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Archive for February, 2014

LA Times Offers Look at New Menil Drawing Institute Design

Friday, February 21st, 2014

The LA Times takes a look at the Menil Drawing Institute, set to open in 2017.  The new museum, designed by Johnston Marklee & Associates, will sit at the southern edge of the Menil Campus, and boasts a number of striking features, including a thin, plate-steel roof and a special public space shaped by illusory curves in the shape of the building.   (more…)

James Franco Weighs in on Shia LeBeouf’s Public Performance

Friday, February 21st, 2014

James Franco has written an op-ed piece in the New York Times this week, examining actor Shia Lebeouf’s recent performance piece in Los Angeles.  Noting LeBeouf’s performance as a potential attempt to take back his public persona from the entertainment industry.  “Any artist, regardless of his field, can experience distance between his true self and his public persona,” he writes. “But because film actors typically experience fame in greater measure, our personas can feel at the mercy of forces far beyond our control. Our rebellion against the hand that feeds us can instigate a frenzy of commentary that sets in motion a feedback loop: acting out, followed by negative publicity, followed by acting out in response to that publicity, followed by more publicity, and so on.” (more…)

New York – Richard Artschwager: “No More Running Man” at Gagosian, Through February 22nd, 2014

Friday, February 21st, 2014


Richard Artschwager, Running Man (triple), (2013), Photo by Rober McKeever, Courtesy of Gagosian Gallery

Gagosian’s Upper East Side Gallery is currently featuring the final works of the late Richard Artschwager. This exhibition coincides with the final destination of Artschwager’s traveling Retrospective, Richard Artschwager!, which just ended at Munich’s Haus der Kunst in January. Organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Yale University Art Gallery, the comprehensive display of Artschwager’s life’s work was his second retrospective, the Whitney having exhibited an earlier iteration in 1988. Collectively titled No More Running Man, the works on view at Gagosian swerve in and out of generic categorization, at once painting and sculpture, to systematically present the enigmatic leitmotif of the Running Man. While one will find echoes of the past in these works, they represent the evolution of a highly protean and prolific master, whose style and subject resisted singularity for over sixty years.

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Blum and Poe to Open Space in New York

Thursday, February 20th, 2014

The Los Angeles-based Blum & Poe Gallery has announced that it will open its first gallery space in New York, on the Upper East Side.  The new space will be helmed by Andrea Neustein, the daughter of artist Joshua Neustein.  The gallery currently boasts Carroll Dunham, Takashi Murakami, and Jim Shaw  among its roster. (more…)

NADA New York Announces Exhibitor List

Thursday, February 20th, 2014

The NADA Art Fair has announced its list of exhibitors for the 2014 edition of the fair in New York, returning to Basketball City on Pier 36 in Manhattan, and running concurrently with the Frieze New York Art Fair this May.  The list of over 80 galleries includes The Hole, Invisible-Exports, Marlborough Chelsea, and more. (more…)

New York – Keith Sonnier: “Elysian Plain + Early Works” at Pace Gallery Through February 22nd, 2014

Thursday, February 20th, 2014


Keith Sonnier, Ba-O-Ba (1970), Caterina Verde, Keith Sonnier/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Pulling works from the beginning and current periods of the artist’s career, Pace Gallery is currently presenting two bodies of work by artist Keith Sonnier, showcasing an extended perspective on the artist’s work and its evolution.  Working alongside fellow post-conceptual artists interested in the capabilities for light and lighting in installations and mounted works, Sonnier first embraced the use of neon in his pieces in the late 1960’s, using panes of glass and wrapped neon lighting to emphasize the interplays and gradual shadings of color caused by reflection and spacing.  A number of seminal works from this period are exhibited here, including  Ba-o-Ba V, and Neon Wrapping Incandescent, influential pieces that marked Sonnier’s newfound interest in the capabilities for light in a sculptural work. (more…)

Hammer Museum Names Artists for 2014 “Made in L.A.” Biennial

Thursday, February 20th, 2014

The Hammer Museum has named its list of artists for Made in L.A., which will open in June.  The list of 35 artists participating in the exhibition include Piero Golia, Tony Greene, Wu Tsang, and project space Public Fiction.     (more…)

Corcoran Gallery to be Absorbed by National Gallery of Art and George Washington University

Thursday, February 20th, 2014

The Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, DC has announced that it will be taken over by the National Gallery of Art and George Washington University, part of a new plan for the longstanding arts institution.  The plan would see the Corcoran School of Art and Design made part of George Washington University, with the University covering the millions of dollars in much-needed renovations.  “There is no way to continue the Corcoran as we knew it or as we know it,” said Peggy Loar, interim director and president of the Corcoran. “That’s going to be the kernel of pain for some people.” (more…)

New York- Sol Lewitt at Pace Gallery now through February 22, 2014

Wednesday, February 19th, 2014


Sol LewittHorizontal Progression #6 (1991), via Daniel Creahan for Art Observed

Sol Lewitt, considered by many as the founding father of conceptual modernism, is regarded as one of the most influential artists of the last half of the 20th century. The cube, as a “grammatical device” from which Lewitt’s work often develops speaks to his ambition to reduce art to its essentials, and approach the relationship between artistic creation and the mechanization of thought.  Lewitt is also known for his large-scale two and three-dimensional works, particularly his wall drawings executed in 1968. In these wall drawings, predetermined line-making procedures and formulas typically associated with commercial production were enlisted in the installation of this work across galleries. (more…)

Miami Man Smashes Ai Weiwei Vase at Perez Art Museum

Wednesday, February 19th, 2014

Maximo Caminero, a 51-year old artist living in Miami has been arrested after reportedly smashing one of Ai Weiwei’s painted Ming vases on view at the Perez Art Museum.  The destruction of the vase was said to have been over the lack of local artists on view at the Miami Museum. “The argument does not support the act,” Ai Weiwei said in an interview over the incident. “It doesn’t sound right. His argument doesn’t make much sense. If he really had a point, he should choose another way, because this will bring him trouble to destroy property that does not belong to him.”

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Potential Vote on Scottish Indpendence Bodes Ominously for Museum Collections

Wednesday, February 19th, 2014

An article in The Art Newspaper analyzes the potential vote on Scottish Independence this year, and the potential impacts an independent Scotland may have on the nation’s art collection.  If Scotland changes its tax structure to more heavily impact the wealthy, some are worried that lending collectors are likely to remove their works from Scottish museums, moving them south.  The National Galleries of Scotland board chair Ben Thomson, however, is more optimistic. “We are extremely confident that we will continue to enjoy very positive support from the Scottish government for our ongoing collaborations with private collectors,” he says. (more…)

New York – Thomas Struth at Marian Goodman Through February 22nd, 2014

Wednesday, February 19th, 2014


Thomas Struth, Ride, Anaheim, California (2013), via Marian Goodman

German Thomas Struth is presenting a series of new photos this month at Marian Goodman’s New York gallery space, presenting a series of recent works, among which are 5 large format photos made at Disneyland, part of a recent series the 59-year old photographer is currently working on.


Thomas Struth, Mountain, Anaheim, California, (2013) via Marian Goodman (more…)

DIS Announces Diffusion Art Line to Launch Next Month

Tuesday, February 18th, 2014

Art collective DIS has announced a special collaboration with artist Lizzie Fitch, titled DISown; an art retail installation featuring “products” from Ryan Trecartin, Jon Rafman, Bjarne Melgaard, Telfar and Hood By Air.  Similar to a high-scale fashion house’s diffusion lines for retail, DISown will sell products from each of these artists and designers anywhere from $50-$500.  The event will be curated by Agatha Wara, and will open on March 6th at Red Bull Studios in New York. (more…)

New York – Alex Prager – “Face in the Crowd” at Lehmann Maupin Through February 23rd, 2014

Tuesday, February 18th, 2014


Alex Prager, Crowd # 9 (Sunset), Courtesy of Lehmann Maupin

With a double show at Lehmann Maupin’s New York galleries, entitled Face in the Crowd, and another exhibition in Corcoran’s DC gallery, photographer Alex Prager has emerged from Los Angeles to take up major art world real estate this winter. Prager’s work is instantly recognizable, a savvy blend of mid-century nostalgia repackaged for our current moment, and it seems the rest of the fashion and art world have finally caught up with her. (more…)

The Whitney Loans Two Edward Hopper Paintings to White House

Monday, February 17th, 2014

The Whitney Museum has loaned a pair of Cape Cod landscapes by Edward Hopper to the White House, where they have been installed in the Oval Office.  “We are pleased and honored to lend two paintings by Edward Hopper—the artist with whom the Whitney Museum of American Art is most closely identified—to The White House for display in the Oval Office,” said Director Adam D. Weinberg. “We hope these beautiful Cape Cod landscapes will give great pleasure to President Obama and to all who see them.”  (more…)

Works from Frick Collection to Leave US for First Time

Monday, February 17th, 2014

A selection of masterpieces from the Frick Collection are set to tour outside of the United States for the first time ever, showing in The Hague’s Mauritshuis Royal Picture Gallery.  The works will include some of The Frick’s most notable pieces, including John Constable’s spectacular The White Horse, and Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres‘ portrait of the Comtesse d’Haussonville. (more…)

Cornelius Gurlitt Launches Website to Clarify Points of Nazi-Looted Artwork Case

Monday, February 17th, 2014

Cornelius Gurlitt, the German man at the center of the controversy over thousands of Nazi-looted artworks found in his Munich apartment, has launched a website in an attempt to tell his side of the story.  “Some of what has been reported about my collection and myself is not correct or not quite correct,” Gurlitt says on the site. “Consequently my lawyers, my legal caretaker and I want to make available information to objectify the discussion about my collection and my person.” (more…)

George Clooney Calls for Britain to Return Elgin Marbles

Monday, February 17th, 2014

Actor George Clooney has chimed in on the growing debates over repatriation, calling for Great Britain to return the Elgin Marbles to Greece, and subsequently drawing strong response from British citizens and officials.  “He’s an American,” says John Whittingdale, the chairman of the Culture, Media and Sport Committee.  “I suspect he doesn’t know why it is that Britain came to acquire the Elgin Marbles. There’s a very strong view in this country that they should stay in the UK.” (more…)

New York – “Alex Katz / Dara Friedman” at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise Through February 22nd, 2014

Monday, February 17th, 2014


Alex Katz / Dara Friedman (Installation View), all images courtesy Gavin Brown’s enterprise

On view at Gavin Brown’s enterprise from January 11th through February 22nd is an exhibition of cutout works from American Pop artist Alex Katz, paired with a new Super 8 and High Definition film by Dara Friedman entitled PLAY, (Part 1&2).

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Marianne Boesky Profiled in WSJ

Sunday, February 16th, 2014

Marianne Boesky is profiled in the WSJ this week, spotlighting her reputation for risk-taking, including showing a never-before-seen South African artist in her booth at the Armory Fair next month, Serge Alain Nitegeka, and her early gamble on Japanese art-star Takeshi Murakami. “I couldn’t even give his work away,” she says. “I could even go so far as to say I was mocked for showing it.”
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Larry Gagosian Interviewed in Financial Times’ “How to Spend It” Style Section

Sunday, February 16th, 2014

Larry Gagosian is featured in the Financial Times’ How to Spend It section this week, recounting his personal style inspirations, and his current reading list.  “I tend to mix it up, so I might read a biography and then follow it up with a page-turner,” he says. “I used to read Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy, but now I stick to contemporary fiction and books related to current events.”  (more…)

Anthony Elms, Whitney Biennial Curator, Profiled in NYT

Sunday, February 16th, 2014

The New York Times profiles Anthony Elms this week, the co-curator of this year’s Whitney Biennial, set to open March 7th in New York, discussing the exhibition’s monumental reputation, and the almost equally considerable criticism it draws each outing.  “I know someone’s not going to like the show, so I might as well just go forward and try to do it the way that seems right,” Elms says.  “Anything I can do to put more artists in more people’s faces is something I’ll say yes to.” (more…)

New York- “Grounded” at Pace Gallery through February 22nd, 2014

Sunday, February 16th, 2014


Oldenburg and van Bruggen, Study, Soft Shuttlecock (1994). All Images Courtesy The Pace Gallery.

Now through February 22, Pace Gallery‘s 534 W. 25th Street location is hosting “Grounded”, an exhibition featuring floor-based sculpture by major figures in contemporary art. The show contains work produced from 1967 to 2013 that invite the viewers to experience a new perspective on sculptural forms. The artists that contribute to this show include works by Carl Andre, John Chamberlain, Tara Donovan, Tom Friedman, Tim Hawkinson, Maya Lin and others, focusing on the spatial interactions between art, the ground, and the viewer’s perception. (more…)

NEW YORK – SUE WILLIAMS: ‘WTC, WWIII, COUCH SIZE” at 303 GALLERY THROUGH FEBRUARY 22ND 2014

Saturday, February 15th, 2014


Sue Williams, Philip Zelikow, Historian (2013) All photos courtesy of 303 Gallery

303 Gallery presents Sue Williams WTC, WWIII, Couch Size, on view through February 22nd, 2014. Williams’ ninth solo exhibition with the gallery, this show features six new large-scale paintings, of ‘couch-sized’ proportion.  This titular reference to the commercial appraisal of artworks marks the comic butt of a seemingly sinister thematic program, which proclaims the World Trade Center and World War III as its subject. Williams’ nominal list introduces the ironic tone that colors her paintings, their dark subject matter bursting with chromatic brilliance and her signature comic levity.

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