Archive for February, 2012

Saturday, February 4th, 2012

‪Denver law students protest artist Christo’s ‘Over the River’ project’s drilling 9,100 holes to cover federally-protected Arkansas Canyons in Colorado with 925 silver fabric panels. Expected to draw 400,000 tourists to the reserve when it debuts in 2014, the $50 million project is thought by some to have both short and long-term repercussions on native bighorn sheep, peregrine falcons, and bald eagles. [AO Newslink]

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Saturday, February 4th, 2012

‪Damien Hirst video interviewed by TIME about his use of assistants, the origin of the spot challenge, and the meaning of his art overall: “That’s the world. You have these massive polarities and extremes all the time, and I try to make work that reflects that.” [AO Newslink]

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Saturday, February 4th, 2012

‪‬Art dealer Guy Wildenstein is said to owe the French IRS $330 million in back taxes for undervaluing his father Daniel Wildenstein’s estate, and allegedly dividing his inheritance in offshore accounts in Jersey, the Bahamas, and the Virgin Islands.  [AO Newslink]

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London: Grayson Perry 'The Tomb of the Unknown Craftsman' at the British Museum extended through February 26, 2012

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

 


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Grayson Perry, The Frivolous Now (2011). Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro Gallery, London. Copyright Grayson Perry. Photo: Stephen White

In the The Tomb of the Unknown Craftsman, Turner Prize winner Grayson Perry curates a show combining treasures from the British Museum‘s permanent collection and a selection of his own works. The show focuses on honoring the craftsman, the many men and women who have anonymously created craft objects throughout the ages, displaying contemporary objects alongside creations from the past two million years, according to the press release.


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Green glazed composition staff-terminal in the form of the god Bes sitting on a lotus flower with a monkey between his feet. Egypt, 664-332 BC. Copyright the Trustees of the British Museum

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Friday, February 3rd, 2012

‪‬Graffiti artist David Choe was paid in Facebook stock options for painting the walls of the first Facebook Headquarters, now estimated to be worth more than $200 million when Facebook goes public. Although the shares were less than .25 percent of the company, the payout may be more than Damien Hirst’s record-breaking $200.7 million Sotheby’s auction in 2008. [AO Newslink]

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Breaking: Qatar purchase of $250-$300 million ‘Card Players’ by Paul Cézanne is most expensive art sale in history

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012


Paul Cézanne, Card Players, Qatar, via Vanity Fair

The royal family of Qatar has just publicized its $250-$300 million purchase of Card Players by Paul Cézanne. The work is one in a series of five, but until now was the only one remaining in private collection. Previous owner, Greek shipping mogul George Embiricos, became receptive to the sale just prior to his death in 2011. Vanity Fair reports that William Acquavella and Larry Gagosian were outbid for Card Players, at comparable amounts rumored up to $220 million.  Even the low estimate of $250 million, factoring in exchange rate and tax fees, marks the highest sum in history ever paid for a single work of art in either auction or private sale by double.


Paul Cézanne, Card Players, Metropolitan Museum of Art, via New York Times

As the title indicates, the series depicts two low-brow card players in Aix-en-Provence. The peasants idealize an old world culture, nostalgic even to the middle-aged artist when he painted from his family’s country estate in the 1890s. At the time, Cézanne was working alone, and his isolation reflects in the sparing surfaces and minimal compositions of the varying card scenes. Only the subtlest of changes differentiate one painting from the next: most notably, the cards themselves change as the games progress, while the faces and suggestively sluggish interactions do not.

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Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

‪‬Tino Sehgal commissioned for 2012 Unilever Series at Tate Modern in conjunction with London 2012 Cultural Olympiad [AO Newslink]

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Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

‪‬Surrealist painter Dorothea Tanning, widow of Max Ernst, has died at 101 in her Manhattan home [AO Newslink]

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Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

‪‬VIP Art Fair set to open today for second year, including galleries Marian Goodman, Hauser & Wirth, and David Zwirner [AO Newslink]

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Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

‪‬The Tate, Centre Pompidou in Paris, and the Israel Museum in Jerusalem jointly, through a time share structure, acquire Christian Marclay’s ‘Clock’ video work, agreeing to show in only one location at a time [AO Newslink]

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Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

‪‬Prado removes black overpaint from what is possibly the earliest Mona Lisa replica, which may have been painted alongside DaVinci by a pupil, and will be unveiled mid-February [AO Newslink]

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Mike Kelley Dies from Apparent Suicide in Los Angeles at the age of 57

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012


Mike Kelley, via Interview

Los Angeles-based artist Mike Kelley (born Detroit 1954) passed away from apparent suicide in a state of depression, according to Helene Winer of Metro Pictures Gallery in New York. Kelley was represented by Metro Pictures for twenty years before showing with Gagosian since the early 2000s. His work often dealt with found objects and abjection, from sculptures and collages to performance and video, coined “clusterfuck aesthetics” by Jerry Saltz after his 2005 show, Day is Done. Kelley was also a proponent of punk, having been in bands throughout college, ‘Destroy All Monsters’ at the University of Michigan, and ‘Poetics’ at the California Institute of the Arts. Having held major solo exhibitions at the Whitney, LACMA, Tate, and Louvre, Kelley’s work is slated to be shown at the Whitney Biennial for the eighth time this year.


Mike Kelley, Arena #7 (Bears). Via the Skarstedt Gallery.

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