’ at Cheim & Read NYC, through November 1, 2008

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008


Echo (2008) Louise Bourgeois via Cheim & Read

Louise Bourgeois revisits familiar themes in her exhibition Echos, on display now at Cheim & Read. Like Bourgeois’s recent retrospective held at the Guggenheim this past June Echos concentrates on the themes of home, family, motherhood, and sexuality. Echos examines the constructs of the female identity, especially those in conflict such as female/male, organic/geometric, and particular to this exhibit mother/father. Comprised of discarded clothing and aged painted wood the featured sculptures are reminiscent of Bourgeois’s earlier work of the 1940′s and 50′s and serve to represent the familial hierarchies. The gouaches on display depict the relations between mother and child and are influenced in part by Bourgeois’s own role as mother as well as the death of her own mother when the artist was twenty. The paintings which are comprised of blood red paint further the organic aesthetic of the exhibit and mirror the artist’s continual emphasis on nature as seen in her mixed-media exhibit held at the Zurich’s Hauser & Wirth this past June covered here.

Louise Bourgeois at Guggenheim [Art Observed]
Louise Bourgeois Echo at Cheim & Read [Cheim & Read]
Louise Bourgeois: Echo at Cheim & Read [Chelsea Art Galleries]

(more…)

Newslinks for Wednesday September 3, 2008

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008


Francois Pinault via the TheLuxeChronicles

In February 2009, works from Francois Pinault’s collection coming to Moscow’s Contemporary Culture Centre “Moscow Garage” [RussiaIC]
Hirst’s $100 million diamond encrusted skull to begin its world tour in … Amsterdam [NYSun]
MoMa selects a Chief Curator of Painting from in-house [NY Times] and, the Guggenheim may soon appoint a new Director from Carnegie Museum [NY Times]
The Jeff Koons-in-Versailles debate continues on [TimesOnline]
Matthew Barney is on Ovation TV, airing Wednesday [OvationTV via C-Monster]
New on the global art scene Roman Abramovich’s girlfriend, Dasha Zhukova, basically summarized [Wall Street Journal]

Newslinks for Tuesday September 2, 2008

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Banksy KKK in Alabama
A rather political work by Banksy spotted in Alabama via Supertouch

Banksy, moving north from New Orleans, (previously covered by AO here), to Alabama [Supertouch]
In October an artist will allow you to stay in a hotel room set up at the Guggenheim [GuardianUK]
New York Magazine highlights 30 art shows for the Fall [NYMag]
Explaining the dearth of Japanese curators [JapanTimes via Artsjournal]
Two books reviewed on the exploits Han van Meegeren: master forger [NYSun]
The Moment reports on vast industrial artspaces at Manifesta 7 in the Italian Alps [The Moment]

Newslinks for Monday September 1st 2008

Monday, September 1st, 2008

Kippenberger Frog
Martin Kppenberger’s Zuerst die Füsse (Feet First)

The Pope condemns late German artist Martin Kippenberger’s crucified frog sculpture [GuardianUK] and more here [NYTimes]
A critique of Olafur Eliasson’s ‘Waterfalls’ as ineffective “shock and awe” public art [NYSun]
Jeff Koons on Night Talk [YouTube via ArtFagCity]
Guggenheim Foundation receives $1 million from National Endowment for the Humanities
[ArtForum]
Banksy’s auction-donated $137,000 work to support Ken Livingstone invalidated due to his anonymity [ArtInfo]
Damien Hirst to open his 2nd ‘Other Criteria’ retail shop next to Sotheby’s on New Bond Street, London [Blomberg]

Newslinks for Sunday August 17th, 2008

Sunday, August 17th, 2008

Brice Marden via the The New York Observer

Artist Brice Marden is redeveloping a hotel in the Caribean island of Nevis [NYObserver]
S&M self-portraiture coming to the Guggenheim with Catherine Opie retrospective [NYTimes TMagazine]
After 30 years, lawyer on trial for attempting to profit off stolen art, including
a $29.3M Cezanne [Artinfo]
Fake American Apparel ads in Brooklyn reference Jeff Koons and perhaps Damien Hirst [AnimalNY]
Ed Ruscha’s open-air studio in Venice Beach, CA may become a city parking lot [NYTimes]
The 100% self made custom wardrobe of artist Mike Latham, of Art’s Corporation, features his signature barcode [NYSun]

Newslinks: Monday, August 4, 2008

Monday, August 4th, 2008

Jacob Rothschild via BBC

Interview with Lord Jacob Rothschild, scion of legendary collector family [The Economist]
Tracey Emin rejects offer to remake her definitive ‘Sensation’ work: “Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963–95,” which burned at the Saatchi gallery warehouse in 2004 [Artinfo]
Guggenheim Foundation expands, taking over 60,000 sf in West Soho [Crain's New York]
Blue chip gallery Pace Wildenstein is up and running in Beijing before the Olympics [NYSun]
More on the China thing: Beijing’s 798 art district prepares for sales tied to the Olympic rush [WallStreetJournal]
And still more on the China thing: female Chinese artists move to the forefront [NYTimes]

Go See: Louise Bourgeois at Guggenheim, New York

Monday, June 30th, 2008


Louise Bourgeois via Artatien
The iconic artist, Louise Bourgeois, is honored by the culmination two major events. Her exhibit at the Guggenheim in New York recently opened on June 27th. June 25th was the theatrical premier of “Louise Bourgeois:The Spider, the Mistress and the Tangerine”, a documentary about her life and work at the Film Forum.

New Louise Bourgeois Documentary Film to Premiere at New York’s Film Forum [Artdaily]
Louise Bourgeois at the Guggenheim [The Art Newspaper]
Portrait of a Haunted Artist Who Befriended Giant Spiders [NY Times]
‘Louise Bourgeois’: An Intimate Look at a Provocateur [NYSun]
The Guggenheim Museum: Louise Bourgeois [Guggenheim]
Raw Materials of a Life, Revealed by Sculpture [NYTimes]
Louise Bourgeios at the Guggenheim [NYTimes]
`Cumuls,’ Dolls Recall Daddy Dearest in Louise Bourgeois Show [Bloomberg]
For Your Distorted Pleasure: Louise Bourgeois [NYTimes]
Bourgeois Looms Large at the Guggenheim [NY artbeat]

(more…)

GO SEE: Louise Bourgeois, La Rivière Gentille, at Hauser & Wirth, Zürich, June 1 through July 26, and Retrospective at Guggenheim, New York, June 27th through September 28th

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

La Rivière Gentille, 2007 via Hauser & Wirth

Hauser & Wirth, Zürich, is currently displaying a new series of works on paper, La Rivière Gentille (2007), by Louise Bourgeois. The exhibit, featuring 42 mixed-media works by the contemporary master mostly known for sculpture, evokes the dual nature of water and memory through imagery and text. The installation wraps around the gallery, reinforcing Bourgeois’ long-held emphasis on architectural and psychological spaces. This show coincides with the traveling, full-career Bourgeois retrospective that visits New York this summer.

Bourgeois Retrospective at Centre Pompidou [moreintelligentlife.com]
La Rivière Gentille in Zurich [Hauser & Wirth]
Louise Bourgeois at Guggenheim [Guggenheim Museum]
Bourgeois Spider Sells for Record $4.5 Million [Bloomberg]
Louise Bourgeois: A Retrospective [Art:21 Blog]

(more…)

Newslinks: Saturday May 30, 2008

Sunday, June 1st, 2008

Leonard Lauder via The New York Times

Lauder Steps Down as Whitney Chair [NY Times, Art Forum]
“The primary market has only one event, and that is Art Basel” [Bloomberg]
A look at the work of the Guggenheim’s Chief Conservator [NySun]
An Interview with Nan Goldin in her Paris home [The GuardianUK]

Newslinks: Sunday – May 25th, 2008

Sunday, May 25th, 2008


Kauffman Desert House in Palm Springs via greatbuildings

Christie’s auction of Neutra house didn’t actually close [NYTimes]
Recent auction results belie underlying market weakness [Economist]
Herzog & de Meuron to design Kolkata Museum of Modern Art [ArtForum]
Ukranians as a new force in art buying [Financial Times]
A financial take on the state of the art market [TheStreet.com]
Guggenheim and Met hunt for museum heads [New York Sun]

NEWSLINKS 03.12.08

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008


Melissa Bent and Mirabelle Marden via Style.com


Interview with Melissa Bent, Mirabelle Marden, founders of Rivington Arms [Style.com]
Former Guggenheim director Krens looking for other New York projects[Bloomberg]
Emmanuel Perrotin’s review “La Louvre – Paris” exhibition by Gelitin
[The Moment]
Ralph Rugoff’s blunt critique of Damien Hirst’s “decorative” £50m skull [The Independent]
Hirst work sells for 500 times €380 paid for it last year [The Independent]
A Rare Richard Prince Interview [Dejour Magazine via Raw art weblog]

NEWSLINKS 03.08.08

Saturday, March 8th, 2008


Alec Wildenstein via Telegraph

Obituary for Alec Wildenstein, of major art world dynasty[Independent UK]
Update: D’Offay wants ‘iconic’ gallery to house £125 million gift [The Scotsman via ArtForum]
In Brooklyn, DUMBO’s most controlling real estate family keeps 1,000 artists and arts organization in the neighborhood [The New York Times]
De Kooning sells for $5 million at the European Fine Art Fair [Bloomberg]
Bill Ruprecht continues to navigate Sotheby’s through uncertain times [Economist]
Future of Metropolitan and Guggenheim is controlled by same exec search firm [NYSun]
‘Gallery condos’ as artist and dealer space for sale in Chelsea [ChelseaNow]
Jeff Koons studio visit is auctioned off, for charity [c-monster], [charitybuzz]

Guggenheim director Thomas Krens leaving after 20 years

Thursday, February 28th, 2008


Thomas Krens at Guggenheim Bilbao via The New York Times
After 20 years as director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, the foundation’s board announced yesterday that Thomas Krens will step down from his postion after a new director has been hired. Krens will remain senior adviser for international affairs and oversee the creation of a Frank Gehry-designed museum in the United Arab Emirates.

Guggenheim’s Director steps down from his position [New York Times]
Searching a new director for Guggenheim’s Museum [ArtInfo]
Thomas Krens Steps Down as Guggenheim Director [New York Observer]
The Depart of Thomas Krens from the Guggenheim [New York Sun]
Guggenheim’s ideal new director [Arts Journal]
Goodbye from the Guggenheim to its director, Thomas Krens [Bloomberg]

Sizable Cyclones a big test for UConn defense

New Haven Register (New Haven, CT) September 16, 2011 | Chip Malafronte The UConn defensive front seven caused major problems against Vanderbilt last week — seven sacks, 13 tackles-for losses and a forced fumble that led to a touchdown. go to web site how many plays did shakespeare write

But the offensive line of Iowa State might pose a stiffer challenge tonight at Rentschler Field (8 p.m., ESPN2). The Cyclones line is a mass of humanity that averages out at 6-foot-4 1/2 and 315 pounds, none larger than left tackle Kelechi Osemele (6-6, 347).

UConn’s strategy is simple.

“Hit ‘em,” junior linebacker Sio Moore said. “Just hit ‘em. Slow them up any way you can.” Defense kept UConn in the game against Vanderbilt, a 24-21 loss in which the Huskies offense was limited to a field goal while the defense accounted for two touchdowns. Moore led the way with 3.5 sacks, including the one that led to the aforementioned fumble to give his team a lead early in the fourth quarter.

Fact is, the defense has carried the mail for some time. UConn’s last offensive touchdown against an FBS opponent came last November, a three-game span in which the defense has three touchdowns and special teams two more.

Under new defensive coordinator Don Brown, the Huskies already talented and experienced unit has been unleashed with more blitz packages and aggressive schemes designed to confuse and punish opposing offenses.

Look no further than Moore, a former West Haven resident, who had 110 tackles in his breakout sophomore campaign but just 1.5 sacks in 13 games.

“We expect to make big plays,” Moore said of the defense. “Our thing is we get out there, we’re about running to the ball and hitting people in the mouth. That’s the only way to live.” Against Vanderbilt there were some hiccups, none more glaring than a 48-yard rush that helped the Commodores to kick the winning field goal with 2:56 remaining. But the Huskies certainly made enough plays to allow UConn to pull off the win despite an offense that failed to generate much after the first quarter. site how many plays did shakespeare write

UConn coach Paul Pasqualoni said he spent much of the week addressing consistency issues on the defensive side.

“You can not give up, in a game like that, four big plays,” Pasqualoni said. “You’re not going to shut everyone out. But this idea of 20-plus run and 40-plus pass, that’s totally unacceptable regardless of how many plays you do make on defense. The effort is really good, playing fast like we all though t they would, we just have to make sure we’re lined up right and reading what we’re supposed to read. If we can get that done, we’ll play more consistently.” Iowa State (2-0) has weapons to go along with the big offensive line, though its offensive numbers are a tad skewed. It knocked off Iowa 44-41 in triple-overtime last week, a game that was tied at 24- 24 following regulation. In the opener, the Cyclones needed a touchdown with 40 seconds remaining to avoid being upset by FCS- level opponent Northern Iowa 20-19. Quarterback Steele Jantz, a dual threat averaging 233 yards passing and 61 yards rushing through two games, will be the focus tonight.

UConn (1-1), still rotating three-quarterbacks, will need the defense to once again keep the game close as it attempts to discover an identity on the offensive side.

If the offense has to rely on the defense, that’s just fine by UConn. Moore says the Huskies defense is more than up to the task.

“If you run out of gas, you’re not a defense,” Moore said. “The defense can’t run out of gas, you have to make plays. There will be games where we might have to lean on the offense. Everyone has to make corrections. We’re in this together, offense, defense and special teams. If we stay together, we’ll be good.” To receive breaking sports news first — simply text the word “nhsports” to 22700. Standard msg+data rates may apply. cmalafronte@nhregister.com IOWA STATE AT UCONN – When: Tonight, 8 p.m. – Where: Rentschler Field, East Hartford – Records: Iowa State 2-0; UConn 1-1 – On the air: ESPN 2; WTIC-1080 – Internet: WTIC.com – Series history: UConn leads 1-0 – Last meeting: UConn stunned the Cyclones 37-20 in Ames, Iowa in 2002, and is considered the first benchmark victory in the BCS-era for the Huskies.

- What to look for: UConn will continue its three-headed quarterback experiment, with Johnny McEntee expected to start and Scott McCummings and Michael Nebrich working their way into certain situations. It’s also possible that tailback D.J. Shoemate makes his debut after missing the first two games with an ankle injury. Iowa State’s big offensive line will provide a major challenge to the Huskies defense, which has been strong so far despite allowing a couple of untimely big plays in last weekend’s loss to Vanderbilt.

- Prediction: UConn 28, Iowa State 27.

Chip Malafronte