Archive for 2011

Go See – Paris: JR ‘Encrages’ at Galerie Perrotin through January 7, 2012

Wednesday, December 28th, 2011


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JR, The Wrinkles of the City, Los Angeles 2010 (2011). All images courtesy of Galerie Perrotin.

Urban artist and 2011 TED prize recipient JR, who eschews the title “street artist,” comes to Galerie Perrotin in Paris with Encrages, his first major solo exhibition. In addition to new works, the show includes several previously seen plastered on city walls worldwide—those of Rio de Janeiro, Nairobi, Shanghai, and Los Angeles, among others. “After displaying his work in the biggest museum of the world, the walls of the cities, JR faces the walls of the gallery,” states the exhibition’s press release. The artist also transformed the gallery itself, covering the entrance with a two-story strained and staring eyeball, framed by wiry eyebrows and leathery skin.


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Outside view of Galerie Perrotin, Paris

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Go See – Rome: Cecily Brown at Gagosian Gallery through December 31, 2011

Monday, December 26th, 2011


Cecily Brown, The Green, Green Grass of Home (2010). All Images via Gagosian Gallery.

Gagosian Gallery in Rome is currently exhibiting a series of paintings by New York-based, London-born artist Cecily Brown. The exhibit examines the human experience, captured in lavish colors, radical abstractions, and voluptuous forms. Brown brings a rich history of painting to her work,  as she channels everything from the sensuality of Rubens to the expressionism of Willem de Kooning.

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AO On Site – London: Daniel Buren ‘One Thing to Another, Situated Works’ at Lisson Gallery through January 14, 2012

Monday, December 26th, 2011


All photos by Caroline Claisse for Art Observed

The work of Daniel Buren has, for over 40 years, sought to explore the relationship of art and space, using his trademark striped painting technique as a method to emphasize the engagement between art, exhibition space and the viewer.  His current show One Thing To Another, Situated Works at the Lisson Gallery in London, continues this dialogue, exhibiting a number of brightly-colored works that incorporate Buren’s technique into new mediums.

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Go See – New York: Vasily Kandinsky at the Solomon R. Guggenheim through January 15, 2012

Saturday, December 24th, 2011


Vasily Kandinsky, Painting With White Border (2008)

Several rooms at The Guggenheim are devoted to Vasily Kandinsky’s works this season. The artist’s personal renaissance—an abandoned legal career, a relocation from Moscow to Munich—yielded iterations of nascent abstractionism that in turn contributed to a rebirth for the artistic community, cementing his place among the eminent artists and thinkers of the early 20th century.

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Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

Trailer released for the documentary film ‘Ai Weiwei Never Sorry’ [AO Newslink]

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Wednesday, December 21st, 2011

American sculptor of crushed steel John Chamberlain (born 1927) has passed away [AO Newslink]

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Don't Miss – New York: Eva Rothschild 'The Heart of a Thousand Petalled Lotus' at 303 Gallery through December 22, 2011

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011


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Eva Rothschild, Blackout (2007) All images courtesy of 303 Gallery.

Eva Rothschild‘s latest exhibition is her second at 303 Gallery, titled The Heart of a Thousand Petalled Lotus. The main white room is peppered with matte black objects and looming sculptures, focusing on the form of the line and simplistic silhouettes of shape. Crudely structured objects are precisely wrapped and woven with red and white, while a series of totem pole-like columns huddle together. Also included in the show are brighter, more psychedelic paintings, a distinct difference from her sharply calm sculptures.

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Go See – London: ‘Leonardo da Vinci: Painter at the Court of Milan’ at the National Gallery through February 5, 2012

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011


Leonardo da Vinci, St. Jerome (circa 1482). Image via the Vatican Museum.

The National Gallery‘s Leonardo da Vinci: Painter at the Court of Milan brings together the most comprehensive display of surviving paintings and drawings by the artist to date, as only a small number of da Vinci’s works remain accounted for. While da Vinci’s interests included painting and sculpture, anatomy, engineering, and music, the National Gallery defines the scope of the show to drawings and paintings dated primarily within the 1480s and 1490s—the period in which da Vinci was the court painter to the Duke of Milan, Ludovico Sforza.


Leonardo da Vinci, Portrait of Cecilia Gallerani: Lady with an Ermine (1489–1490). Image via the Czartoryski Museum.

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Go See – Los Angeles: Picasso, de Chirico, Léger, and Picabia ‘Modern Antiquity’ at the J. Paul Getty Museum through January 16, 2012

Monday, December 19th, 2011


Pablo Picasso, Studio with Plaster Head (1925).  © The Museum of Modern Art/Licensed by SCALA / Art Resource, NY.

Modern Antiquity at the J. Paul Getty Museum displays the works of four iconic Modern Art masters who combined ancient objects with 20th-century aesthetics to create what are now seminal artworks. From Picasso’s post-cubist womanly forms to Picabia’s “transparencies,” one can experience the relation of these modern works to their classic counterparts in the setting of the Getty Museum, famous for its antiquities collection. Picasso, de Chirico, Léger, and Picabia each uniquely found inspiration in the antique classical objects in museums that they frequented. Despite the fact these ancient objects belonged to other times and cultures, these artists felt a contemporary affinity towards them as they made up part of their everyday life. This major exhibition focuses on the works these four artists made between 1905-1935.

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Don’t Miss – Hong Kong: Roy Lichtenstein ‘Landscapes in the Chinese Style’ at Gagosian through December 22, 2011

Monday, December 19th, 2011


Lichtenstein, Landscapes in the Chinese Style, installation view. All images via Gagosian Gallery.

Most recognized for his 1960s output of super-sized pulpy comic book prints and cartoon imagery explosions, Roy Lichtenstein‘s work continued to span an additional 30 years, in which he explored a number of styles and motifs that he is not commonly associated with. The current show at the Gagosian in Hong Kong seeks to exhibit some of Lichtenstein’s lesser-known works and, in particular, a number of pieces that re-interpret the style of Chinese landscape paintings.


Roy Lichtenstein, Landscape With Scholar’s Rock (1996)

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Monday, December 19th, 2011

‪‬BP Oil £10m controversial sponsorship of four British museums to continue, Tate director stating, “The fact that they had one major incident in 2010 does not mean we should not be taking support from them.” [AO Newslink]

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John Baldessari displays ‘The First $100,000 I Ever Made’ at the new Highline Billboard commission off the Highline at 10th Avenue and West 18th Street in New York on view through Friday, December 30th, 2011

Monday, December 19th, 2011


John Baldessari – The First $100,000 I Ever Made (2011) Traffic View

In 1934, the United States government initiated a cash bailout of its Federal Reserve banks, sending out 42,000 $100,000 bills bearing the likeness of former President Woodrow Wilson.  These bills were used to guarantee the gold reserves still on hold in these banks, effectively supporting their investments on the verge of a total banking collapse.  This bit of fiscal lore is the inspiration behind a new installation by John Baldessari at the Highline Park in New York City.  The First $100,000 I EverMade hangs above 10th Avenue traffic, bringing historical context to the forefront of the current fiscal malaise.


The Original $100,000 Bill

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Go See – Rome: Carsten Höller at Museum of Contemporary Art Rome through February 26, 2012

Monday, December 19th, 2011


Carsten Höller, Double Carousel with Zöllner Stripes. Image via Enel Contemporanea.

Well-known Belgian artist Carsten Höller is the recipient of the 2011 Enel Contemporanea Award. Now in its fifth year, the Enel Contemporanea is sponsored by the Italian power company Enel, also sponsor to the 54th Venice Biennale. In an effort to explore the connections between energy, a lifeline for contemporary society, and current art production, Enel annually commissions an original work that takes on themes around power and energy. Höller, oft associated with what Nicolas Bourriaud coined as Relational Aesthetics in the 1990s, contributed Double Carousel with Zöllner Stripes, now on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art Rome (MACRO). Selected by a committee of curators from around the world, past projects have included The Butterfly House by Dutch duo Bik Van der Pol (2010), an open-air installation on Tiber Island by US artist Doug Aitken (2009), and a lunar eclipse by Canadian artist Angela Bulloch above the Arc Pacis (2007).

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Sunday, December 18th, 2011

‪‬Shea Hembrey single-handedly fabricates biennial art book of 100 made-up artists in 2 years as a work of “satire and reverence,” the project titled ‘Seek: 100 artists in 2011’ [AO Newslink]

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Sunday, December 18th, 2011

‪‬Tate Triennial 2012 cancelled due to questionable success, the museum instead reviewing the programme and focusing on the Tate Britain Millbank project [AO Newslink]

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Sunday, December 18th, 2011

‪‬Metropolitan Museum of Art collaborates with Google Goggles to recognize over 76,000 works through mobile app, “yet another milestone in our effort to provide global access to our collections.” [AO Newslink]

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Don’t Miss – New York: Uta Barth at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery through December 22, 2011

Sunday, December 18th, 2011


Installation view of Uta Barth at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery. All images via Tanya Bonakdar.

In her current solo exhibition at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, the German-born and Los Angeles-based photographer Uta Barth presents works from her recent partner projects, …and to draw a bright white line with light (previously shown in her 2011 solo exhibition at The Art Institute of Chicago) and Compositions of Light on White. Both series carry the themes of atmospheric flux, the passage of time, and ephemerality that have come to characterize Barth’s practice. Long recognized for her rigorous examination of the conventions of photography and the poetics of visual perception, Barth takes on the role of the observer at the window in these most recent series.


Uta Barth, …and to draw a bright white line with light (Untitled 11.2) (2011)

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Thursday, December 15th, 2011

‪‬Richard Serra’s 80-foot sculpture, titled ‘7,’ unveiled at MIA Park inauguration on grounds of Islamic Museum of Art in Doha, Qatar [AO Newslink]

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Go See – New York: George Condo ‘Drawing Paintings’ at Skarstedt Gallery through December 21, 2011

Thursday, December 15th, 2011


George Condo, Purple Compression (2011). All images via Skarstedt Gallery.

George Condo is currently showing eleven new works from his ongoing series Drawing Paintings at the Skarstedt Gallery in New York. Combining techniques of spontaneous drawing and more calculated painting, the series blends charcoal lines with pastel acrylics in Condo’s signature figurations. The large colorful canvases are busy with eyes and teeth, bowties and breasts, with the series-within-a-series, Compressions, leaving small stretches of blank canvas outside the compressed scenes. Condo says of the series, “They are about freedom of line and color and blur the distinction between drawing and painting. They are about beauty and horror walking hand in hand. They are about improvisation on the human figure and it’s consciousness.”

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Wednesday, December 14th, 2011

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Shepard Fairey designs cover of Time Magazine 2011 Person of the Year: The Protestor (with Ai WeiWei as runner up) [AO Newslink]

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Wednesday, December 14th, 2011

‪‬Tracey Emin appointed Professor of Drawing at Royal Academy Schools in London; Emin “excited to be teaching again” [AO Newslink]

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Go See – Brussels: Ugo Rondinone 'New Horizon' at Almine Rech Gallery through January 14, 2012

Wednesday, December 14th, 2011


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Ugo Rondinone, ERSTERJUNIZWEITAUSENDUNDELF (2011). All images courtesy of Almine Rech Gallery.

New Horizon is the sixth solo exhibition by Swiss artist Ugo Rondinone at Almine Rech Gallery Brussels. For the first time since 1997 the artist’s iconic “horizon paintings” are being presented along with a series of watercolors. The now New York-based multi-media artist has continually questioned the relationship between viewer and artwork as well as the role of the artist and his place in the world. This series of works offer an entry point into the artist’s personal meditations around these inquiries while challenging the notion of public versus private domains.

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Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

‪Damien Hirst interviewed before his show of ‬300 spot paintings in 11 Gagosian galleries “‘What would be more appealing … to have made the Mona Lisa painting itself or have made the merchandising possibilities — putting a postcard on everyone’s walls all over the world? Both are brilliant, but in a way I would probably prefer the postcards” [AO Newslink]

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Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

‪‬Tracey Emin to sell limited edition prints and works out of new east London shop, Tracey International [AO Newslink]

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