Sunday, August 21st, 2011
Tracey Emin surreptitiously installs a neon work at David Cameron’s headquarters at No. 10 Downing Street, London [AO Newslink]
Tracey Emin surreptitiously installs a neon work at David Cameron’s headquarters at No. 10 Downing Street, London [AO Newslink]
The New York Times surveys this summer’s selection of outdoor sculpture in New York City [AO Newslink]
Albert Oehlen, Blue Diamond Eyes (1994) all images via Honor Fraser
“It’s Great to be in New Jersey†is currently at Los Angeles gallery Honor Fraser, and will be on view through August 27th. Curated by the Norwegian artist Gardar Eide Einarsson, known for multimedia works that celebrate freedom from authority, the exhibition presents works by a diversity of artists including Christopher Wool, Albert Oehlen, Banks Violette, David Ratcliff, Linder, Raymond Pettibon, Wolfgang Tillmans, Oscar Tuazon, and Bea Schlingelhoff. “It’s Great to be in New Jersey†celebrates the influence of British Punk and the ways in which each of these artists interpreted and experienced the movement.
More story and images after the jump…
Judge dismisses photographer Janine “Jah Jah” Gordon’s copyright infringement case against Ryan McGinley citing “Such a conception of copyright law has no basis in statute, case law, or common sense” [AO Newslink]
Ai WeiWei interview with LATimes regarding his Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads at LACMA; preoccupation with missing cat [AO Newslink]
Francesco Clemente, Name, 1983, all images via Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt
Frankfurt’s Schirn Kunsthalle’s “Francesco Clemente. Palimpsest,†an exhibition of work by Francesco Celemente, is the first show of the artist’s work in Germany in over twenty-five years. “Palimpsest†exhibits works spanning thirty years of Clemente’s career, filling three galleries with large paintings as well as jewel-toned watercolors. The show is open through September 4th, 2011.
More images and text after the jump…
Larry Gagosian buys $36.5 million , 20,000 sf, 50-foot wide Harkness Mansion at 4 E.75th St.; roughly 200 meters from his Upper East Side Gallery on Madison Avenue [AO Newslink]
Sigmar Polke, Untitled (Palermo) (1976), all images via Leo Koenig, Inc.
“Sigmar Polke: Photoworks 1964-2000†is currently on view at Leo Koenig, Inc. in New York City through September 3rd, 2011. Developed in collaboration with Winckler Fine Arts, Berlin, the exhibition displays a carefully curated slice of the thousands of photographs Sigmar Polke made throughout his lifetime.  The images chosen demonstrate his enthusiasm for photographic experimentation and the subjects captured range in tone from humorous to serious. The exhibition reveals Polke’s chameleon-like aptitude and capriciousness.
More text and images after the jump… (more…)
David Hockney, composite from “Me Draw on iPad†(2010), all Hockney images are via the Louisiana Museum
On view at Denmark’s Louisiana Museum is “Me Draw on iPad†featuring several hundred of David Hockney’s most recent drawings. Created on his iPhone and iPad using the Brushes application, these drawings make clear both Hockney’s characteristic whimsy and dedication to exploration of new creative methods and media. Curated by Charlie Scheips, “Me Draw on iPad†is on view through August 28th 2011.
David Hockney, composite from “Me Draw on iPad†(2010)
More text and images after the jump… (more…)
Trailer released for Anselm Kiefer: Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow by Sophie Fiennes [AO Newslink]
Assume Vivid Astro Focus and Lady Gaga to collaborate on a holiday window at Barney’s New York [AO Newslink]
Edward Hopper’s 1935 painting The Long Leg to become a US Postage Stamp [AO Newslink]
Chelsea’s Luhring Augustine gallery establishes new storage and exhibition space on Knickerbocker Avenue in Bushwick, Brooklyn [AO Newslink]
Eva Rothschild, Empire (2011). All images courtesy are via Public Art Fund.
Installed at the Doris C. Freedman Plaza in Central Park, New York, “Empire” is Irish sculptor Eva Rothschild’s first commissioned public art work in the United States. Appearing at once ominous and playful, “Empire” greets pedestrians at the southeast entrance to the park. The sculpture joins the ranks of past Public Art Fund art installations that have been displayed in the plaza.
Eva Rothschild, Empire (detail) (2011)
More images and story after the jump…
$250,000 Rembrandt drawing stolen Saturday evening from private art exhibition at Ritz Carlton Marina del Rey in Los Angeles [AO Newslink]
Hague government pays €1 million to heir of Jewish art dealer for painting looted by Hermann Goering [AO Newslink]
Architectural artist Daniel Arsham to design sets for Merce Cunningham Company’s final performance at Park Avenue Armory [AO Newslink]
On Friday Aug. 5th, the same woman who attacked an $80 million Gauguin work months ago dismounted and repeatedly slammed a $2.5 million Henri Mattisse work against the wall at the National Gallery in Washington and was subsequently sent to a psychiatric facility [AO Newslink]
Fred Sandback, Broadway Boogie Woogie (Sculptural Study, Twenty-part Vertical Construction), 1991/2011. Courtesy of Abstract Critical.
Whitechapel Gallery is exhibiting work of the late artist Fred Sandback, who passed away in 2003. Departing from the somewhat mystical notions of the unreality of objects and the malleability of empty spaces, Sandback’s yarn sculptures slice the gallery’s spatial emptiness with straight angles, mimicking geometrical shapes, which, to the observer’s eye, appear and disappear into thin air.
More text and images after the jump…
Installation shot of Vanessa Beecroft’s “Performance VB70 – VB Marmi” in Milan. All images courtesy Galleria Lia Rumma unless otherwise noted.
In a sprawling gallery space in Milan, women with marbled skin mingle with marble plinths. One hundred and fifty people at a time streamed in to take in the sight of the vivid hues– green onyx, French red ochre, Portuguese pink marble, lapis lazuli, sodalite blue, macaubus light blue, and black Belgian– glowing against a white cube setting. As Roberta Smith said in a 1998 New York Times review of the artist’s work, “It’s art; it’s fashion. It’s good; it’s bad. It’s sexist; it’s not. It’s Vanessa Beecroft‘s performance art.”
more story and images after the jump…
Shepard Fairey assaulted in Copenhagen while being called an”Obama illuminati”: “I have a black eye and a bruised rib” [AO Newslink]
Thief steals $100k KAWS work from Marc Ecko “during business hours” [AO Newslink]
Michelangelo Pistoletto, Installation view (2011), all images via Serpentine Gallery
Currently showing at the Serpentine Gallery is Michelangelo Pistoletto‘s sprawling labyrinth of one continuous roll of corrugated cardboard. Custom made for the space, the chest-high installation snakes in and out of each room, constantly diverting the viewer’s course and occasionally taking them to one of several main focus points at which large mirrors (a motif repeatedly used by the artist) are located.
More images and story after the jump…