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Archive for 2008

NEWSLINKS 04.14.08

Monday, April 14th, 2008


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Victoria Beckham by Juergen Teller via New York Times

Juergen Teller’s casual, quirky, highbrow photographs  [NYTimes]
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Rothko’s kin petition to transfer his remains [NYTimes]
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Book Review: Renzo Piano’s monopoly; “Piano effect” [archidose via C-Monster]
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Matthew Barney honored by the National Arts Club [ NY Sun]
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Indian contemporary art at Wolverhampton, UK [Financial Times]
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Interview with Glenn Lowry, MOMA’s director [Timeout New York]
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20 sick at Thanksgiving party with indoor charcoal grill

SouthtownStar (Chicago, IL) November 27, 2011 Seven people were hospitalized with carbon monoxide poisoning after someone used a charcoal grill inside a Chicago home for Thanksgiving. this web site charcoal grill

Reports that ambulances were called to a home on Chicago?ˆ™s North Side before 11 p.m. Thursday. charcoalgrillnow.com charcoal grill

Twenty people reported symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning.

Seven people were taken to area hospitals. The others were treated at the home.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns that charcoal should never be burned inside because it gives off carbon monoxide.

AP

Auction news: Chinese contemporary sells well at Sotheby’s Hong Kong

Monday, April 14th, 2008


Bloodline: Big Family No. 3 by Zhang Xiaogang via NY Times

Another to testament to the strong Asian market, work at offered at the Sotheby’s Chinese contemporary auction in Hong Kong last week ended up for higher than estimated prices. A Zhang Xiaogang painting sold for over $6 million, breaking the record for the highest price ever for a Chinese painting.

$51.77M in Chinese contemporary sales exceeds expectations [NYTimes]
Michael Goedhuis’ ‘Estella Collection’ up for sale [New York Times]
Rare antiques go for record prices in Hong Kong [Bloomberg]

(more…)

Gehry to design 2008 Serpentine Pavillion, London

Sunday, April 13th, 2008


Frank Gehry via Serpentine gallery

This summer, Frank Gehry’s architecture will grace the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion in London. The architect described his project as “a wooden timber structure that acts as an urban street running from the park to the pavilion.”

Frank Gehry to design 2008 Serpentine Pavilion [Serpentine Gallery]
Frank Gehry’s architecture at the Serpentine pavilion this summer [Guardian UK]

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Go See: Wolfgang Tillmans’s retrospective in Berlin, March 21 – August 24

Friday, April 11th, 2008


Wolfgang Tillmans’s most recent works via Artnet

Berlin’s Hamburger Bahnhof museum for contemporary art is featuring German photographer Wolfgang Tillmans with a retrospective from March 24 until August 24. The title “Lighter” refers to a series of works which envolves illuminated paper. Wolfgang Tillmans was the first non-UK artist to win the Britain’s Turner Prize. Tillman’s is one of the most celebrated photographers of his generation.

Retrospective of Wolfgang Tillmans [The Local]
Wolfgang Tillmans at the Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin [Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin]

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GO SEE: Anselm Kiefer at Gagosian, LA March 30 – April 27

Friday, April 11th, 2008


Palmsonntag via Gagosian

Gagosian Gallery in Los Angeles features the new exhibition of Anselm Kiefer in two parts from March 29 until April 26. It will be his first exhibition in Los Angeles in more than a decade. The Beverly Hills gallery will present recent paintings, sculptures, and innovative photo-collages.

Anselm Kiefer at Gagosian Gallery [Gagosian Gallery]
Anselm Kiefer’s exhibition [ArtDaily]

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Vanina Holasek Benefit at Marc Jancou Gallery A Strong Success

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008


Hope Atherton’s “Untitled (Feathers)” 2008, Oil and Gesso on linen
via Vanina Holasek Benefit

On Monday April 7, Marc Jancou Gallery featured a Benefit for Gallerist Vanina Holasek to raise funds for her battle against cancer. More than 500, including art world figures and other notables attended the event.

Benefit for Vanina Holasek [ArtObserved]
Marc Jancou Gallery [Marc Jancou Gallery]
Benefit for Vanina Holasek official website
(more…)

NEWSLINKS 04.09.08

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008


A David Hockney via Times Online.


Hockney donates largest piece to the Tate
[Daily Telegraph]
France loans to buyers, supports art market, competes with China [Int. Herald Tribune]
Inside Beijing’s Booming Central Academy of Fine Arts [New York Times]
“The Bather,” one of Cézanne’s greatest works [Wall Street Journal]
French film producer/director Claude Berri’s Paris art gallery in Paris designed by Jean Nouvel [ArtInfo]
MOMA lunch announces new IMPei designed Museum of Islamic art [NYMag]

Go See: Dave Eggers’ “Lots of things like this” at Apexart, New York, through May 10

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008


Apexart presents “Lots Of Things Like This,” curated by author Dave Eggers from April 2 through May 10. The show attempts to find a unifying theme within a broad array gallery-worthy artwork that use cartoon images and text. From well known artists, literary figures and others.

Dave Eggers at Apexart [artdaily]
Gawking over Eggers’ art show [Gawker]
Apexart [Apexart gallery]

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Go See: Ryan Mcginley at Team Gallery New York, through May 3

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008


“I know where the summer goes” via Team Gallery

New York’s Team Gallery features “I know where the summer goes,” an exhibition of Ryan McGinley’s photographic works. It is the second solo show of the artist at Team Gallery, and will be on display from April 3rd to May 3rd.

Ryan Mcginley at the Team gallery [Cool Hunting]
Exhibit official website [Team Gallery]
“I know where the summer goes” [BlackBook]

(more…)

NEWSLINKS: April 7th, 2008

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008


‘The Battle of Trafalgar, as Seen from the Mizen Starboard Shrouds of the Victory,’

J.M.W. Turner, 1806-8, via Tate

Tate sends 100 Turners to Moscow despite frigid diplomatic relations [ArtForum]
Update: French art market eclipsed by China [Financial Times]
Jasper Johns: Most successful artist ever? [New York Sun]
Russian artist Anna Mikhalchuk disapeared in Berlin [Artdaily]
View of Olafur Eliasson sculpture in Munich [contemporist via C-Monster]
Update: Interview of Whitney chief curator on Biennial’s process [Wall Street Journal]
Warhol’s Upper East Side townhouse for $5.99M 
[New York Times]

Benefit Tonight for Gallerist Vanina Holasek at Marc Jancou Contemporary, New York

Monday, April 7th, 2008


Diane Arbus courtesy of Vanina Holasek at Marc Jancou Contemporary

Cocktails Auction Raffle, Monday, April 7th, 2008 For more information about the event, please visit www.holasekbenefit.com In order to support and help art dealer Vanina Holasek in her battle against cancer, friends and family organize tonight at Marc Jancou Gallery for a silent and a live auction.

Vanina Holasek’s Benefit at Marc Jancou Gallery [Bloomberg]
Marc Jancou
[Marc Jancou Gallery] (more…)

Sonnabend private estate sale largest on record

Monday, April 7th, 2008


Jeff Koon’s “Rabbit” 1/3 (1986) via Artinfo.com

Famed art dealer Ileana Sonnabend’s art collection was sold in two private transactions by her children this past week. Valued at nearly $1 billion, Sonnabend’s collection included works by artists such as Rauschenberg, Warhol, Koons, Johns, Lichtenstein and Twombly.

A Colossal Private Sale by the Heirs of a Dealer[The New York Times]
Sonnabend’s Children Part with $600 Million Worth of Art to Pay Off Estate Taxes[Art Forum]
Sonnabend’s Children Sell Most of $900 Million Collection[Bloomberg News]
Sonnabend Works Sold in Private Auction [Art Info]

(more…)

Murakami keeping it surreal in Brooklyn

Monday, April 7th, 2008


Murakami’s work via New York Times

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

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

(more…)

Go see: Liu Xiaodong at Mary Boone, March 6 – April 29

Friday, April 4th, 2008


Liu Xiaodong via Mary Boone Gallery

Mary Boone Gallery hosts from March 6 until April 29, a new exhibition of the Chinese artist Liu Xiaodong. The exhibition features new paintings such as two monumental landscape paintings: “Qinghai-Tibet Railway” which is a five-panel panorama painted and “Sky Burial.” Liu Xiaodong is considered as one China’s “new generation” of figurative painting. The artist studied at the prestigious Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing.

Liu Xiaodong’s exhibition [Mary Boone Gallery]
Liu Xiaodong studies [Herald Tribune]

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Go see: Nicola Vassel at Deitch Project, March 29 – April 26

Friday, April 4th, 2008


Rosson Crow, Live in the Black Pussy, 2008 via Deitch Projects

From March 29 until April 26, Deitch Projects features a group painting exhibition curated by Nicola Vassell. Works include paintings from Elizabeth Neel, Kristin Baker, Rosson Crow and Dan Colen.

Substraction at Deitch [Deitch Projects]

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AO on Site: Hope Atherton at Bortolami, New York, March 29 – May 2

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008


Rivington Arms gallerist Mellissa Bent and Designer Elise Overland
All photos via ArtObserved

Despite the slew of parties and events to choose from in New York during Armory show weekend, the opening party for Hope Atherton’s solo exhibition at Bortolami Gallery in Chelsea on Saturday night drew a large crowd. The show, which consists of moody, large oil paintings of landscape and still- life, runs from March 29 – May 2.

Hope Atherton’s new show [Chelseaartgalleries]
Atherton’s shows [Bortolami]
Hope Atherton’s opening at Bortolami gallery [Women’s wear daily]
Hope Atherton’s show [Vind]

(more…)

Go See: Ai Weiwei at Mary Boone Gallery Chelsea, March 8 – April 26

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008


Ai Weiwei’s descending light via Mary Boone Gallery

From March 8, until April, 26 2008 the Mary Boone Gallery features the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei. This is the artist’s first solo exhibition in New York, entitled ” Illumination”.

Mary Boone Gallery [Mary Boone Gallery]
Ai Weiwei at Mary Boone [Artnet]

(more…)

French architect Jean Nouvel wins the Pritzker Prize

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008


Jean Nouvel via the New York Times

French architect Jean Nouvel has won the the Pritzker Prize, considered architecture’s top honor. The architect is known for many buildings globally, including the Arab World Institute (1987) in Paris, Quai Branly Museum in Paris (2006) and in New York, 40 Mercer a a 15-story iron/red-and-blue themed luxury residential property. Nouvel is also designing a satellite of the Louvre Museum in Abu Dhabi, in the United Arab Emirates.
Jean Nouvel wins the Pritzker Prize [New York Times]
Nobel prize of architecture for Jean Nouvel [Slate]
Jean Nouvel’s honor [New York Sun] (more…)

NEWSLINKS 04.01.08

Monday, March 31st, 2008


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Gregory Crewdson via New York Magazine

Gregory Crewdson’s elaborate, freaky-suburban, cinema set works [NYMag]
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On the art pilgrimage to Judd’s Marfa, TX [Wall Street Journal]
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A Tom Otterness sculpture to Dumbo [New York Sun]
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Why Asian nations are bargain hunting Japanese Art [Herald Tribune]
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Banksy works headline U.K. regional auction [Bloomberg]
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Update: Overview of the Armory Show [Artinfo]
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Update: Warhol’s “Ten portraits of Jews of the 20th century” [NYTimes]
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Update: Armory sales hold despite economic slowdown [artnewspaper]
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An over-the-front-desk look at the “gallerinas” of Chelsea [NYTimes]
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C-Monster at the Whitney
[Time Magazine]

Television Review

The Independent (London, England) January 26, 2001 | Robert Hanks EVEN IF The 1940s House (C4) had not told us anything about life during wartime, it would have been fascinating for what it told us about life today: how, under the froth and bubble of our pampered lives, there is a search for an “authentic” sense of the past. The Hymers family’s three-month ordeal by ration book was a product of the sort of curiosity and anxiety that led to the Early Music Movement, with its catgut violins and shockingly brisk tempos.

As it happened, The 1940s House did tell us a lot about that period, if not always the things it wanted to tell us. Last night’s post-mortem on the experiment included a fascinating sequence in which the “war cabinet”, the team of historians assembled to oversee the house, expressed their disappointment in the Hymers. It wasn’t just that they had cheated on their ration books (Kirstie stole buns from a whist drive; meanwhile, her mother, Lyn, bummed cigarettes off everybody she met – you got the impression that if there had been any GIs around, she would have been in there). No, the real problem was that they hadn’t tried hard enough. They hadn’t improvised any cleaning materials out of paraffin and vinegar, hadn’t grown any food worth speaking of, hadn’t built their Anderson shelter to spec. here art of war quotes

The Hymers met the charges with indignation towards those “bastards”, those “faceless bureaucrats” handing down the orders. Michael defended his shelter-building robustly; the instructions had said that if the entrance to the shelter was close enough to the house, there was no need for earthworks to protect against a bomb blast.

But the defence seemed to miss the point: that in wartime, people don’t always try as hard as they should, don’t all get the Dunkirk spirit. Angus Calder’s book, The People’s War quotes Mass Observation’s finding that about a third of people bothered to read all the government pamphlets they were sent. As one of the war cabinet admitted, rationing helped crime and the black market to flourish. So, in bending the regulations, the Hymers were closer to the wartime mentality than they would have been if they stuck to them. A further irony: the war cabinet was itself getting sucked into the experiment, taking on the role of wartime civil servants, disappointed by people’s inability to live within the bounds they set them. see here art of war quotes

Not that the programme reproduced the conditions of war perfectly. The physical experience was replicated with surprising accuracy, but the psychological facts proved to be elusive. On the one hand, there was no way for the Hymers to suffer the uncertainty or long-term tedium of war; on the other, they could not enjoy the sense of community, of burdens and jokes shared. What the programme did have to say about the psychology of the period was inadequate. It was stated that the strains of life on the Home Front led to a number of suicides. In fact – Calder again – the suicide rate fell quite dramatically.

As history this was largely bunk, then. But as family drama it was funny and touching, with the Hymers becoming a calmer, happier bunch as they coped with privation. Now, please, can we leave the war alone for a bit?

Robert Hanks

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

Monday, March 31st, 2008


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

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

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

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Video: Armory Show Video’s (Parts 1 & 2)

Monday, March 31st, 2008


Screenshot of Armory Video part 1 courtesy of Vernissage.tv (click through for Video)

Vernissage.tv has two videos of the Armory Show currently on display at Pier 94 in New York. The first (shown above) features works from the galleries such as David Zwirner, Contemporary Fine Arts, Cheim and Reid and Arndt and Partner. Artists on display include Jason Rhodes, Daniel Richter, Johnathan Meese, and Thomas Hirschorn.

See Video 2 after the jump (more…)

Jeff Koons Sued by Porn Star Ex-Wife

Monday, March 31st, 2008


Ilona Staller and artist Jeff Koons via Reuters

The Italian porn star Ilona Staller recently sued her ex-husband Jeff Koons in a claim claims $2.3 million (£1.15 million) due on child support. Ilona Staller aka “La Cicciolina” (which means “the little fleshy one” according to Wikipedia) claimed in New York State Court that her ex-husband has to date only paid $310,600 in child support for their son, Ludwig, since they divorced in 1998. Jeff Koons is known as one of the highest-paid living artists.

Artist Jeff Koons beeing sued [New York Magazine]
Koons sued by Porn Star Ex-Wife [Bloomberg]
Battle between Koons and his ex-wife the italian porn-star [New York Sun]

(more…)

AO On Site: Neon Neon: Bright Lights at the Armory 2008

Saturday, March 29th, 2008


Martin Creed; Brass & Chrome in front; Multi-Colored Neon in back; Hauser & Wirth

Commentary and Photos by Faith-Ann Young

In the 1950s, neon represented the light of the American Dream- a technological innovation that emblazoned a company or brands’ success and riches into the starry skies. In the 1980’s art world, neon signs were omnipresent, signifying cool kitsch. At this year’s Armory Show in NYC, neon was back and bold- flashing flamboyantly in at least seventeen exhibitions- whether in traditional form or L.E.D. However today’s neon, rather than to flaunt the obvious (like typical commercial signage), most artists employed these glow rays to reveal the hidden, secret or censored. (more…)

Richard Prince sells rights to apocalyptic film pitch inspired by St. Barth

Friday, March 28th, 2008


Photo of Richard Prince courtesy of Revolver

The Guardian UK reports that Richard Prince recently sold the rights to his film concept to an unnamed buyer.

Picture the End of the World – [Guardian UK]

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