Archive for July, 2013
Monday, July 15th, 2013
Tech millionaire, Zita Cobb, is working to rejuvenate a previously struggling Canadian fishing community where she was born. Fogo Island is now home to a Shorefast, a foundation that provides a micro finance fund for local entrepreneurs and a research center devoted to sustainable fishing, as well as numerous arts studios and Fogo Island Inn, which opened in May. The foundation and hotel aim to immerse themselves fully in the island’s history, with furniture inspired from local style and workmanship by the island’s craftsmen.
Read more at The Financial Times
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Sunday, July 14th, 2013
MoMA’s PS1 campus in Long Island City, Queens, has received $3 million in funding from the city of New York, needed to purchase an adjacent building for expansion. The new space, located at 22-01 Jackson Ave., will potentially be utilized for museum office space, freeing the main building up for more exhibition spaces. “You want dynamic institutions like MoMA PS 1 to continue to change, to progress and to grow, and they can’t do that without the physical expansion,” Said City Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer. “I think it’s great for the neighborhood, it’s great for Long Island City.” (more…)
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Sunday, July 14th, 2013
The New York Times has published a spotlight on artist Robert Therrien, done in conjunction with his ongoing retrospective at the Albright-Knox Museum in Buffalo, NY. The artist has moved somewhat below the currents of the contemporary market, despite a broad body of work in sculpture and photography that has won him a considerable following and representation by Gagosian Gallery. He’s a very unusual person, and he’s a sweetie, too,” said Lynn Zelevansky of the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. “It’s just so harmonious and so beautiful. It’s about experience, and this amazing capacity for invention.”
(more…)
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Sunday, July 14th, 2013
With Dia’s announcement last month that it would deaccession some of its works in order to fund new acquisitions, a number of former leaders and collaborators have spoken against the move. The sale of works, which will occur this fall, includes a number of works by Cy Twombly and Barnett Newman. In a June 28th letter to the institution, former Menil Collection Director Paul Winkler writes: “The primary purpose of Dia has been to collect and present bodies of work by a select group of artists in permanent installations and to realize site-specific commissions, also in permanent situations. It is uninformed and disrespectful of your history to equate permanence with mausoleum.” (more…)
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Saturday, July 13th, 2013
Preparing for the release of her anticipated album ARTPOP, pop star Lady Gaga has announced a series of collaborations with contemporary artists, including Jeff Koons, Marina Abramovic, Inez & Vinoodh and Robert Wilson. Gaga has stated that her new project will “bring the music industry into a new age; an age where art drives pop, and the artist once again is in control of the ‘icon.'” (more…)
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Friday, July 12th, 2013
Constance Caplan, the chairman of the Hirshhorn Museum’s board of trustees, resigned on Monday. In a strongly worded letter to the Hirshhorn and Smithsonian Institution, Ms. Caplan cited a “lack of inclusiveness with which a number of trustees and staff associated with the Hirshhorn and the Smithsonian have behaved over the past year.” The divisions have now led to seven board members resigning within the last year, including the former chairman, J. Tomilson Hill.
Read more at The Washington Post
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Friday, July 12th, 2013
Urs Fischer (Installation View), photo by Stefan Altenburger, © Urs Fischer, Courtesy of the artist and The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
Occupying both the Grand Avenue and the Geffen Contemporary spaces at MOCA, Swiss-born, New York based artist Urs Fischer presents his first U.S. retrospective, culling from his diverse and unique body of work to fill both spaces with an overwhelming display of sculptural pieces and grandiose immersive environments.
(more…)
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Thursday, July 11th, 2013
A number of wall drawings and other works by Sol LeWitt are set to open this fall, including an installation of Wall Drawing #599: Circles 18 at the Jewish Community Center on the Upper West Side, and an exhibition of the artist’s wall drawings at Paula Cooper Gallery in Chelsea. “It is an opportunity to make art accessible for all ages, from strollers to wheelchairs, toddlers to people in their 90s.” Says JCC executive director Rabbi Joy Levitt. (more…)
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Thursday, July 11th, 2013
This coming fall, Sotheby’s will auction off a seminal work by pre-Raphaelite Dante Rosetti, a chalk drawing depicting Rosetti’s muse Janey Burden as the Greek Goddess Prosperine. Described by the auction house as “one of the defining images of European art – instantly recognisable and representing the artist at the height of his originality,” the work will sell at auction this November in London, and is expected to command a sales price between £1.2 and £1.8 million. (more…)
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Thursday, July 11th, 2013
President Barack Obama’s administration has announced the winners of the 2012 National Medal of Arts, including Ellsworth Kelly on the list of recipients. Kelly, who turned 90 this year, is currently in the spotlight for a trio of New York shows this spring and summer, spanning the range of his career, and will accept the award tonight in Washington, DC. Other recipients include landscape architect Laurie Olin. (more…)
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Thursday, July 11th, 2013
Nick van Woert, Haruspex (Installation View), Courtesy Yvon Lambert Gallery
The work of American artist Nick van Woert is currently on view at the Yvon Lambert Gallery in Paris. Taking its name from a 2010 work, Haruspex refers to the practice of divination in Etruscan or Roman religious practice, called Haruspicy involving the interpretation of mens or predicting the future based on the entrails of animals. Inspired by the images of divination and dismemberment, the artist has constructed a series of pieces that approach modern economic and social conditions of the world through the deconstruction and application of material runoff.
Nick van Woert, Untitled (2013), courtesy of the Artist (more…)
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Thursday, July 11th, 2013
The Bruce High Quality Foundation, Con te Partiro (2009), via Brooklyn Museum
Shrouded in anonymity, the Bruce High Quality Foundation has made a career for themselves out of playful irreverence. Rising out of the post-9/11 New York art scene, the anonymous collective has launched a campaign of physical aggression against public installations (Public Art Tackle), initiated their own free education classes, staged socio-politically charged morality plays on gentrification, all under the guise of a production of the Broadway musical Cats, all alongside a number of pieces and installations that embrace the juxtaposition of art history, pop culture and contemporary society to “invest the experience of public space with wonder.”
The Bruce High Quality Foundation, Ode to Joy (2001–2013) (Installation View), via Brooklyn Museum (more…)
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Thursday, July 11th, 2013
Rapper Jay-Z appeared at New York’s Pace Gallery today, performing his song Picasso Baby for 6 hours straight. The marathon performance was part of the artist’s “Docu-music” video for the song, and featured a moment where the rapper danced with Marina Abramovic. Other notable attendees included Marilyn Minter, Laurence Weiner, Klaus Biesenbach, Aaron Young, among many more. (more…)
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Wednesday, July 10th, 2013
Artist James Turrell appeared last week on Charlie Rose’s talk show, in promotion of his blockbuster exhibitions at the Guggenheim, LACMA, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Speaking on his installation at the Guggenheim, his practice and his view on the creating and execution of his work. “Ideas and thoughts are cheap, you can have many of them, but it’s actually pulling these things off and realizing them. As an artist, you don’t get to count the things you haven’t done.” He says. (more…)
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Wednesday, July 10th, 2013
Antony Gormley, Meter (Installation View), via Thaddeus Ropac
Antony Gormley’s sculptures continually revisit the human form, using a variety of principles in measurement, position, space and density to chart the human body through sharp angles and jutting lines. Taking this jutting, architectural approach to figuration, the artist’s work poses intriguing questions of how humanity recreates its own inherent forms, and the dissonances that occasionally enter the dialogue between subject and object. (more…)
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Wednesday, July 10th, 2013
ARTNews’ annual list of the world’s top art collectors has been released, detailing the most prolific and high-spending patrons from around the world. Among the top 10 are a number of recognizable names, including Eli Broad, Steven A. Cohen, and François Pinault. Also of note is a brief article stating the number of collectors willing to spend high dollar amounts for desired works. “I’d say the figure for those going over $20 million is about 150. There are about 100 who would go over $50 million.” Says Sotheby’s Executive Vice President Charles Moffett. (more…)
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Wednesday, July 10th, 2013
Multimedia arts publication DIS Magazine has announced a new partnership with 89plus, the young artist program co-founded by Simon Castets and Hans Ulrich Obrist, for the arts grant competition Younger Than Rihanna, aimed at offering money for young artists and their creative proposals. Hosted on the DIS website, the competition welcomes young artists born in 1989 or later to upload their work and statement, placing them in contention for over $19,000 in grant money, and a gallery exhibition this fall. (more…)
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Wednesday, July 10th, 2013
The Design Musuem announced on Tuesday that it has sold its Thames-side home to Zaha Hadid architects. The revenue of the £10 million sale will be added to the £80 fund necessary to move the museum to the Commonwealth Institute on Kensington High Street. The former banana-ripening warehouse will now become the offices of the practice, as well as a space for architecture exhibtions.
Read more:
The Telegraph
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Wednesday, July 10th, 2013
Laurel Nakadate, Portland, Oregon #1 (2012), via Leslie Tonkonow
Strangers and Relations is a two-part project by American photographer and filmmaker Laurel Nakadate, in which the artist photographs strangers she connected with through the Internet, and arranged to meet in 31 different states within the US. and parts of Europe. The exhibition is being held at Leslie Tonkonow in New York City. (more…)
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Wednesday, July 10th, 2013
Robert Irwin, Black Rectangle – Scrim Veil – Natural Light (1977), via The Whitney
The immediate effect upon entering Robert Irwin’s full-room installation at The Whitney Museum is one of disorientation. A single black runs along the outskirts of the room, interrupted by the enormous window at one end of the space. Through the middle of the room runs an even larger black line, seemingly suspended in mid-air. The eye swims around this phenomenon, unsure of the depth of the room, or the origin of the line until one notices the large veil bisecting the room, leaving about 6 feet of clearance for viewers to walk under.
Robert Irwin sets up his installation at the Whitney in 1977, via New York Times (more…)
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Tuesday, July 9th, 2013
In celebration of its first broadcast of a national televised awards show from Brooklyn, MTV has recruited artist KAWS to redesign the Video Music Awards statue for its August 25th broadcast from the Barclays Center. The one off design translates the iconic image of Buzz Aldrin planting a flag on the moon (affectionately referred to as “The Moonman”), replacing Aldrin with the artist’s “Companion” character. “The connection to Brooklyn, it felt like it was the perfect time to reinvent an iconic image,” said MTV President Stephen Friedman. “Consistent with our DNA of creative reinvention and constant reinvention, this felt like a perfect marriage.” (more…)
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Tuesday, July 9th, 2013
With the opening of Richard Artschwager! (previously at the Whitney Museum) at the Hammer Museum this month, the institution welcomed Richard Artschwager’s contemporaries, John Baldessari and Ed Ruscha to sit down and discuss his influential practice, output, and creative legacy. “Whether he’s well known or not is not important because he’s seen widely, and if you’re interested in art you’re going to be familiar with his work.” Ruscha said. (more…)
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Tuesday, July 9th, 2013
Bill Viola, Chapel of Frustrated Actions and Futile Gestures (Detail) (2013), via Blain Southern
Several new works by American video artist Bill Viola are currently being hosted by the Blain Southern gallery in London through July 27. Viola is considered a leading voice in the field of New Media, and is known for the existential and essentialist themes that surface in his work. Drawing from Buddhist, Zen, and mystical tradition, Viola approaches human mortality and spirit through video, sound and digital installation. (more…)
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Tuesday, July 9th, 2013
The New York Times reports on the growing contemporary arts scene in Bangkok, Thailand, increasingly bolstered by expats and foreigners. Referred to as “farangs” in Thai, many have opened galleries, nonprofits and other organizations promoting the city’s artists and institutions. “Farangs play a very important role in the image of what goes on here,” says curator Pier Luigi Tazzi. “They are still connected to their own countries so these links are still very attractive in terms of communication.” (more…)
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