Archive for January, 2016
Thursday, January 28th, 2016

Sarah Meyohas at 303 Gallery (Installation View)
303 Gallery is hosting a special collaboration with New York based artist Sarah Meyohas, merging the inherently performative natures of two distinct terrains of art making and stock marketing. Stemming from Mehoyas’s dual educational background in both business and fine arts, the Yale MFA graduate traded stocks on the New York Stock Exchange during the market’s operating hours for ten business days, affecting the value of these stocks. Transferring their behavior into stark black and white drawings, Mehoyas transfers the market’s often erratic movements into the serene white cube. (more…)
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Wednesday, January 27th, 2016
The Art Newspaper reports on the lawsuit between the Art Loss Register, the long-running database of missing or stolen artworks, and new upstart the Art Recovery Group, which offers similar services, stemming from a question of proprietary data and how much the ARG has benefitted from the use of data allegedly obtained without consent. “The ALR knows exactly the extent of information in my possession because it was obtained openly, transparently and with express permission pursuant to an agreement signed by Julian Radcliffe in 2012,” says ARG head Chris Marinello. (more…)
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Wednesday, January 27th, 2016

Alexander Calder, Antennae with Red and Blue Dots (1953), © 2015 Calder Foundation, New York and DACS, London
Alexander Calder’s work as the originator of the mobile, and his free-flowing, languid techniques have long established him as a distinct pioneer of mid-20th Century sculpture. His floating, kinetic sculptures and more grounded, static works were iconic elements of the post-war movements towards the abstract and expressive in sculptural practice. Yet presentations and explorations of Calder’s work frequently obscure his early interest in the theatrical and performative, threads which were long instrumental to the artist’s practice, and to the development of much of his later work. It’s these same threads that receive express emphasis in the Tate Modern’s Performing Sculpture, an exhibition of work culled from the length of Calder’s career, and which places his interests in performance, movement and time back into the proper context his later sculpture is so strongly rooted in.

Alexander Calder, Vertical Foliage (1941), Calder Foundation, New York © 2015 Calder Foundation, New York / DACS, London
(more…)
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Tuesday, January 26th, 2016
Ai Weiwei has created a series of new works for Paris department store Le Bon Marché, showing a body of work inspired by traditional Chinese “Shan Hai Jing” children’s stories. “This casualness of urban culture is very appealing: It’s not like being in a museum, in a white box — it’s part of a metropolitan landscape — and the people, or audience, are not artgoers,” the artist says. “People experience the art as they go about their day and something unconsciously happens.” (more…)
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Tuesday, January 26th, 2016
Marianne Boesky’s temporary project gallery uptown will close its doors this year after a six-year run. The space had been intended as a five year “experiment” by the gallery, but “I loved it so much we signed on for another year,” Boesky said. (more…)
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Tuesday, January 26th, 2016
The New York Times takes a look inside the Hebrew Home senior center in Riverdale, which has built a remarkable collection of art from Robert Rauschenberg, Ellsworth Kelly, Marc Chagall and Alex Katz, among others. “Art is an integral part of life here,” says curator Emily O’Leary. “Because many of them can’t go out to museums,” she said, “the idea was to bring the museum to them.” (more…)
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Tuesday, January 26th, 2016
The New York Times takes a look inside 347 West 20th Street, the former home of Louise Bourgeois that has been converted into a museum documenting the artist’s rigorous studio practice. “It has a heart and a soul. People are very moved when they come here,” says former assistant Jerry Gorovoy. (more…)
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Tuesday, January 26th, 2016
A selection of previously unpublished diaries by Eric Allden, a close friend of Francis Bacon’s, who writes on the artist’s early years. “His people live in Ireland, County Kildare, and he told me that when he was 16 he ran away to Paris, but was brought back, though soon after he was permitted to return there,” Allden writes in one passage. (more…)
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Tuesday, January 26th, 2016

Lizzi Bougatsos, The King’s Virgin (2015), via Rae Wang for Art Observed
What does it mean to work? To what extent is play quantifiable as labor and vice versa? Such are the questions posed by Work Habits, the latest solo exhibition from artist Lizzi Bougatsos on view at James Fuentes. Stepping into a space lit up in traffic light red on opening night, one quickly garners a Nietzschean sense of faith unfound, unraveling foundations and unsustained beliefs. The room, minimally adorned with a dynamic installation of assemblages, depict these found and repurposed objects as inherently lazy. (more…)
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Monday, January 25th, 2016
The Venice Biennale has announced Christine Macel as the Director of the 57th edition of the Italian art exhibition. Macel, currently the Chief Curator at the Musée national d’art moderne, has worked with Venice in curated the French and Belgian pavilions in past years. “Her experience in the Department of “Création contemporaine et prospective” at the Centre Pompidou in Paris has long offered her a vantage point rich in potential from which to observe and identify new energies coming from various parts of the world,” says Biennale President Paolo Baratta. (more…)
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Monday, January 25th, 2016
The art forgery lawsuit between the family of Sotheby’s Chairman Domenico De Sole and Knoedler Gallery’s Ann Freedman is set to begin this week over the sale of a counterfeit Mark Rothko. “Banking on their unblemished and impeccable reputations, Knoedler and Freedman fraudulently warranted that the work was an authentic Rothko, when they knew or should have known otherwise, lied about their knowledge of the work’s provenance, and hid the true facts,” writes the De Soles lawyer. (more…)
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Monday, January 25th, 2016
Barcelona gallery Mayoral is bringing a replica of Joan Miró’s studio to the 2016 Armory Show, placing the artist’s work in the context of his creative process. “The Studio offered Miró a suitable working environment,” says the artist’s grandson Joan Punyet Miró. “When he closed the door behind him he knew he was cutting all contact with the outside world and entering into his imaginary universe.” (more…)
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Monday, January 25th, 2016
Artist Cai Guo-Qiang is set to premiere his documentary Sky Ladder at Sundance this week, documenting the artist’s magnum opus performed in 2014. “His story is not just that of a Chinese artist becoming successful and going international,” says producer Wendi Murdoch. “His is a story that reflects the changes in China over the past 15 years.” (more…)
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Monday, January 25th, 2016
The ICA in London is embarking on a mission to find and help develop the future of the British avant-garde, led by Director Gregor Muir, known for his early championing of the YBA’s. “If we are looking for something radical, it is not always about shocking people. It is about being more pernicious, about getting under people’s skin,” he says. “Finding a real sub-culture is more important now than just calling something the new ‘avant-garde’. We need to hear a voice from cultures that are not represented well elsewhere.” (more…)
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Monday, January 25th, 2016

Tauba Auerbach, Shadow Weave – Metamaterial/Slice Ray (2013) © Tauba Auerbach. Courtesy Paula Cooper Gallery, New York, Photo: Steven Probert
Tauba Auerbach’s work does much with its slight physical moorings. Utilizing sparse, repeated patterns, meticulously executed sculptural objects and a nuanced eye for her selected materials and colors, Auerbach’s work creates delicate structural harmonies and ordered, meditative pieces that create a sense of calm despite their geometrically-complex, constantly evolving surfaces. This method is executed to great effect in the artist’s just-opened exhibition at Paula Cooper’s 21st Street location, compiling selections from several ongoing series of the artist’s work, as well as new sculptural elements, a library of texts, and several new publications from Auerbach’s Diagonal Press publishing house, included in the gallery bookstore. (more…)
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Sunday, January 24th, 2016

Elizabeth Peyton, Sea (Kristian) (2016), via Sadie Coles
Presenting a new body of paintings, including both landscapes and portraiture from her travels and experiences, Elizabeth Peyton opens a new body of work at Sadie Coles HQ in London, filling the gallery’s Davies Street location with her uniquely delicate watercolors, pencil drawings and oil compositions. The show is Peyton’s seventh with the gallery in nearly twenty years, and marks a continuation of her recent practice and stylistic diversity. (more…)
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Saturday, January 23rd, 2016
The Hammer Museum has announced its artist list for the 2016 edition of Made in L.A., its biennial event, featuring a list of 26 artists ranging from Dena Yago and Martine Syms to Sterling Ruby and designer Eckhaus Latta. (more…)
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Saturday, January 23rd, 2016
Collector and hedge fund billionaire Steven Cohen has taken out another large loan using his own collection as collateral, evidence that he may be planning another considerable purchase in the coming auction sales. Cohen sold his Andy Warhol Mao last November for $47 million. (more…)
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Saturday, January 23rd, 2016

Anne Collier, May/Jun 2009 (Cindy Sherman, Mark Seliger) (2009), all photos via Osman Can Yerebakan for Art Observed
The Guggenheim’s Photo-Poetics: An Anthology, curated by Jennifer Blessing, senior photography curator at the museum, delves into methods utilized by artists to diverge from traditional notions of photography as a chronicle of tangible reality. Such capturing of verité leaves the stage for investigation of process, material, and expression in works by ten contemporary photographers, spanning three floors at the museum’s side galleries, and guiding viewers through various sections containing selections of work by a single artist, among them Sara VanDerBeek, Erin Shirreff and Kathrin Sonntag to name a few. (more…)
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Friday, January 22nd, 2016
Sotheby’s announced a fourth quarter loss this week, noting that it would scrap its year end dividend in favor of a stock buyback. The loss was caused in part by charges for a previous buyback, and by the sizable guarantees made to secure the Taubman collection sale last year, which failed to live up to estimates. (more…)
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Friday, January 22nd, 2016
The City of Dresden has bought back Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s Strassenbild vor dem Friseurladen, a work which was seized by Nazis as “degenerate art” from Dresden City Art Gallery almost 80 years ago. “The acquisition of Kirchner’s work has a special significance for Dresden,” says Hilke Wagner, the director of the Albertinum museum, which will show the painting. (more…)
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Friday, January 22nd, 2016

Mark Grotjahn, Miller (Green) (Date TBC), via Rae Wang for Art Observed
Mark Grotjahn doesn’t stay in one place for too long. Despite the honed abstraction techniques illustrated in his long-running series like Butterfly Paintings, his recast, painted cardboard box sculptures, and the swirling figuration of his Face works, Grotjahn has also spent countless hours on small-scale projects, conceptual exercises and intriguing asides. There is, for one, his Instagram account, a free-wheeling aesthetic testing ground where the artist has obsessively posted album covers, sets of reflexive iPhone screenshots, and bizarre scenarios culled from both his own life and printed media. (more…)
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Thursday, January 21st, 2016
While some warn of a potential bubble burst, auction houses remain confident in Asia, pushing Chinese buyers in particular as a strong bet in the upcoming sales, particularly as new collectors expand their tastes. “They go within one year from general purchases to sophisticated purchases, such as Surrealism and Max Ernst,” says Giovanna Bertazzoni, Christie’s deputy chairman and senior director of global auctions. (more…)
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Thursday, January 21st, 2016
One in five UK Museums has been forced to make partial closures in the past year, or will do so in 2016, Artforum reports. “We know from previous research that funding cuts are changing the way museums are managed with many forced to cut jobs, introduce admission charges, reduce opening hours and cut back on other services,” says Museums Association director Sharon Heal. (more…)
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