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Archive for November, 2008

Damien Hirst and Levi’s release Jeans collection featuring original artwork

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008


T-shirt and pair of jeans featuring original artwork by Damien Hirst, via BlackBook

Damien Hirst has teamed up with Levi’s to produce ‘Damien Hirst x Levi’s x Warhol Factory Collection,’ a series of limited edition jeans, t-shirts and denim jackets. The collection features over 12 pieces featuring motifs and aesthetics found in Hirst’s art: tropical butterflies, skulls, and an array of spin-painted colors. Buyers can expect to find the collection at a select group of Levi’s stores in major global cities as well as fashion boutiques. T-shirts start at $83, while jeans will retail at $230. There is also a series of spin painted jeans in Levi’s signature 501 style, which will only be available via silent auction in key cities in Asia, Europe and North America–for price tags in the range of $23,000.

Art Star Damien Hirst Creates New Levi’s Jeans [Women’s Wear Daily]
Damien Hirst x Levi’s x Warhol Factory [Denimology]
Introducing $23,000 Denim, Courtesy of Damien Hirst [BlackBook]

Tate Britain and Russian Billionaire send 112 Turners to Pushkin Museum in Moscow

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008


J.M. Turner Snow Storm – Steam-Boat off a Harbour’s Mouth, exhibited 1842 via Tate Britain

This Wednesday The Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow and The Tate Britain in London agreed to hold the first major exhibition in Russia of works by J.M.W. Turner, the renowned 19th century British painter. The exhibition will be solely financed by the Russian billionaire Alisher Usmanov, a close friend of Vladimir Putin, who was ranked the 142nd richest man in the world in the 2007 Forbes 400 and who is the largest shareholder (24%) of Arsenal Football Club.

Billionare Takes Tate Works to Moscow [Guardian]
Usmanov Explains Why he Backed Turner Show [Bloomberg]
Turner Exhibition Set to Open in Russia [ArtDaily]
Tate sends Turners to Pushkin [TimesOnlineUK]
Press release from Tate Britain

More info and images after the jump… (more…)

Newslinks for Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Richard Serra via Time

The Economist is long on Richard Serra: “slow-burning Mr Serra will be one of the artists whose work will continue to shine long after he is gone” [TheEconomist]
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The defensive financial strategies art auction houses take during a market downturn
[The Art Newspaper] and in related, financing for fine art is correspondingly receding [Portfolio]
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A look inside the highly specialized art storage business [Financial Times]
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The Tate Modern may have accidentally hung 2 Rothko’s sideways [TimesUK]

The Pollock in question via terisfind.com

Highly controversial supposed Jackson Pollock drip painting is for sale for $50 million in Toronto [CBC]
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London’s Colony Room, favored bar of Lucian Freud and Damien Hirst, may close [TimesUK]
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50 to 75 Modern and Contemporary German works of art including some by Rosemarie Trockel, Georg Baselitz and Candida Höfer donated to the Busch-Reisinger Museum at Harvard [Artdaily]
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Yvonne Force Villareal, sets up an APFlab (“Art Production Fund”) on Wooster street in Soho, New York [NYTimes]

The Bacchae: The Library Theatre, Manchester and on tour

The Independent (London, England) February 21, 1996 | JEFFREY WAINWRIGHT Euripides’ The Bacchae is strong meat, literally. Its dominant image is of dismemberment, animal and then human flesh seized alive and devoured in the furthest reach of frenzy available to human kind.

Now The Library is a nice place, a cosy cup of a theatre, designed less for Bacchanalia than for Spring and Port Wine. Other venues on Kaboodle’s itinerary may suit Euripides better, but interesting as it is to contemplate the startlingly different contexts of ancient Greek and modern theatre, the production does not resolve this fundamental incongruity. For this, the less traditional the performance space the better.

But for all the rawness at its heart, The Bacchae is in no sense a “primitive” play. It is the story of the coming of the disreputable but potent Dionysus to Thebes, determined to prove his lineage as a son of Zeus and claim the honour due to a god. Though despised as a foreigner by the Theban king, Pentheus, Dionysus has captivated the women of Thebes, who, led by Pentheus’ own mother Agave, are now the Bacchae, living in liquid abandon beyond the city walls. Dionysus, himself ambiguously gendered, is lord and liberator of women, and the rapture he engenders transports them from their appointed place into ecstasy. The play’s main conflict is therefore between this liberation and the pursed rectitude of Pentheus.

It appears to be a clash of immutable elements, but Euripides’ psychological subtlety lies in the way Dionysus is able to evoke a prurient interest in the activities of the women in his enemy, and so seduce him from his fixed masculinity. Discovered in his spying, Pentheus is sundered by the Bacchae, his own mother claiming his head as a trophy. The second psychological switch is Agave’s rediscovery of her former mind as the frenzy abates and the contrary face of the Dionysian rapture becomes apparent. go to web site facial hair styles

Happily, the complexity that surrounds Pentheus is presented with nuanced care by Lee Beagley. Softly spoken, he has no crude, tyrannical bluster about him, and he is drawn into his fatal female garments in a gentle swirl of reluctance and surprised pleasure. Kaboodle’s other long-time actor, Paula Simms, takes two of the vitally important “messenger” roles, and her narration, especially the first account of the Bacchae at large, is clearly and characterfully done. This scene also provides the best visual moment, in which the company create a huge beast from a cow’s skull and a vast red curtain, then hunt it down.

Otherwise, Lee Beagley’s staging and Bruce Gallup’s design are disappointing by Kaboodle’s previous standards. The eclecticism of the costumes is unfocused, and a cumbersome piece of revolving stage machinery resembling a sawn- off caboose clutters the action. Eugene Salleh makes a puckish Taras Bulba of Dionysus, but his voice is not sufficiently commanding. Despite the ritual elements, these plays require a tremendous amount of simple, informative speaking, and, Beagley and Simms apart, this is woefully underpowered here. The result is that this great and disturbing play is not nearly disturbing enough.

n On tour to Marlborough, Birmingham, Kendal and Leicester this month, then throughout F} {DD} 21:02:96 {XX} Arts {PP} 8 {HH} Music: Music from the Yellow Shark, Frank Zappa / Ensemble Modern Royal Festival Hall, London {BB} Phil Johnson {TT} The late Frank was sadly unable to appear for this ultimate valediction of his role as a serious composer, but if he had, he would, you think, have taken comfort in the extent to which his facial hair-styles seemed to live on in many members of the audience. The yellow shark of the title lay pinned up behind the stage like a scruffy talisman and an air of expectation lay over the whole of the first, non-Zappa, half of the performance. web site facial hair styles

Opening with three studies by Conlon Nancarrow, the Ensemble demonstrated immediately their masterly grasp of difficult repertoire, the two pianos chattering away as if in binary code while the percussion sectionswapped roles in a see-saw of rhythmic accents, like chopsticks rattling on a plate. Study No 6 was achingly beautiful, the strains of a Mexican lullaby somehow emerging through the convulsive pitter-patter. Varese’s Deserts followed, accompanied by a film by the video artist Bill Viola of underwater point-of-view shots, barren landscapes and, eventually, an interior scene in which a man moved slowly across a room. Meanwhile, the music – part live orchestra, part taped industrial sounds – reached a series of crescendos, matched at the end by a magnificent coup de film, when the man and his furniture were dashed to smithereens. It was difficult, it was pretentious, but it was also very well done, and it matched the accumulating tension and ecstatic release of the music marvellously. So how would Frank live up to that?

Brilliantly, of course. First assembled for a performance at the 1992 Frankfurt Festival, which was partly conducted by the composer, the music is a compendium of Zappa themes that he got up to speed on his trusty synclavier and then printed out as music for the orchestra to learn, the title emerging only as an afterthought. Beginning with a cheesy Star Wars-ish introduction, the Ensemble’s programme mixed and matched movements from the original performance (available almost complete on the excellent Rykodisc album). Echoes of Boulez and Henze, at times rather too plinkety- plonk for comfort, were evident, but much of the music was quite superb, and the closing “G-Spot Tornado” was a tour de force of sustained action and invention. Only in “Bebop Tango,” was there any real Mothers of Invention monkey-business (when the orchestra talked among themselves, loudly) and the concert ended in total adulation. The encore, though, was a bit of a disappointment; hoping maybe for “Peaches En Regalia”, what we got was the Star Wars intro again. But the Zappa-philes went home happy, as they knew they would.

JEFFREY WAINWRIGHT

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

Sunday, November 9th, 2008


‘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…)

Newslinks for Saturday November 8, 2008

Saturday, November 8th, 2008

Anish Kapoor - Cloud Gate via heartland.vanabbe.nl

A London studio visit interview with Anish Kapoor [GuardianUK]
Richard Prince, who opened at Gagosian Chelsea tonight, interviewed on VBS.TV [VBSTV]
Three public art projects from Jeff Koons, Daniel Arsham, and John Henry will be at Art Basel Miami Beach [Artdaily]
All about Maia Norman, Damien Hirst’s companion [TimesUK]
How the current times can offer art bargains [Bloomberg]
The Asian Contemporary Art Fair, on in New York from Thursday to this Monday the 10th at Pier 92, 52nd Street & 12th Avenue [Official Site]
Two portraits authenticated as Van Goghs from 1886 Paris [cbcnews]
Former MET Director Philippe de Montebello and Paula Zahn to host 13’s SundayArts [ArtDaily]
Murakami ‘Wraps’ Louis Vuitton corner on 5th and 57th in Manhattan [WWD via Kempt]

Damien Hirst to reinstate representation with Parisian gallerist Emmanuel Perrotin

Saturday, November 8th, 2008


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Damien Hirst’s first exhibition with Emmanuel Perrotin Gallery in 1991 via Perrotin Gallery

Damien Hirst has surprised the art world again by announcing that he will reignite his relationship with Parisian gallerist, Emmanuel Perrotin, who in 1991, was one of the first two dealers to exhibit the artist. Perrotin considers Hirst to be an old friend and claims to be the only dealer to never profit from Hirst’s stardom. It is too early to tell, but it is suggested that a solo exhibition will be scheduled for 2010, but neither Hirst nor Perrotin have indicated if this is the beginning of a longer lasting artist-dealer relationship. Perrotin and Hirst’s partnership comes after Hirst’s infamous Sotheby’s auction, “Beautiful Inside My Head Forever,” previously covered by AO here in which noted art critic Robert Hughes accused Hirst of cutting dealers out of the action. “Everyone has written that Hirst wanted to bite the hand that fed him,” says Perrotin. “But there’s a difference between asserting independence and turning your back on dealers.” Whether Hirst is playing a well-calculated ironic card out of his ever-evolving deck or simply scratching the back that once scratched his own is still to be seen.

Hirst adds Perrotin to his dealer roster [ArtNewspaper]
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Pandora: Hirst goes back to his roots with Paris show [IndependentUK]
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Gallerie Perrotin [Gallerie Perrotin]
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(more…)

Go See: Joan Miró, Painting and Anti-Painting, 1927-37 at MoMA, NYC through Jan. 12

Saturday, November 8th, 2008


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Still Life With Old Shoe
(1937), Joan Miró via NYTimes

Joan Miró: Painting and Anti-Painting 1927–1937 at MoMA is the first major museum exhibition to display the chronological process of Miró’s practices and ideologies used to attack conventions and disrupt market values in this vital decade. The exhibition uses Miró’s 1927 claim of “wanting to assassinate painting” as its launch point to explore his lineage in 12 groups, which includes 90 paintings, collages, objects, and drawings. The exhibition takes a step-by-step perspective of the reinvigoration and radicalization of Miró’s sustained series. Additionally the exhibition is symptomatic of the European reaction to the end of the roaring twenties and insemination of political tensions that would culminate in 1939. The exhibition begins with a group of works composed on unprimed canvas and concludes with a single painting from 1937: Still Life with Old Shoe and is culmination of works created in Paris, Montroig (a rural village on the coast of Catalonia), and Barcelona. The exhibition is organized by Anne Umland the Curator or the Department of Painting and Sculpture at the The Museum of Modern Art. It will be on view in The Joan and Preston Robert Tisch Gallery, sixth floor, from November 2, 2008, through January 12, 2009.

MoMA Opens Exhibition Focusing on the Transofrmative Dcade of Joan Miró’s Work [ArtDaily]
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Joan Miró: Painting and Anti-Painting, 1927-1937
[TheArtNewspaper]
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Angry Young Man
[TheNewYorker]
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Miró, Serial Murderer of Artistic Convensions
[NYTimes]
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Joan Miró: Painting and Anti-Painting 1927-1937
[Museum of Modern Art]
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Miró, Miró on the Wall [ArtNet]

(more…)

AO Auction Results: Christie’s “The Modern Age,” the Alice Lawrence and Hillman family collections sell for less than 50% of estimate as Rothko and Manet headliners are pulled

Saturday, November 8th, 2008

Rene Magritte's "L'Empire des lumiéres" (1947) via Christie's

On Wednesday November 5th, Christie’s conducted its sale of the estates of two separate widows (the Alice Lawrence and Hillman family collections) bearing similar works of mostly late 19th and early to mid-20th century pieces, in an auction thus titled “The Modern Age.” These auctions included works by headliners such as Pablo Picasso, Paul Cézanne, Mark Rothko, Fernand Léger, Edouard Manet, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Amedeo Modigliani, Giorgio De Chirico and René Magritte. The event followed the latest Sotheby’s auction for Impressionist and Modern art on Monday (as covered by AO here) which disappointedly totaled $223.8 million against the $338 million low estimate. Additionally, the Modern Age sale corresponded to a particularly steep post-presidential race drop in the public equity markets in which the Dow plunged 486 points.

The auction results were no surprise considering the current tepid environment in the art market: The two collections listed 58 lots, of which 17 did not sell, for a total sale of $47 million, which was less than half of its $104 million low estimate. Christie’s said 51% of buyers were American and 29% European. Though Surrealist lots by Magritte (see image above) and De Chirico (see below) did well, of the lots that were brought in were the most expensive of the sale, notably, Manet’s “Fillette sur un banc/Girl on a Bench,” a 1880 portrait of a girl with a wide-brim hat estimated at $12-18 million (see image below), and Rothko’s “No. 43 (Mauve),” estimated at $20-30 million. Other works by Cézanne, Renoir, and de Kooning also failed to sell.

Bleak Night at Christie’s, in Both Sales and Prices [NY Times]
Art-Market Rout Persists: Rothko Snubbed at Auction [Bloomberg]
Buyers Cool to Private-Collection Art at Christies [Reuters]
Market Forces Bring Fire-Sale Prices for Christie’s “Modern Age” [Art Info]
The Modern Age: Property from the Hillman Family Collection [Art Daily]
Christie’s Wan and Woeful Night [CultureGrrl]
Christie’s Website

more auction results, quotes and images after the jump…

(more…)

Lower East Side Gallery Rivington Arms to close in January

Thursday, November 6th, 2008


Mirabelle Marden and Melissa Bent via Artnet

Rivington Arms, the young, trend setting gallery that opened in a retail space on Rivington Street in the Lower East Side in 2001, before moving to its current space off the Bowery, is closing in January.  The partners, Mirabelle Marden, 29, and Melissa Bent, 31, are fixtures not just in art but also in fashion (they have been featured in Uniqlo ads throughout the city, in Vogue and the New York Times Style section) and in the New York social scene.  The duo cited causes for the breakup that were unrelated to the economy: “It had to do with where each of us wanted to take the gallery.  We are not ending because we are getting crushed out.”

Rivington Arms to Close [ArtInfo]
Rivington Arms to Close [ArtForum]
Rivington Arms to Close as Partners Differ on Gallery’s Future [Bloomberg]
Rivington Arms

(more…)

AO Auction Results: Sotheby’s New York Impressionist and Modern Art, despite select notable sales, overall results were poor

Thursday, November 6th, 2008


Kazimir Malevich’s 1916 painting Suprematist Composition sold for $60 million via International Herald Tribune.

The results of the Sotheby’s New York Impressionist and Modern Art auction Monday night were overall dissapointing, despite some noteworthy lot results of works by Malevich, Degas and Munch. Fears of an art-market meltdown have been fueled by recent lukewarm results at London’s Frieze art fair and the abrupt pulling from the auction of the 1909 Picasso that was expected to sell for over $30 million. While the Sotheby’s evening total on Monday stood at 45 works sold for $223.8 million, it was well below its initial estimates of $337 million to $476 million, which were set over the summer before the financial crisis. The sale was the lowest for an Impressionist evening sale at Sotheby’s since May 2001. David Norman, an executive vice-president at Sotheby’s was quoted by the Guardian as saying “Anyone would expect people to be more circumspect in this environment. We’re selling in a very uncertain world.”


Auction Season Opens With Little Enthusiasm
[NY Times]
Art Market `Corrects’ as Lots Go Unsold at Sotheby’s [Bloomberg]
Three Big Lots Pace Respectable Showing at Sotheby’s [ArtInfo]
New York sales hit record highs amid signs that the art market is dropping
[Guardian UK]
Work by Kazimir Malevich sold for record $60 million
[International Herald Tribune]
Kazimir Malevich’s Suprematist Composition Sets Record at Sotheby’s Sale
[Art Daily]
Opening of Fall Art-Auction Season Marked by Crappy Sales, Great Deals [NYMag]
Flat result at NY season’s first art auction [Reuters]
Munch artwork fetches record $38m [BBC]

more results and pictures after the jump…

(more…)

Newslinks for Thursday, November 6th, 2008

Thursday, November 6th, 2008


Richard Prince ‘Nurse Hat Chair’ via Wallpaper

Richard Prince, in collaboration with Richard Prince, curates a furniture exhibit in Paris with his ‘Nurse Hat Chair’ [Wallpaper]
A reputed Jackson Pollock painting of questionable authenticity, purchased for $5 in 1992, goes on sale in Toronto for $50 million US [ArtInfo] Oct. 31
Terence Koh, artist on a bike, interviewed [Dejour Magazine]
A guide to London gallerist Steve Lazarides, now showing on the Bowery, and the Outsiders art movement [IndependentUK]
‘Pulse Park’ is a public art light installation in Madison Park, Manhattan that senses heart rates [NYMag]
Turner Prize winning video artist Steve McQueen interviewed [Scotland on Sunday]
The state of Sotheby’s art lending business [NYMag]

The Fall New York auctions are on right now, beginning with this Evening’s Sotheby’s Contemporary Sales

Monday, November 3rd, 2008


Danseuse au Repos, the 1879 painting by Edgar Degas is a highlight of this evening’s Sotheby’s auction though it remains to be seen if it will sell for its estimated $40 million, via NY Times

After extremely high sales in May which tallied $1.56 billion, and then more recently lackluster sales in London which missed low estimates by up to $40 million, as covered by Art Observed here, the art world is up for a major test in the next two weeks as Sotheby’s and Christie’s begin tonight selling contemporary, impressionist, and modern works that add up to high estimates of $1.76 billion, including a work by the Russian Kazimir Malevich (“Suprematist Composition” 1916, a $60 million geometric work) and a $40 million self-portrait by Francis Bacon and other works from high profile financiers Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts & Co. co-founder Henry Kravis and Lehman Brothers Chief Executive Officer Fuld.

Despite Pablo Picasso’s 1909 painting ‘Arlequin’ (which was estimated at $30 million) being pulled before the Sotheby’s auction recently, this evening’s Sotheby’s impressionist and modern art sale is slated to tally about $320 million and includes 71 lots including “Danseuse au repos” by French Impressionist Edgard Degas which is expected to go for $40 million (pictured above).

This auction will be followed by Christie’s $153 million high estimate November 5th sale which includes works from the estates of the widows, Rita Hillman and Alice Lawrence, and then a November 6th sale, comprised of art from various owners, estimated to total up to $344 million. Sotheby’s November 11th sale of contemporary art could total up to $281.6 million and features works by John Currin, Richard Prince, and Yves Klein. Following that is Christie’s November 12th sale with a high estimate of $321.7 million, featuring Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich’s Jean-Michel Basquiat painting of a boxer at an estimate of $12 million.

On Auctions Overall:
Big Prices, Big Risks at Fall Art Auctions
[NY Times]
NY art auctions under microscope amid financial crisis [AFP]
Art world dreading declines at upcoming key NY sales [Reuters]
Kravis, Fuld Brace for N.Y. Auctions as Collectors Lower Prices
[Bloomberg]
Falling under the hammer
[Financial Times]
It’s not a pretty picture Christie’s, Sotheby’s may be on the hook
[New York Post]
Art sales face acid test in midst of credit crunch [Financial Times]
Exceptional Work by Francis Bacon Leads Christie’s New York Post-War & Contemporary Art Sale [ArtDaily]
Things Are Cold, Clammy at City Auction Houses [NYObserver]

From ArtObserved:
Metallica’s drummer to sell Basquiat painting at Christie’s New York, November 12th auction; ‘Boxer’ to be displayed during Frieze Art Fair in London [ArtObserved]
Sotheby’s hopes to smash Russian art at auction record with $60 million sale of Malevich painting in New York on November 3rd [ArtObserved]

On withdrawn Picasso:
Picasso work withdrawn from Sotheby’s sale
[Reuters]
Picasso painting pulled from sale [BBC News]
Picasso Work Is Withdrawn From Sotheby’s Sale [NY Times]
Sotheby’s Withdraws Picasso’s Arlequin From Impressionist and Modern Art Sale [Art Daily]
Picasso Withdrawn From Sotheby’s Imp-Mod Sale [Artinfo]
Picasso painting withdrawn from Sotheby’s auction [Associated Press]

Auction Information:
Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale – Sotheby’s November 3 [Sotheby’s]
Christie’s Impressionist/Modern Evening Sale November 5th [Christie’s]

more pictures from the Sotheby’s Sale and other auctions after the jump…

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Go See: Tom Sachs, at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac Paris, through November 22nd

Monday, November 3rd, 2008


Crying Sanrio sculptures by Tom Sachs (to correspond with his show at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac) at the Trocadero, Paris, via Supertouch

After a show at Lever House in New York earlier this year (previously covered by ArtObserved here), Tom Sachs’ crying sculptures based on Sanrio characters went on display in Paris. The three sculptures were available for public viewing through November 2nd at the Place du Trocadero, in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower, and were an off-site installation of Sachs’ show at the Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac.  Entitled “Miffy,” “Hello Kitty,” and “My Melody,” the sculptures appear to be made of foamcore, known to be Tom Sachs’ favorite material. They are actually made of bronze, and constructed to mimic foamcore and the cut and paste aesthetic found in many of the artist’s works.  The show will run until November 22nd, 2008, at the Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac.

TOM SACHS
through November 22, 2008
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
7 Rue Debelleyme
Paris, France

Artist page: Tom Sachs
Tom Sachs’ show at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
Press Release at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
PARIS///TOM SACHS’ CRYING KITTYS AT THE TOWER OF EIFFEL [Supertouch]
Tom Sachs Exhibition at The Eiffel Tower Paris [RawArt]

More pictures after the jump…

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AO On Site: ‘Down’ by Kehinde Wiley at Deitch Studios, NYC November 1 to December 20, 2008

Monday, November 3rd, 2008


Kehinde Wiley’s exhibition at Deitch Projects on Saturday Night photo by Art Observed

Kehinde Wiley opened his third solo show at Deitch Projects in SoHo last night. The exhibition, DOWN, includes seven large-scale portraits done in Wiley’s signature style. Kehinde Wiley is known for creating his own version of contemporary portraiture that appropriates young African American men in the place of more well known portraits of old world power figures, religious icons etc.. For his newest solo exhibition he has chosen to depict seven young men from Brooklyn in poses inspired by the fallen warriors and saints that appeared in the old 18th and 19th century paintings of Holbein, Mantegna, Houdon, Maderno, Retout and Clesinger. The young men are shown in old traditional poses of religious figures or leaders in the moment of death or repose, but their expressions and dress are wholly their own. The largest of the portraits is a breath taking 25 feet in length and has an asking price of $300,000. The exhibit will be on view until December 20th, 2008.

Art in Review; Kehinde Wiley [NYTimes]
Kehinde Wiley “Down” At Deitch Projects
[Highsnobiety]
Kehinde Wiley on the Difference Between His Art and His Cooking [NYMag]
Kehinde Wiley at Deitch Projects [The Worlds Best Ever]
MIA interviews visual artist Kehinde Wiley [Interview Magazine]
Kehinde Wiley + Deitch [This Hearts On Fire]
Kehinde Wiley @ Deitch NY [Dailydujour]
Kehinde Wiley “Down” [Deitch Projects]

(more…)

Go See: Alexander Calder: The Paris Years 1926-1933 at Whitney Museum of American Art through Feb. 15

Monday, November 3rd, 2008


Alexander Calder, Josephine Baker IV (1928) via Artnet

Alexander Calder: The Paris Years, 1926-1933 at the Whitney Museum showcases Calder’s works of portraiture, video, and figuration that are seldomly giving such widespread recognition.  Molding from industrial steel wire, Calder’s figures range from toast-of-the-town 1920s dancer Josephine Baker to tennis champion Helen Wills to John D. Rockefeller playing golf.  One of the highlights of the show comes by way of Jean Painlevé’s 1955 film “Le Grand Cirque Calder 1927,” in which Calder introduces his figures one by one while manipulating them through low-tech mechanics to animate their activities. This performance drew savvy audiences including many vanguard types like Jean Cocteau, Marcel Duchamp and Piet Mondrian and can be viewer here. The Whitney has the largest body of work by Alexander Calder in any museum and is the exclusive venue for this landmark exhibition, co-organized with the Centre Pompidou.

Calder At Play: Finding Whimsy in Simple Wire
[NYTimes]
Video of Calder performing the “Circus” from a 1955 film by Jean Painleve [Youtube]
Alexander Calder: The Paris Years, Exhibition at the Whitney Museum [DesignBoom]
Animalism by Charlie Finch [Artnet]
Alexander Calder: The Paris Years 1927-1933 [Whitney Museum of American Art] (more…)

Newslinks for Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Monday, November 3rd, 2008


The Grand Palais in Paris, the Site of the 2008 FIAC art fair

Seen as selling more established contemporary artists, the 158-gallery strong FIAC art fair, back to Central Paris since 2006, was by consensus more successful than Frieze this year [Artreview] more here [TheArtNewspaper] here [Bloomberg] and here [Financial Times]
Jeff Koons’s Versailles installation of 17 works drew over 250,000 people and has been extended to January [Associated Free Press]
Tel Aviv as a contemporary art destination [NYTimes]
Jake Chapman on his new book: The Marriage of Reason & Squalor [ArtForum]
Olafur Eliasson’s Waterfalls exhibit brought 1.4 million visitors and $69 million to New York City [Crain’sNewYork]
Damien Hirst co-directs a bloody Sienna Miller in music video for The Hours [TheSun]
Steve Lazarides, agent to Banksy, is working on New York space following the success of the The Outsiders show on the Bowery in September [The Evening Standard via TWBE]