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Archive for 2008

Newslinks for Friday July 18, 2008

Friday, July 18th, 2008

Guan Yi via The art Newspaper

Guan Yi, China’s top collector of contemporary art, has ambitions for Beijing [The Art Newspaper]
Christie’s sales for first half 2008 up 10% on
new demand from the likes of Middle East, Russia and Asia
[Bloomberg]
Russian Andrey Melnichenko’s $400M, 400 foot yacht docks in Norway to pick up some Monet’s sans EU import taxes [TimesUK]
Christie’s Paris to sell Yves Saint Laurent’s art collection February ’09 [NYSun]

Go See: Tracey Emin Curates at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, through August 17

Friday, July 18th, 2008

Moses Contra Freud, RB Kitaj (2005) via Royal Academy of Arts

Recently appointed Royal Academician, artist Tracey Emin has curated a gallery at the current Royal Academy Summer Exhibition which is the institution’s 240th event of this kind. The exhibition, whose theme this year is ‘Man Made’, is a well-recognized annual event in the contemporary art world and includes works from approximately 1,200 artists, both established and emerging.

Emin brings sex, death to UK Royal Academy show [Reuters]
Tracey Emin at the Royal Academy summer show [TimesOnline]
Row erupts over Tracey Emin’s ‘offensive’ selections for Royal Academy exhibition [DailyMail]
Tracey Emin at Royal Academy [ViewLondon]
Tracey Emin RA on curating Gallery 8 of the Summer Exhibition [RA Magazine]
The Summer Exhibition: A Culture Show Special [RoyalAcademy]
Newslinks: Tracey Emin’s controversial selections for Royal Academy
[Art Observed]

(more…)

Newslinks: Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008


Jeff Koons at the Met via Artfagcity

NYMag explores how the art of Jeff Koons somehow stands above the other “razzmatazz” [NYMag]
Profile of collector Eli Broad and his “oversize ego and unstoppable ambition” [Metropolis]
The art services market grows in lockstep with art prices [NYTimes]
Edvard Munch prices seem to be rising in direct correlation to recent art thefts of his work [The Art Newspaper]
Bloomberg posits that Banksy’s possible middle class private school background may affect his notoriety [Bloomberg]


Go See: The Hermès “H Box” at the Tate Modern, London, through August 17

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

H BOX, designed by Didier Fiuza Faustino Portuguese, and produced by Hermès International via Bloomberg

Storied french luxury fashion house Hermès International presents the H BOX, a collapsible screening hall designed by Portuguese artist and architect, Didier Fiuza Faustino. The H Box is a traveling screening capsule that exhibits the video art of 8 international artists: Alice Anderson, Yael Bartana, Sebastián Díaz-Morales, Dora García, Judit Kúrtag, Valérie Mréjen, Shahryar Nashat, and Su-Mei Tse. The H Box will be exhibited in the Tate Modern in London until August 17.

Outside The Box [Vogue]
Hermes H Box, Tate Modern [Designtaxi]
The Tate Modern [Tate]
Vuitton’s Richard Prince Bags, Hermes at Tate: Fashion Art [Bloomberg]
Tate’s H-Box screens art films [Digital Arts Online]

(more…)

New Museum announces Triennial based on “20 something” artists

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

The New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York City via Guardian

The New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York announced yesterday, July 15, that they are starting a new international triennial art exhibition in the spring of 2009. The triennial, entitled Younger than Jesus, will showcase young emerging artists from Generation Y, born circa 1980. A curatorial team led by the director of special exhibitions Massimiliano Gioni, senior curator Laura Hoptman, and Rhizome.org director and adjunct curator Lauren Cornell, along with a network of ten international correspondents and over 150 “informers” are organizing the triennial and scouting the young artists.

New Museum Plans Triennial, Seeks Young Artists for 2009 Debut [Bloomberg]
New Museum Launches Triennial [Artinfo]
New Museum Plans Emerging Artist Triennial [NYSun]
New Triennial from New Museum [Artnet]
(more…)

Newslinks: Monday, July 14 2008

Monday, July 14th, 2008

This photograph taken in Jamaica four years ago, is believed to be Banksy via Daily Mail

After a year long investigation, Graffiti artist Banksy revealed? More here, and here [Daily Mail], [NYTimes], [Supertouchart]
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Ad agencies reverse the long-evident trend of artists poaching from popular ads by creating popular ads that poach from artists [NYTimes]
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A profile of Roman Abramovich’s girlfriend, Daria “Dasha” Zhukova, a new player on the art scene [TimesUK]
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Previously thought ‘fake’ is a Rembrandt, but not a self-portrait [The Art Newspaper]
–>
The Sun reviews Art Market tome ‘The $12 Million Stuffed Shark’ previously covered by AO here [NYSun]
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On Page Six: 303 Gallery employee fired for mistaking Marc Jacobs for a homeless man and Andres Serrano keeps it gritty in his new Chelsea show [NYPost]
–>
MoMA assembles modern prefab houses in adjacent vacant lot [NYTimesMag]

Review: ‘Paranormal Activity’ is abnormally scary.(A & E)

Seattle Post-Intelligencer October 14, 2009 We live in a world of reality TV, YouTube, digital cameras, and cell phones with access to the Internet and video capabilities. But ten years ago, before our ties to everyday home recorders, a little independent horror flick called The Blair Witch Project came out and scared the pants off people by providing something we hadn’t seen before: “real” video footage of scary stuff happening to “real” people. But can the same “real footage” angle still produce scares today? Director Oren Peli and his Paranormal Activity proves that yes, yes it can. go to site paranormal activity 2 online

Movie Trailers TV News Celebrity News Photos More from film.com Interview: Director Spike Jonze Talks Where the Wild Things Are Megan Fox’s Next Project: Underwear Ads Children’s Book Adaptations That Failed Dancing With The Stars Results: Chuck Liddell Is Counted Out The Pitch Meeting for Showgirls 2 Live-in boyfriend and girlfriend (Micah and Katie) videotape their everyday lives living in their house where Katie has reportedly experienced out of the ordinary occurrences. Over the course of three weeks, the two determine that some sort of presence is definitely in the house. But what? And why? And maybe most importantly, what can they do about it? Armed with only a camera and some computer software, the couple tapes their experience while attempting to figure out what to do.

What makes Paranormal Activity so darn effective is how real the whole thing feels. They didn’t try and pull a Blair Witch and claim that the events really took place — we live in the Internet age where any sort of white lie like that could be debunked in a matter of minutes. But everything from the couple — their relationship, the house they live in, their reactions to what’s going on around them — feels so real during even the mundane and normal parts of their lives that when the freaky stuff kicks in, it’s that much scarier.

The leads were key in making this movie work, and both Micah and Katie put their all into their roles. They hit the right emotional chords when they needed to, and when the terror kicks in for them, it kicks in for the audience as well. Only a few times did I feel their performances were fake, mostly due to some of the dialogue that was likely scripted in certain areas to steer the “plot” in the proper direction; otherwise, they felt like genuine people.

The house was also vital in making or breaking the film’s scare factor as the whole movie takes place in the couple’s house. The house felt like a real house, a house that you’ve probably been in at one time or another, or maybe even live in now. It’s an ordinary house with ordinary stuff. Again, what could possibly be scarier than freaky stuff happening in the woods? How about your own home? Provoking a fear of the unknown in the middle of the woods is easy to induce, but fear inside your everyday suburban house? That’s no easy task.

But the big question remains: Is it scary? By using sound effects, gaining night vision-style video, and an eerie premise, Paranormal Activity managed to produce a genuinely scary and downright creepy little horror flick. What may be the scariest tactic of all was the anticipation of what was going to happen each night the couple spent in the house. There’s so much focus and concentration on waiting to see something happen, that when something as simple as a door moving by itself does happen, it makes your hair stand on end. While the movie does pull a few cheap boo-scares, I can’t say they weren’t welcome — the sudden loud noises were jolting, but the reasons behind those noises were what made them scary. The use of the handheld camera also added to the scare factor, only showing you pieces of what’s going on at a time. in our site paranormal activity 2 online

Paranormal Activity is a terrifying movie experience, done through strategic storytelling devices, off-camera sound effects, and only the most primitive, basic special effects. By creating the fearful anticipation of what might happen each night, the film reaches heights in horror that haven’t been touched in a while. Micah and Katie were relatable and, best of all, they were real, making the events that unfold around them that much more intense and unbearable. While I thought the ending took an uncharacteristic turn from the rest of the movie, the film as a whole still provided a frightening experience and delivered what audiences everywhere have been asking for for years: a reason to sleep with the lights on for awhile, and just in time for Halloween to boot.

Grade: A- Ammon Gilbert covers the latest in horror weekly for Film.com.

View the original article on film.com

Go See: Martin Creed Work No. 850 at Tate Britain, through November 16

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Running in the Tate via Bloomberg

Head’s up to visitors of the Tate Britain: from now until November 16, every thirty seconds from 10am – 6pm, an athlete will make a fast 85 meter dash from one end of Duveen Hall to the other. While running is not normally encouraged at the Tate, this particular athletic display is actually a commissioned artwork entitled Work No. 850 by British artist Martin Creed. Creed has instructed the runners, who he recruited from athletic magazines and are being paid an hourly wage, to “run like their life depended on it.” The artwork is part of an ongoing series of commissioned contemporary sculpture in the Duveen Galleries of Tate Britain, sponsored by Sotheby’s.

Tate Britain [Tate]
Martin Creed [Martin Creed]experience of life. The runners i
Dashing Through the Tate Britain [NY Sun]
Interview with Martin Creed [Bloomberg]
Duveen Commission 2008 [ArtDaily]
An Idea with Legs [Guardian UK]
Sprinting Runners by Martin Creed [Telegraph UK]
View video of the exhibit at Artreview.com

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Newslinks: Saturday July 12, 2008

Saturday, July 12th, 2008


Snow Scene at Argenteuil 1875 by Claude Monet (1840-1926) via Guardian

On view at Tate Britain: 18 masterpieces recently bequeathed to British National Gallery, including works by Degas, Freud, Monet, worth roughly $200,000,000 [GuardianUK]
The art/fashion, Vuitton/Richard Prince link in London [Bloomberg]
Mutualart.com’s Top Art Exhibitions for 2008 [Businessweek]
French art thief pleads guilty in botched $4.7M masterworks sale, indictment covered by AO here [NYSun] [AO]
2009 Turner Prize judges announced [TheArtNewspaper]
MOMA buys 3 Jasper Johns works for undisclosed sum (note: 2 years ago a Johns sold for $80M) [NYTimes]

 

 

 

 

GO SEE: Terence Koh and Michael Sailstorfer at Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, through August 31

Friday, July 11th, 2008

Warhol remains as a chinese winter garden in my heart (self-portrait), 2006, Terence Koh via ArtNews

The Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt presents two simultaneous solo exhibitions by Bavarian artist Michael Sailstorfer and Chinese-Canadian artist Terence Koh. Both Sailstorfer’s “10 000 Stones” and Koh’s “Captain Buddha” make use of ready-mades and found objects to present their own artistic statement. Each artist’s installation work comments on his surroundings, though in different ways.

The Art Newpaper [The Art Newspaper]
Current Exhibitions [Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt]
Terence Koh and Michael Sailstorfer at Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt [Artipedia]
Michael Sailstorfer: Tire with popcorn [Art Magazine]
Terence Koh [ArtNews]

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AO On Site: “Pretty Ugly” at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise and Maccarone in New York, through August 29

Friday, July 11th, 2008

“Pretty Ugly” at Gavin Brown Enterprise via Art Observed

Art Observed was on site at the opening of “Pretty Ugly” on Thursday, July 10th. The show took place at two neighboring galleries on Greenwich St. in New York: Gavin Brown’s Enterpise and Maccarone.
The show was curated by Alison Gingeras, of the Pinault collection, and featured work from more than 75 artists, including John Currin, Louise Bourgeois, the Chapman Brothers, Paul McCarthy, Takashi Murakami, Alice Neel, Hermann Nitsch, Andy Warhol, Francis Picabia, and Rob Pruitt, just to name a few.

Pretty Ugly: Press Release [Gavin Brown’s Enterprise]
Pretty Ugly, Maccarone [Maccarone Gallery]
A Pretty Ugly New York Art Eclipse [Flash Art]
This Week in Art Openings: Totally Rad, Pretty Ugly, and The Shallow Curator [Papermag]
Pretty Ugly [Artlog]

(more…)

AO Auction Results: Sotheby’s Old Master Paintings Evening Sale, Wednesday, July 9

Friday, July 11th, 2008

Portrait of Willem van Heythuysen, Seated on a Chair and Holding a Hunting Crop, Frans Hals (circa 1630) via Sotheby’s

Sotheby’s Evening Sale of Old Master Paintings in London on Wednesday attracted an international client base and managed to raise $101.5 million in overall sales, which is the second highest amount in the company’s history for an auction of this genre.

The sale included not only pieces of exceptional quality, but also a number of works which had previously been held in private collections and therefore had not been on the market for some time. A re-discovered painting by Frans Hals (Pictured above), which was heretofore believed to be a copy, sold for $13,995,067 which not only exceeded its pre-sale estimate of $6.0-$10.0 million, but which also was the second highest price ever paid for a work by the artist at auction.

There were numerous other auction records set that evening, including record sales by artists including Guido Reni, Jacobo Tintoretto, Taddeo di Bartolo, Frans van Mieris the Elder and Jan Brueghel the Elder. An impressive 58% of lots sold at the auction garnered bids in excess of their estimates, contributing to the sale’s success as a whole.

Sotheby’s Auction Results: Old Master Paintings Evening Sale [Sotheby’s]
Old Masters Perform at Sotheby’s London [NYSun]
Old Master Paintings Soar at Sotheby’s Realizing $101.5 Million [Artdaily]
At Sotheby’s, Exceptional Old Master Offerings Lead to Six Records [International Herald Tribune]
Old Master Paintings Soar at Sotheby’s Auction in London [News-Antique]
Old Master Paintings Realize $101.5 Million at Sotheby’s [AuctionPublicity]
Sotheby’s Week of Old Masters Realizes GBP45.2 Million [SGallery]

(more…)

Newslinks: Thursday, July 10, 2008

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Sculpture from “Art for the Masses”, Yue Minjun via Supertouchart

KAWS does a Yue Minjun figurine [Supertouchart]
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Are commodity-rich buyers propping up the market for trophy art? [CNN]
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Damien Hirst’s rumored collaboration with ultra-pricey cell phone brand Vertu
[FashionWeekDaily]
–>
Applications for an MA degree in art business see a strong increase [Financial Times]
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Damien Hirst, other bold-faced names keep it swanky at Annabel’s in London for Richard Prince at Serpentine Gallery [The Independent]

Amtrak warned of Acela ‘defect’; Train spokesman denies lawsuit.(PAGE ONE)

The Washington Times (Washington, DC) October 22, 2002 Byline: Tom Ramstack, THE WASHINGTON TIMES Amtrak was warned by the manufacturer of its troubled high-speed Acela Express trains about potential “defects” in the undercarriages but forced early delivery.

Court documents in a lawsuit by Bombardier Corp. against Amtrak say trains were delivered before the design was certified as safe.

Bombardier, based in Montreal, said it gave its warning of a “trainset truck defect” in a letter dated Aug. 29, 2000. A trainset refers to locomotives and the rail cars they pull. Trucks are the wheel assemblies on the undersides of rail cars and locomotives.

Amtrak yesterday denied Bombardier’s accusations.

“At no time did Bombardier ever raise issues relating to the safe operation of the trainsets,” said Amtrak spokesman Bill Schulz. “If it had, neither Amtrak nor [the Federal Railroad Administration] would have permitted the trainsets to be operated.

“Amtrak was not aware of the specific defect,” he said, referring to cracks in the suspension systems.

Two months ago, an Amtrak mechanic discovered cracks in the undercarriage suspension system of an Acela Express locomotive when a bracket dislodged during routine maintenance in Boston. Additional inspections turned up cracks in other Acela Express trains, which travel at speeds up to 150 mph along the Northeast Corridor. Amtrak was forced to interrupt the popular service and lost millions of dollars in ticket revenue.

Amtrak found that the suspension assembly brackets appeared to be too weak to withstand the side-to-side movement of the locomotives. web site amtrak promotion code

Bombardier delivered the first Acela Express trainset on Oct. 18, 2000. Regular service along the Northeast Corridor started in December 2000.

Amtrak owns 18 Acela Express trainsets, 15 of which normally operate 50 daily departures. Three are kept in reserve. Because of the suspension problems, the operation is down to 12 trains making 40 daily departures.

Bombardier in November filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia seeking compensation from Amtrak for cost overruns resulting from repeated design changes and tests ordered by the national passenger railroad.

On Aug. 18, 2000, Amtrak submitted a “claim,” or demand, that the trains in the $800 million contract be delivered. They already were more than a year late.

Bombardier responded by saying it was reluctant to deliver the trains before all of Amtrak’s requested design changes were complete.

“What Amtrak proposes is nothing short of a unilateral rewriting of the contract that would permit Amtrak to force the delivery of equipment which Amtrak itself asserts is defective in major respects,” wrote Germain Lafontaine, director of program management for the Bombardier Transportation-Alstom consortium that built the trains.

Richard Sarles, Amtrak’s vice president for high-speed rail, knew disagreements involving design of the undercarriage were unresolved but submitted the claim anyway, Mr. Lafontaine said in his letter. Mr. Sarles also knew that the unresolved design issues “could require operation of the trainsets at reduced speeds.” In addition, “these defects would allegedly increase the trainset’s trip time and require post-delivery repairs by the contractor or other commercial resolution.” Bombardier spokeswoman Carol Sharpe repeated the company’s position that any problems resulted from Amtrak’s design changes.

“What we said was that there were certain technical issues with which we disagreed,” she said. “They were imposing certain designs on us and we would disagree. We can’t discuss the specifics.” After Bombardier filed suit, Amtrak issued a statement blaming the manufacturer for delays and cost overruns.

“After five years of delays, performance failures and self-inflicted financial losses, it is no shock that Bombardier is now attempting to shift the blame for the consortium’s mismanagement of the high-speed trainset contract to Amtrak,” said an Amtrak statement dated Nov. 8, 2001.

Among Amtrak’s complaints against Bombardier were “speed restrictions, because the trainsets do not meet contract specifications when operated on track that complies fully with all FRA requirements.” Amtrak appeared to be aware of the undercarriage problems before delivery of the trainsets when it told Bombardier in an Aug. 14, 2000, letter that it was suspending payment for failure to meet design specifications. site amtrak promotion code

Payments in the contract were due as the Bombardier-Alstom consortium progressed in intervals toward completing the contract, referred to in letters as “milestones.” “Milestone payment amounts associated with trainset truck performance and the related qualification tests are not yet due because these milestones have never been achieved,” John Bell, Amtrak’s program director for high-speed trainsets, said in the letter.

Amtrak withheld $51 million in payments because of the equipment problems. Bombardier is seeking $200 million in its lawsuit as compensation for the cost overruns incurred from Amtrak’s design changes.

Meanwhile, Bombardier says it has engineered a permanent repair for the suspension systems, a sturdier bracket that reduces side-to-side motion.

The cracked support brackets were rewelded as a temporary fix in August to get the trains back into service.

Amtrak said Bombardier’s new bracket is undergoing field testing and must be approved by the FRA before it can be certified as a permanent repair.

Acela Express, one of Amtrak’s most popular and profitable business ventures, was a linchpin in the railroad’s failed efforts to free itself from federal subsidies. Congress is considering restructuring Amtrak because of its persistent inability to operate profitably.

CAPTION(S):

Amtrak says Bombardier Corp.’s suspension assembly brackets are too weak to withstand the side-to-side movements of Acela Express trains, which travel up to 150 mph. [Photo by AP]

AO Auction Results: Christie’s Old Masters on Tuesday: a $24,400,00 lost masterpiece

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

La Surprise, Jean-Antoine Watteau (c. 1718) via Christie’s

Christie’s Old Master Sales that took place last Tuesday, July 8th, featured quite a few ‘lost’ works of art, and generated over $47 million. In addition to the three rediscovered Goya drawings which sold for a combined $8 million, La Surprise by Jean-Antoine Watteau led the Old Masters Sale with a record breaking $24,376,385. The Watteau painting had been lost for almost 200 years, and was assumed to be destroyed until it appeared last year in a private English collection. It is the highest paid price for a French Old Master painting sold at auction to date, and well exceeded it’s $5.9-$9.8 million estimate. The sale also featured artwork by Anthony Van Dyck, Pieter Brueghel II, Thomas Lawrence, William Larkin, Jan Josefsz Van Goyen, and many more notable old masters.

Rediscovered Watteau Masterpiece Sells for Record $24.4 Million [Artdaily]
A Watteau sets record at £12.36 million in an uneven Old Masters sale [IHT]
Lost Watteau Fetches Record; Old Masters Languish at Christie’s [Bloomberg]
ÄŒR buys 8 Liechtenstein works at Christie’s auction [Praguemonitor]
Goya sketches “lost” for 130 years sold at auction [ReutersUK]
Goya Boosts Christie’s Drawings Sale [NYSun]
Francisco de Goya at Christie’s London [Coxsoft]
‘Lost’ Goya drawings sold for £4m [BBC]
Art buyers find ‘lost’ works [LATimes]
Christie’s Auction Results [Christie’s]
Goya Boosts Christie’s Old Masters Drawing Sale on Tuesday [Artobserved]

(more…)

News Blurb: Goya Boosts Christie’s Old Masters Drawings Sale on Tuesday

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Bajan Riñendo, Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (1746-1828) via BBC

Three drawings from Spanish artist, Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes, sold at Christie’s Old Masters Auction on July 8th for $7.9 million, double the pre-sale estimate. The three drawings had been rediscovered after being ‘lost’ for the past 130 years. The trio was last recorded at an auction in Paris in 1877, and did not resurface until the Old Masters Auction at Christie’s last Tuesday.

Goya sketches “lost” for 130 years sold at auction [ReutersUK]
Goya Boosts Christie’s Drawings Sale [NYSun]
Francisco de Goya at Christie’s London [Coxsoft]
‘Lost’ Goya drawings sold for £4m [BBC]
Lost Watteau Fetches Record; Old Masters Languish at Christie’s [Bloomberg]
‘Lost’ Goya works sell for 4m pounds at Christie’s [Economic Times]
Christie’s Auction Results [Christie’s]

(more…)

New York Developer commissions Anish Kapoor for Herzog & de Meuron residential project in Tribeca

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Artist Anish Kapoor via Billslater

Indian-born artist, Anish Kapoor, has been commissioned to design a large-scale public sculpture for a new residential tower in Tribeca. In addition to Kapoor, the New York-based real estate company, Alexico Group, has chosen the world-renowned Pritzker Prize winning architectural firm, Herzog & de Meuron to design the building. Izak Senbahar and Simon Elias, principals of the Alexico Group, have announced that the Kapoor sculpture will be installed at ground level and be fully incorporated into the architectural design. The designs for the building and sculpture that will sit at the intersection of Leonard and Church Streets, will be released in the fall, and construction is projected to be completed in Spring 2010 .

New Tribeca Tower to Include Kapoor Sculpture [Artinfo]
A New Tower For Tribeca [VanityFair]
Alexico Group Announces Manhattan Commission to Architects Herzog & De Meuron and Artist Anish Kapoor [Artdaily]
Swiss Firm to Design New TriBeCa Tower [NYTimes]
Alexico Group inked a deal with architects Herzog & de Meuron [NYDailynews]
Herzog & de Meuron and Anish Kapoor to Collaborate on New York Tower [InteriorDesign]
Tribeca Skyscraper to get Sculpture [TheRealDeal]

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AO Auction Newslink Roundup: the closing word on the London Sales

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

Panel from Francis Bacon’s triptych “Three Studies for Self-Portrait,” which Christie’s sold for £17.28M via IHT

Below is just a roundup of some post-auction articles that give a good summary of all that generally occurred in last week’s London auctions from all the major houses. These articles were published after AO completed its summaries of those auctions.

Auction Houses Test Market With Record Contemporary-Art Sales [Bloomberg]
AUCTIONS: Prices continue to soar as a Bacon earns £17.28 million at Christie’s sales [TheArtsNewspaper]
Prices Continue to Soar
[International Herald Tribune]
Contemporary Art Defies Doomsayers [Financial Times]
Investors Turn to Art; Sales Make Record $1.1 Billion [Bloomberg]
AO Auction Results: Christie’s Post-War & Contemporary Art, London, June 30 [AO]
AO Auction Results: Phillip’s London Contemporary Art Auctions, June 30 [AO]
AO Auction Results: Sotheby’s Masterpieces of Contemporary Art, July 1, London [AO]

Newslinks: Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

Olafur Eliasson, ‘Visualization of The Parliament of Reality’, Bard College via Artdaily

Bard College has Olafur Eliasson’s 1st permanent US installation [Artdaily]
MoMA purchases 23 photo works from eight Chinese artists controversially bought in bulk [Bloomberg]
Two Pulitzer Prize winning authors gain rights to new Francis Bacon biography [Bookseller]
Next-generation, under-30’s legacy arts patrons: on the scene [NYTimes]
Tracey Emin’s $122,000 4-inch bronze sparrow goes missing from public work and then is inscrutably returned (publicity stunt?) [BBC]


AO Auction Preview: Sotheby’s London, Old Master Paintings, Wednesday July 9

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

Landscape at Evening with Travellers and a Hunter Near Classical Ruins, Pierre Patel the Elder (circa 1640) via Sotheby’s

Sotheby’s has a forthcoming sale of Old Master Paintings, to be held in London at its New Bond St. location, on Wednesday, July 9th. The sale’s highlights include works from Pompeo Batoni, Jan Brueghel the Elder, Lucas Cranach the Elder, Carlo Crivelli, Frans Hals, Guido Reni, Sir Peter Paul Rubens, David Teniers the Younger, Aert van der Neer, Gaspar van Wittel (Vanvitelli) and a number of other exemplary European painters of this time.

It should also be noted that there will be ten paintings featured in the July 9th sale which come from the esteemed private collection of the late Dr. Gustav Rau, a 20th century philanthropist and collector of works from artists such as Pierre Patel the Elder, whose piece, Landscape at Evening with Travellers and a Hunter Near Classical Ruins, is estimated to fetch $800,000-$1,200,000 (Pictured above).

London Old Master Paintings Evening Sale [Sotheby’s]
Masters and Surprises In London, Old Masters Set To Be Sold [NYSun]

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French national living in Florida indicted on attempted sale of stolen Monet, Sisley, and Breugel

Monday, July 7th, 2008

State prosecutor, Jacques Dallest, displays stolen paintings via ReutersUK

A Frenchman living in Florida has been charged with conspiring to sell four masterpieces, stolen from the Musee des Beaux-Arts in Nice, France back in August 2007. The Frenchman, Bernard Jean Ternus, was caught trying to sell four paintings, by Claude Monet, Alfred Sisley, and Pieter Breugel, to undercover FBI agents. The four recovered paintings were Falaises près de Dieppe by Claude Monet, Allée de peupliers de Moret by Alfred Sisley, and Pieter Breugel’s Allégorie de l’eau and Allégorie de la terre.

French Man Living in Florida Indicted for Conspiring to sell stolen works [Artdaily]
Frenchman in Florida charged in Monet, Sisley Art Heist [CBC]
U.S. charges Frenchman over stolen Monet, other art [ReutersUK]
Frenchman Charged With Plotting to Sell Stolen Monet Painting [Bloomberg]
French Citizen charged in brazen Art Theft [CalgaryHerald]
Art thieves aren’t just in it for the Monet [Guardian]

(more…)

Newslinks: Monday July 7, 2008

Monday, July 7th, 2008

Starry Night over the Rhone, Van Gogh via NYTimes

‘Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night’ coming to The MOMA [NYTimes]
Details of contract for the Louvre Abu Dhabi revealed [TheArtNewspaper]
In industry executive news: MoMA’s Chief Curator of Paintings and Sculpture says ‘Good-Bye’ [NYSun]
In other executive moves, DIA Art Foundation has a New Director, Philippe Vergne [NYMag]
More executive news: Neil MacGregor, of the British Museum, declines directorship of the Met [TIME]
In page six today: Andy Warhol criticized in memoir by former friend and Ahn Duong, former flame to Julian Schnabel and Simon de Pury, ends her marriage [NYPost]

Go See: J.M.W. Turner at the Metropolitan Museum of Art through September 1st

Friday, July 4th, 2008

Whalers by Turner via Bloomberg.

From July 1st, through September 21, The Metropolitan Museum of Art is hosting the first retrospective exhibition of J.M.W. Turner. The exhibition will contain 140 diverse paintings. Most works come from Tate Britain which is the most comprehensive collection of the artist’s work in the world. Turner’s paintings represent seascapes, historical subjects, and modern scenes usually with a characteristic use of light.

Turner at the MET [Metropolitan Museum of Art]
J.M.W. Turner at the Metropolitan Museum Slideshow [NYTimes]
Storm-Tossed Visionary of Light [NYTimes]
Bloated Turner Show Arrives at Met Museum in Blaze of Colors [Bloomberg]
Nature Painted With Force [NY Sun]

(more…)

Newslinks: Thursday July 3, 2008

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

Marc Jacobs channels Andy Warhol via Interview Magazine

Interview Magazine, founded by Warhol, dedicates this month to Warhol [Interview Magazine]
Bilbao Guggenheim makes a $156M expansion into the countryside, more here [Reuters] [NYTimes]
Tracey Emin’s 1st retrospective will be in Edinburgh [Times Online]
Steve McQueen, an artist working primarily in film, represent Britain at Venice Biennale [Guardian]
A major Goya was in the end painted by his pupil [Independent]
Victor Pinchuk and Carlos Slim Helu newly make Top 10 of top 200 art collectors [ArtNews]

U.S. Premier of Malcolm McLaren’s video project, Shallow, in Times Square

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

Shallow, Malcolm McLaren via Rawartint

Creative Time has announced the U.S. premier of the video, Shallow, by Malcolm McLaren of the Sex Pistols. The video is a series of film clips taken from films of the 1960s, all of which contain the moments right before or after sex scenes. The film is going up on MTV’s huge outdoor HD screen the middle of Times Square between 44th and 45th Street. The film will be up through August and plays at the top of the hour, every hour. McLaren’s video is just one of Creative Time’s projects, others include David Byrne’s Playing the Building and Mike Nelson’s Psychic Vacuum.

At 44 1/2 Creative Time presents Malcolm McLaren [Creative Time]
Malcolm Mclaren’s ‘Shallow’ And Creative Time [Rawartint]
Porn-again Times Square [NYDaily]
Malcolm McLaren and MTV Bring “Artful Porn” To Times Square [Exclaim]
McLaren take porn to New York City [ContactMusic

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AO Auction Results: Christie’s Post-War & Contemporary Art, London, June 30

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

Naked Portrait with Reflection, Lucian Freud (1980) via Artinfo

Christie’s held its Postwar and Contemporary Evening sale on Monday, June 30th, setting new records and selling 83% of the lots. The four largest sales came from Jeff Koons, Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, and Andy Warhol. Other artists who were featured in the finely curated sale were Mark Rothko, Gerhard Richter, and Gilbert and George just to name a few. Out of the 48 lots that sold, 30 of them made over $1 million, and the total sale raised $172 million. This is Christie’s best result for a post-war and contemporary art sale in Europe.
Bacon Self-Portraits Fetch $34.5 Million at London Art Auction [Bloomberg]
Koons sculpture highlights record-breaking art sale [APF]
Koons record as London art sales draw to close [Reuters]
Christie’s London Bests Own Contemporary Record [Artinfo]
Record price for Koons sculpture [BBC]
Christie’s Post War and Contemporary Art Sale [Christie’s]
Bacon Triptych Sells for $34.4 Million in London [NYTimes]
Dead Artists Breathe Life Into Auctions [Wall Street Journal]
Koons’s ‘Balloon Flower’ sits in St. James Square before sale at Christie’s June 30th [Art Observed]

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