Archive for 2016
Monday, June 13th, 2016
An article in the New York Times this week looks at the upcoming market events in Basel and London in the coming weeks, and notes a more nuanced and complex sales picture in response to what many have considered a period of market correction. “There’s a growing rift between price and value,” says advisor Heather Flow. “In some cases, gallery prices are higher than the levels at which similar works are being flipped,” meaning resales at auction. (more…)
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Monday, June 13th, 2016
Galerie Perrotin has joined the migration of galleries to the Lower East Side, and will set up shop next year at 130 Orchard Street. The 25,000-square-foot space echoes moves by other galleries as Chelsea rents continue to rise. (more…)
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Monday, June 13th, 2016

Jasper Johns, Untitled (2014), via Art Observed
Spanning the last thirty years of his career, Jasper Johns’s monotypes make up a fascinatingly diverse, unique body of works, one that forms something of a microcosm for the rest of the artist’s body of work. Themes appearing throughout Johns’s career; jagged minimalism, number systems, and the incorporation of the art historical into various structures of subversion or reinterpretation, are presented again through a selection of etched prints across a wide variety of hues, subjects and approaches. This body of work is the subject of the artist’s current exhibition at Matthew Marks Gallery, following his continued exploration of the monotype as an expressive and diversely capable medium from 1983 to the present day.

Jasper Johns, Untitled (2015), via Art Observed
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Sunday, June 12th, 2016

Bjarke Ingels Group Serpentine Pavilion, via Serpentine Galleries
The annual Serpentine Galleries pavilion commission is a rare architectural project predicated on immediate and widespread public use while also encouraging formal inventiveness to the furthest possible degree. Each year’s works, laid out on the grounds of Kensington Gardens, function as a site for talks, performances and other events, while also as a showcase for some of the brightest talents in contemporary architecture. (more…)
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Sunday, June 12th, 2016

Stephen Prina, Carl Sandbug, Born: January 6, 1878, Galesburg, Illinois, Died: July 22, 1967, Flat Rock, North Carolina (2015), all images via Osman Can Yerebakan for Art Observed
Stephen Prina’s eighth solo exhibition at Petzel Gallery pulls its audience into an ephemeral territory, where the fluidity of one’s memories engages with the tactile presence of objects. Through a highly introspective narrative, the exhibition pays homage to Prina’s hometown of Galesburg, a small city in Illinois where the artist grew up. Currently based in Los Angeles and Cambridge, Prina elaborates on the act of remembering his home, while seeking creative stimuli in the mundane details of the day to day, to reach broader conclusions on the human condition and artistic endeavor. The works on view are singular, autonomous artifacts, eventually converging in focus through Prina’s grand orchestration of converging narratives that twist the past through a contemporary lens. (more…)
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Saturday, June 11th, 2016
The New York Times spends a day in the offices of Dominique Lévy, as the dealer prepares for her gallery’s booth at Art Basel next week. “It’s really your one moment where you can show who you are,” Lévy says. “It’s acutely important for existing relationships, new relationships, the way the art world perceives you.” (more…)
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Saturday, June 11th, 2016
Venus Over Manhattan has named gallery director Anna Furney as a partner in the gallery. Furney has worked with the space since 2012. (more…)
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Saturday, June 11th, 2016
The Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo has tapped Rem Koolhaas’s OMA to design its new campus expansion. “Over the next year, we will work together to imagine a renewed Albright-Knox for the twenty-first century, one that includes state-of-the-art spaces for special exhibitions and the display of our world-renowned collection,” museum director Janne Sirén says. (more…)
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Saturday, June 11th, 2016
The Louvre has reopened following the massive flooding that swept through Paris last week, causing over €1 billion in damage to the city, and €1.5 million in lost revenue to the museum itself. (more…)
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Saturday, June 11th, 2016
Michelangelo Pistoletto has been tapped as the next artist to show at Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire. “I am very pleased to be presenting a comprehensive show of my work within a place brimming with history, tradition, and craft,” he said of the show, opening this September. “I look forward to seeing my art in an entirely new context.” (more…)
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Saturday, June 11th, 2016
The Atlantic reports on the continued efforts of museums to make their collections more accessible to the blind and those with low vision, including Louvre galleries of replica sculptures for visitors to touch, or the Met’s “Multisensory Met” project. “We see through our brains, not our eyes,” art historian and museum educator Georgia Krantz says. “The eye is just one of the channels through which sensory information is passed to the brain for processing.” (more…)
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Saturday, June 11th, 2016
Pyotr Pavlensky, the Russian artist who set fire to the doors of Russia’s Federal Security Service headquarters, has walked free, subject only to a fine for the damage, which he refuses to pay.“It does not matter how the trial ended,” he said. “What is important is that we were able to unmask, uncover the truth: the government is founded on the methods of terror.” (more…)
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Saturday, June 11th, 2016

Jordan Wolfson, Colored sculpture (2016) All images are Courtesy of Sadie Coles HQ, London and David Zwirner, New York.
On view at David Zwirner’s 525 West 19th street location is Jordan Wolfson’s most recent investigation of the sculptural genre in the age of new technology. Following 2014’s exceptionally received and widely seen (Female Figure), the voluptuous and arresting female animatronic that Wolfson created at a professional Hollywood film studio, his current exhibition introduces Colored sculpture: a larger-than-life, red-haired teenage boy suspended from a mechanic structure that controls his movements and often violently degrades his body.
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Friday, June 10th, 2016

Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller, The Marionette Maker (2014), all photos via Luhring Augustine Gallery
The Canadian artist duo of Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller, known for their immersive installations mixing deeply sculpted sonic environments with an often theatrical narrative, are currently presenting their fourth solo exhibition with Luhring Augustine this month with two recent works: The Marionette Maker (2014) and Experiment in F# Minor (2013). (more…)
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Thursday, June 9th, 2016

Gert and Uwe Tobias, Untitled (GUT / 2489), via Art Observed
Artists Gert and Uwe Tobias return to Team Gallery in New York for a show of new drawings and sculpture this month, bringing with them a new variant on their already prolific output of work negotiating the spheres between the folklore of their native Romania, and the context of Western art production that their own work is situated within. (more…)
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Wednesday, June 8th, 2016
The Los Angeles Department of Transportation has recruited artist and oral historian Alan Nakagawa to aid in its plan to end traffic deaths, approaching language in a way to reinforce shared space and communal perceptions of the roads. The artist will “will continue this tradition, with a focus on how we can infuse art into design to create safer streets,” according to a statement. (more…)
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Wednesday, June 8th, 2016
A commission of U.S. Senators are working on a proposal to make Nazi-looted works easier to recover by their original owners, the New York Times reports. “It is our moral duty to help those survivors and their families achieve what justice can be found,” said NY Senator Charles E. Schumer. (more…)
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Wednesday, June 8th, 2016
The Bronx Museum has delayed an exhibition of Cuban artworks, following concerns by the Cuban government that any works sent to the U.S. for the show may be seized in lieu of claims by American citizens. There are $7 billion in outstanding claims over property seized by the Castro government during the 1959 revolution, and the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes (MNBA) in Havana had expressed concern over the works’ immunity from seizure. “This is an issue that is going to be very difficult and I don’t see a short-term solution to it,” says Cuban art dealer Ramón Cernuda. “In the current climate, I really don’t see any important museums in the US wanting to convey an image of not caring for or considering valid claims to ownership of art or other claims against the Cuban government. It’s not just the uphill battle of getting the immunity, but the backlash that could come with that.” (more…)
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Wednesday, June 8th, 2016
Richard Prince and Gagosian Gallery have once again been named in a copyright infringement lawsuit over a photograph of Sex Pistols bassist Sid Vicious. Photographer Dennis Morris has filed the lawsuit over a photograph used as the cover of a book by David Dalton. (more…)
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Wednesday, June 8th, 2016

Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #1271 Scribbles 12 (2007), all photos via Quincy Childs for Art Observed
The Drawing Center in New York is currently presenting selections from the collection of Sol LeWitt, offering a glimpse into the creative inspirations of one of the Post-War era’s central figures. Showcasing an array of memorabilia and art including Japanese woodblock prints, hand-colored tourist photographs, and letters from his contemporaries, the show traces a lifetime of intellectual exchange and exploration by the pioneer of minimalist and conceptual practice. (more…)
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Tuesday, June 7th, 2016
A recently authenticated and restored Peter Paul Rubens painting has gone on show at the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg this week, after spending over 80 years in storage. “For many years this Rubens was regarded as a work by the artist’s school,” says museum director Mikhail Piotrovsky. (more…)
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Tuesday, June 7th, 2016
Influential Brazilian artist Tunga has passed away from cancer-related causes this week at the age of 64, Art News reports. The artist, whose work is held in high regard in Brazil as a pioneer of a unique brand of surrealism that transfers aspects of the human form to strange, towering structures and situations, had seen increased prominence in the United States in recent years, in part through the advocacy of his gallery, Luhring Augustine. “Tunga was a tremendous force both personally and artistically, and was as firmly rooted in Brazilian aesthetic, cultural, and philosophical traditions as he was in their international counterparts,” Luhring Augustine director Donald Johnson-Montenegro said in a statement. “He was both rigorous and curious in his investigations, and he leaves behind a remarkable legacy through a complex and sensual body of work that is equally distinctive and evocative.” (more…)
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Tuesday, June 7th, 2016
The University of Iowa is moving forward with a $60 million plan to build a new art museum complex on its Des Moines campus, which will house its collection, including Jackson Pollock’s iconic Mural from 1943. “This project would bring the art collection back on campus by constructing a new museum building coupled with the renovation of existing space within the UI Main Library,” the construction proposal reads. “Given the importance of access to the collection for students, faculty and the university community, locating a new and permanent facility on or near the main campus core is an important feature of the proposed site.” (more…)
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Tuesday, June 7th, 2016
Ugo Rondinone’s Seven Magic Mountains installation in the Las Vegas desert has been vandalized, the city’s local news reports. “Yes, we are very upset about this vandalism,” says Amanda Horn, the director of communications at the Nevada Museum of Art. “It is something we knew was a risk when we installed an art display on public lands.” (more…)
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