Archive for 2012

Lisa de Kooning has passed away at the age of 56

Sunday, November 25th, 2012


Lisa de Kooning, only child of artist Willem de Kooning (1904-1997) and illustrator Joan Ward (1927-2005), died on Friday, November 23rd, 2012 at age 56. The cause of death has not yet been determined. Johanna Liesbeth (“Lisa”) de Kooning was born in New York in 1956. She was raised in Manhattan and lived primarily in The Springs, East Hampton, near her father’s studio. She created a foundation in her father’s name and a Trust for her personal collection of his work. She was known as an active and prominent philanthropist, and worked devotedly to preserve the legacy of her father. She maintained her father’s studio as he had left it, forming an invaluable resource for research and study. Lisa was a sculptor herself, and championed a variety of philanthropic causes, from animals to children to art. She is survived by her three children.  (more…)

As population of Russian nationals grows in London, auction houses seek to capture market with $108 million sales

Sunday, November 25th, 2012

London auction houses will offer $108 million worth of Russian art this week. The number of Russian and former C.I.S. nationals residing in London is estimated to be around 500,000, and auction houses hope to capitalize on that market. (more…)

Critic Jed Perl examines the cult of Warhol

Sunday, November 25th, 2012

In The New Republic, art critic Jed Perl discusses the cult of Warholism in context of the “Regarding Warhol” exhibition at the Met: “If we are all Warholians, then even our distaste for Warhol is a Warholian act… I would be perfectly happy never to see anything by Andy Warhol again”, he says, and asks: “Could it be that Warholism is by its very nature irreconcilable with discrimination? … Warholism as a faith ought by now to be in ruins, although you certainly wouldn’t know it from the prices that Warhols are reaching in the auction houses”. (more…)

Christo to create world’s largest and most expensive permanent sculpture

Sunday, November 25th, 2012

Christo is reportedly creating what he calls the world’s largest permanent sculpture, which will be installed in Abu Dhabi. The Mastaba, which is made out of 410,000 oil barrels, has an estimated production cost of $340 million, making it the world’s most expensive as well. An “art campus” is planned to be built near the structure, along with a luxury hotel and restaurant. (more…)

Art authentication experts increasingly wary of litigation

Sunday, November 25th, 2012

An increase in lawsuits against those who authenticate artwork is forcing experts and artists’ estates to ramp up liability insurance and in many cases, stop authenticating altogether. Art lawyer and author of “The Expert and the Object”, Ronald Spencer, says scholars are “nervous about taking a $500 fee and getting sued for $10 million”. (more…)

New York City – Richard Artschwager: “Richard Artschwager!” at the Whitney Museum and “BLPS” at The Highline, Through February 3rd, 2012

Sunday, November 25th, 2012


Richard Artschwager – Exclamation Point (Chartreuse) (2008), courtesy The Whitney Museum

As the work of Richard Artschwager dances in and out of familiarity, taking the commonplace forms of our everyday existence, the artist reshapes them into something foreign – just outside of the viewer’s descriptive vocabulary.  Now, after four decades of work in sculpture, painting and drawing, Artschwager’s work is the subject of a large-scale retrospective at the Whitney Museum in New York City. (more…)

“Sleight of Hand” in the history of banking and art

Saturday, November 24th, 2012

Rachel Cohen, author of “A Chance Meeting”, and of the forthcoming “Bernard Berenson: A Life in the Picture Trade”, writes about the dual history of art and investment banking over recent centuries: “There is more than a shadow of resemblance between the purchase of the Hirst skull in 2007 and the mortgage-backed-securities debacle that made of Lehman Brothers in the following year one of the great public pictures of vanitas we’ve had. And, when you look further into these intersections, you often find that what is really at stake is a change in the way we feel and understand time.”  (more…)

Barbara Kruger submits NYTimes Op-Ed work

Saturday, November 24th, 2012

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Anish Kapoor’s video in support of Ai Weiwei spread this week

Saturday, November 24th, 2012

Anish Kapoor’s video, “Gangnam for Freedom”, supporting Ai Weiwei’s quest for free speech, relied on major participants such as Southbank Centre director Jude Kelly and writer Hanif Kueishi, with contributions by institutions such as the Guggenheim. “Our film aims to make a serious point about freedom of speech and freedom of expression”, said Kapoor. (more…)

Christie’s focuses on Renaissance works as “value”

Saturday, November 24th, 2012

On Jan. 30th, 2013, Christie’s offers the “Rockefeller Madonna,” a devotional panel by Botticelli whose provenance includes the collection of John D. Rockefeller Jr., a family name that has been known to add marketing heft to auctions.  The auction house is catering to new international collectors showing particular interest in 14th – 16th century works. “While [the estimated $5-7 million painting] is one of the most expensive works in the Renaissance sale, it seems like a bargain, when paintings by Warhol and Kline brought more than $40 million apiece at Christie’s last week.” (more…)

London – “Roy Lichtenstein: A Retrospective” at The Tate Modern, Through May 2013

Saturday, November 24th, 2012


Roy Lichtenstein, Oh, Jeff… I love you, too… but.., 1964, courtesy Tate Modern

The Tate Modern is holding a retrospective of work by master of Pop Art, Roy Lichtenstein, which consists of 127 works and runs through May 2013. The exhibition, the first major one since the artist’s death in 1997,  is said to attract more visitors than Damien Hirst’s 2012 show that brought people from all over the world through the doors of the Tate.

Lichtenstein was born in 1923 and passed away in 1997; he was considered to be the founder of Pop Art along with other preeminent artists such as Andy Warhol. His signature comic-book-inspired works that are brought to life with Ben-Day dots were the beginning of art based on popular culture. Images adopted from the media were rearranged and juxtaposed with unrelated material to relate to contemporary life.


Image: Roy Lichtenstein, Whaam!  (1963), via Tate Modern

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On the lack of profitability of art theft despite the high value of the works involved

Friday, November 23rd, 2012

Stolen artwork is simply difficult to unload. “Nine times out of ten, when individuals commit a robbery like that, it is done by individuals or criminal organisations which have the ability to do a burglary, but they don’t usually have the ability to sell paintings,” says Robert Wittman, founder of the FBI’s art crime team and author of the memoir Priceless: How I Went Undercover to Rescue the World’s Stolen Treasures. (more…)

KAWS “Companion” balloon debuts at Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade

Friday, November 23rd, 2012

Brian Donnelly, known as KAWS, discusses his Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade balloon and his history as a toy-maker. The character, “Companion”, is in a retreating pose, hunched and covering its eyes. “I was thinking, God, if I had to sit there all day and have a million people pass me and stare, I’d be mortified”.  (more…)

100-tonne Antony Gormley Sculpture to go on view at White Cube in London

Friday, November 23rd, 2012

A massive Antony Gormley sculpture, his largest to date, will go on view at White Cube next week. It is so enormous that visitors enter through one of the sculpture’s feet.  It is a direct response to the space afforded by White Cube’s South Galleries at Bermondsey.  (more…)

Farschous receive new attention in Ai Weiwei’s video

Friday, November 23rd, 2012

Ai Weiwei’s “Gangnam Style” video unwittingly focused attention on two relatively low-profile collectors and museum founders, Jens and Luise Faurschou. They own a major collection of postwar and modern artwork and recently opened a privately funded art museum in Copenhagen, Foundation Faurschou. (more…)

An Assessment of Damien Hirst Pricing Trends

Friday, November 23rd, 2012

According to Artnet data, Businessweek reports that Damien Hirst works that were purchased during the artist’s commercial peak, between 2005 and 2008, have seen an average negative return of 30% when resold, particularly notable in a year of record auction results.  Sergey Skaterschikov, a Russian investor and business strategist, said that Hirst “degraded his market, almost cannibalized it, by developing this mass production of well-recognized images.” James Kelly, Hirst’s business manager, asserts that auction prices are a “totally misleading” indicator and don’t reflect private primary market sales data.  (more…)

Paris – ‘Liam Gillick: Sit in the Machine’ and ‘Florbelle (After Sade): Group Exhibition’ At Air de Paris Through December 3rd, 2012

Friday, November 23rd, 2012


Liam Gillick, Installation View – Rest area racks 1-3, (2011), courtesy Air de Paris

Currently held within Air de Paris are two simultaneous complimentary exhibitions. Liam Gillick is responsible for a series of works entitled Sit in the Machine, which features two contradictory films detailing a glamorized yet banal setting regarding the mechanics of car manufacture. Intertwined with the exhibition is a relaxation area that mimics the workers’ rest areas at the factory. Gillick thus constructs a social act, relying on the spectators’ interactions, creating a nonobjectual relational experience.


Liam Gillick, Installation View, (2012), courtesy Air de Paris

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Imelda Marcos’s former personal secretary charged with theft of valuable Impressionist works

Thursday, November 22nd, 2012

The former personal secretary to Imelda Marcos has been charged with concealing and selling four Impressionist works, including Claude Monet’s 1899 “Water-Lily Pond” in September 2010 for $32 million after hiding it for two decades.  (more…)

New York City – Bernadette Corporation: “2000 Wasted Years” at Artists Space Through December 16th, 2012

Thursday, November 22nd, 2012


Bernadette Corporation - Still From Get Rid of Yourself (2003), Via Artists Space

Over the past decade and a half, the loosely defined art collective of Bernadette Corporation has moved from underground fashion line and party promoter, to film producer, to editor and publisher of a variety of magazines, books and novels. It is currently based in New York as a collaborative with three principal members, Bernadette Van-Huy, John Kelsey and Antek Walczak. Challenging contemporary creative identities and consumer politics, the group has time and again subverted the traditional practices of art and art exhibition.


Bernadette Corporation - Only She Could Be Other (2011), courtesy Artists Space (more…)

Copyright law changes in the air?

Thursday, November 22nd, 2012

The Republican Study Committee published a memo last week on how to fix copyright law, but on Saturday afternoon the group pulled the memo, stating that it did not have “all facts and viewpoints in hand.” Copyright protections now extend 70 years past the life of the author; for a corporation, 95 years after publication. Critics of the law say that coupled with punitive laws on copyright violation, this policy hinders creativity and innovation. One such copyright lawsuit involved Richard Prince’s appropriation of photos by Patrick Cariou.  (more…)

Chairman of NEA announces his retirement

Thursday, November 22nd, 2012

Rocco Landesman, the former Broadway producer who been the head the National Endowment for the Arts since 2009, announced Tuesday that he was retiring from his post as chairman at the end of the year. The senior deputy chairman, Joan Shigekawa, will take on the role until a permanent successor is nominated by the White House and confirmed by Congress, the endowment said. (more…)

New York – Latin American Week Roundup: Auction Results and Pinta, November 15th – 20th, 2012

Wednesday, November 21st, 2012


Gallerist Cecilia Jurado of Y Gallery, NY in front of two works by Carlos Motta photo by A.M. Ekstrand for ArtObserved

Latin American week began with the Pinta art fair, which ran from November 15th – 18th, 2012, after which followed auctions at Christie’s, Sotheby’s and Phillips de Pury & Co. Several records were broken for Latin American artists, proving that the market is still robust, especially on the high end.


Roberto Matta, Nada 1943 courtesy Sotheby’s sold for $1.82 million (more…)

New York – AO On Site: Independent Curators International Annual Fall Benefit & Auction, Monday, November 19th, 2012

Tuesday, November 20th, 2012


ICI Executive Director Kate Fowle, Leo Award recipient Dasha Zhukova, and Independent Vision Curatorial Award recipients Nav Haq and Jay Sanders

All photos by C. Daleli for ArtObserved

On Monday, November 19th, 2012, Independent Curators International held its Annual Fall Benefit & Auction. ICI’s Executive Director, Kate Fowle, kicked off the party with a toast to all Honorees, Board of Trustees and supporters of the institution. The intimate Honoree Hour celebrated the recipient of this year’s Leo Award, Dasha Zhukova. Agnes Gund, President Emerita of the Museum of Modern Art and member of the Board of Trustees of the National Council on the Arts presented the award to Zhukova after listing her endless accomplishments are an art world patron. This was followed by acclaimed curator Hans Ulrich Obrist presenting the prestigious Independent Vision Curatorial Award to Jay Sanders and Nav Haq.


Wendi Murdoch (more…)

Israeli Museums Brace for Rocket Attacks

Tuesday, November 20th, 2012

The Tel Aviv Museum of Art has relocated about 200 works of art into a fortified walk-in safe. The pieces that were moved include the museum’s roughly 100 works by relatives of Pieter Brueghel the Elder. The Ashdod Art Museum – Monart Center is protecting their 15 pieces by contemporary Israeli artist Tsibi Geva. These works are in an underground vault that is protected against rocket fire and biological weapons. The Eretz Israel Museum in Tel Aviv, however, believes such precautions are unnecessary. Likewise at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the country’s most important museum for cultural property. “It’s business as usual,” commented director James Snyder. (more…)