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Archive for 2016

Pace Gallery Opens Permanent Location in Palo Alto

Thursday, February 25th, 2016

Continuing its efforts in Silicon Valley, Pace Gallery has left its temporary space in favor of a more permanent outpost in downtown Palo Alto.  “It was time to fish or cut bait,” says President Marc Glimcher. “You can’t do a pop-up forever.”  (more…)

Art UK Launching Expansive Project to Digitize Nation’s Public Collections

Thursday, February 25th, 2016

The Public Catalogue Foundation has been renamed Art UK, and is launching an initiative to digitize the full collection of works in the British public collections.  The project continues the organization’s already completed efforts at digitizing the nation’s oil paintings, a 10 year, £6 million venture. (more…)

Pissarro Painting Looted by Nazis to Return to Owner

Thursday, February 25th, 2016

The University of Oklahoma has agreed to return a Pissarro painting, La Bergère, that was looted by Nazis from collector Raoul Meyer.  The work will go to Meyer’s daughter Léone, who has agreed to show the painting on a rotating basis in Oklahoma and France.  “Léone Meyer has agreed that, rather than getting the painting back for her own living room, to continue the public display of the painting for the public,” her lawyer said.

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New York – Eddie Martinez: “Salmon Eye” at Mitchell-Innes and Nash Through March 5th, 2016

Thursday, February 25th, 2016

Eddie Martinez, Restartation (2015), via Art Observed
Eddie Martinez, Restartation (2015), via Art Observed

Brooklyn-based painter Eddie Martinez had charted a particularly unique course for himself in recent years, exploring both expressly abstracted compositions and their relationships to more rigid, serial processes in both painting and sculpture.  Trained as both a draftsman and painter, the artist’s dual experience in both meticulously planned composition and free-roving expressionism floats to the surface in his first exhibition with Mitchell-Innes & Nash, on view now at the gallery’s Chelsea location. (more…)

Harmony Korine Interviewed in The Guardian

Wednesday, February 24th, 2016

Harmony Korine, via The GuardianHarmony Korine is interviewed in The Guardian this week, discussing his early career, his new work as a painter, and his reputation as a cultural antagonist.  “I’m fine with it,” he says. “I want to do extreme damage. I want to be disruptive, I don’t care about the flow and I don’t want to go with it.” (more…)

Berlin – “Dreaming Mirrors Dreaming Screens” at Sprüth Magers Through April 2nd, 2016

Wednesday, February 24th, 2016

Dreaming Mirrors Dreaming Screens (Installation view), via Sprüth Magers
Dreaming Mirrors Dreaming Screens (Installation view), via Sprüth Magers

For the most recent new exhibition in Berlin, Sprüth Magers has brought together work from thirteen artists under the title Dreaming Mirrors Dreaming Screens.  Curated by Goodroom and Johannes Fricke Waldthausen, the exhibition features works by Lizzie Fitch/Ryan Trecartin, Andy Hope 1930, Oliver Laric, Jon Rafman, and Andro Wekua, among others.  Intended to navigate visitors through the intersecting narratives within the realm of surrealist animation, abstraction and the ideas of “New Materialism” as expressed through the greater logistics of the world wide web, the exhibition references the notion of the screen as a critical tool of the conscious and unconscious, as well as a surface for projections of communication and technological abstraction.   (more…)

Dia Director Jessica Morgan Profiled in Vogue

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2016

Jessica Morgan, via VogueDia’s Jessica Morgan is profiled in Vogue this week, underscoring her unique perspectives and highly praised vision as a curator.  “She really goes deep, deep, deep,” says Urs Fischer. “She digs herself in.” (more…)

Met Museum Takes Deep Perspective on New Modern and Contemporary Focus

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2016

Breuer Building, via Art NewspaperThe Art Newspaper profiles the curatorial focus at The Met’s new Breuer building, and its willingness to push deeper into the perspectives and dialogues of contemporary art.  “Whether we like it or not, professional artists are heirs to, and inextricably tied to, traditions,” says painter Kerry James Marshall, who will select a body of works from the museum collection to show alongside his own retrospective.  As he notes, the space allows the Met to “highlight the intellectual links between historical forms and modes of production.” (more…)

M+ Museum Invites Critique of Mainland with First Major Exhibition

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2016

M+ Museum, via The GuardianHong Kong’s M+ Museum is opening an expansive exhibition of works currently, including several politcally charged pieces from the Uli Sigg Collection, testing what seems to be a frigid political climate in mainland China. “It is up to Hong Kong to choose how free it wants to be,” says Lars Nittve, a former M+ curator.  “If there is a message to this exhibition, this has to be it.” (more…)

Tate Modern to Stage Major Hockney Retrospective Next Year

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2016

The Tate Modern is planning a landmark retrospective for David Hockney in 2017, one of the largest exhibitions the museum has ever opened.  “We’ve shaped the show and made a selection and then he’s made suggestions and we’ve shifted the emphasis a bit and there are some works he’s asked us to think about,” says co-curator Chris Stephens. (more…)

Christie’s Deputy Chair of Asia, Xin Li, Profiled in W Magazine

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2016

W Magazine Profiles Xin Li, the Deputy Chair of Christie’s Asia, and her unique career path as both a basketball player and model.  “I’ve always played better during the real game than in practice,” Li says of her focus in the auction room. “It’s something I learned from being an athlete and model. I feel the lights and the camera, and I know how to stay focused. But when you are working as a model, it’s all about you. Working in an auction house, nothing is about you. I learned how to switch off my past and become a different person.” (more…)

Artists Chime in on Focus for Met’s New Breuer Building Space

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2016

The Art Newspaper has interviewed a group of artists, T.J. Wilcox and Deborah Kass among them, to offer their perspectives and suggestions for the opening of the Met’s Breuer Building for exhibitions.  “There is some of that overdue revisionism going on and I will be thrilled to see Kerry James Marshall’s retrospective [at the Met Breuer this autumn], one of the most important painters of my generation,” Kass writes.  “But until this re-evaluation includes women, incredibly important pieces of art history continue to be willfully, almost petulantly omitted.” (more…)

New York – Robert Ryman at Dia: Chelsea Through June 18th, 2016

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2016


Robert Ryman, Untitled (1960), via Art Observed

Walking through the doors of Dia: Chelsea, one is immediately struck by a lack of lighting, with the halls and open floor plans of the building lit only by dull sunbeams streaming down from the open skylight and onto the works of painter and conceptualist Robert Ryman.  The show is a notable fusion of history in both the immediate and the general for the artist, a point that makes considerable sense giving his subject matter, presented here in a span of works focusing primarily on his career in the 1960’s through the 1980’s. (more…)

Berlin – Tatiana Trouvé: “From Alexandrinenstrasse to the Unnamed Path” AT König Galerie Through March 28th, 2016

Monday, February 22nd, 2016

Tatiana Trouvé, Untitled (2016), image courtesy of Tatiana Trouvé and KÖNIG GALERIE
Tatiana Trouvé, Untitled (2016), image courtesy of Tatiana Trouvé and König Galerie

“Time is the theme underlying all my work,” states Italian-born, Paris-based artist Tatiana Trouvé.  Frequently reflecting ideas of time and intervention through her prolific body of drawings, sculptures and installations, the artist is presenting a new exhibition at Berlin’s König Galerie, where she has enacted a space illustrating the origins and systems dictating the flow and movement of the universe.  Consisting of furniture covered with bronze blankets, on whose backs reveals drawings and text, traced and written,her objects combine multiple realities incorporating dreamlike states and alchemical properties, always based on nuanced, multifaceted layers of space and time.  Each installation reveals a fragmented culture, and a system pushed into instability through her varying representational techniques.   (more…)

MoMA Opening Major Francis Picabia Retrospective this Fall

Sunday, February 21st, 2016

MoMA has announced plans for the U.S.’s first major retrospective on the work of Francis Picabia, set to open in November of this year.  The show is presented in collaboration with the Kunsthaus Zürich, which will show the exhibition this summer before it travels across the Atlantic. (more…)

Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers Profiled in FT

Sunday, February 21st, 2016

The Financial Times profiles the founders of Sprüth Magers this week, as the gallery prepares to open its Los Angeles exhibition space in West Los Angeles.  “Our gallery is a very traditional one,” says Monika Sprüth, discussing their focus on artist development over sales. “We think our job is to serve the artists.  We do sometimes disturb one or other of our male colleagues. They don’t understand how it can work the way we are. They are irritated. Which is nice, to irritate them a little bit.” (more…)

Paris – “Picasso.Mania” at Grand Palais Through February 29th, 2016

Sunday, February 21st, 2016

Pablo Picasso, Le violon (Titre attribué : Nature morte) (1914) © Succession Picasso 2015 / photo Centre Pompidou, MNAM-Cci, dist. Rmn-Grand Palais / droits réservés
Pablo Picasso, Le violon (Titre attribué : Nature morte) (1914) © Succession Picasso 2015 / photo Centre Pompidou, MNAM-Cci, dist. Rmn-Grand Palais / droits réservés

Having pioneered the vivid forms and perspectival innovations of Cubism during the course of his career, pushing that initial formal innovation into the vastly divergent forms, there can be little doubt of Pablo Picasso’s monumental impact on the path of modern art.  This influence sits at the core of Picasso.Mania, a playful yet impressively curated exhibition currently on view at the Grand Palais in Paris.  Pairing works from both before and after the artist’s massively influential impact on the world of 20th Century Art, the exhibition presents a contemporary perspective to the name, the myth, the reputation of the artist. (more…)

The Met Rolls Out New Logo

Saturday, February 20th, 2016

The Met has announced a new logo in the run-up to the opening of its exhibition space in the former home of the Whitney Museum, part of an attempt to convey a more open, welcoming institution.   “It’s the right direction,” Daniel Brodsky, the museum’s chairman, said. “It’s a changing institution; the world is changing around us, and I think it’s time for the Met to move forward.” (more…)

Los Angeles – “Histories of a Vanishing Present: A Prologue” at The Mistake Room, Through February 20th, 2016

Saturday, February 20th, 2016

Aleksandra Domanovic, Turbo Sculpture, 2010-13, Courtesy The Mistake Room
Aleksandra Domanovic, Turbo Sculpture, (2010-13), all photos courtesy The Mistake Room

The Mistake Room Los Angeles presents Histories of a Vanishing Present: A Prologue, the second chapter in a series of four exhibitions, featured as part of a long-term research initiative launched by the space. This multiyear project spotlights the experience of millennial generation artists from the Global South who, through a lens of postmemory, explore the media through which the past is transmitted across time and space. The exhibition investigates how traumatic histories play out in the practices of contemporary artists, often whose experience of these histories is indirect—inherited through the images, narratives and objects of preceding generations. Curated by Cesar Garcia and Kris Kuramitsu, A Prologue features video pieces from four artists situated in non-western cultures, chronicling both events, relations and practices not typically included in the art historical canon.    In animating the enduring consequences of colonization, nationalism, ethnic wars, globalization and the legacy of racism, these artists engage in a complex meditation on their cultural heritage and identity politics, and embrace history as a site of reflection and reinvention.

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Tania Bruguera to Stage “Referendum” Work in New York Around Immigration Policy

Friday, February 19th, 2016

Artist Tania Bruguera will stage her work Referendum in Union Square this coming March, offering New Yorkers a public forum to voice their opinion on U.S. immigration policy.  “It’s a very personal interaction,” says Sara Reisman, artistic director at the Shelley and Donald Rubin Foundation “She’s trying to gauge people’s opinions… she’ll probably do some advocating.” (more…)

Art Info Explores Visa Process for Foreign Artists

Friday, February 19th, 2016

Art Info takes a cursory look at the immigration process for artists applying to live and work in the United States, and the varying issues that U.S. immigration officials take into account when reading applications.  “The problem is the interpretation of that regulation. The people who are actually looking are not in the arts industry,” notes BoBi Ahn of Warshaw Burstein, LLP.  “So they might apply arbitrary standards.” (more…)

Düsseldorf Opening New Ad-Free, Artist-Designed U-Bahn Stations

Friday, February 19th, 2016

The recently completed Düsseldorf U-Bahn line is set to open this month, featuring intuitively designed installations and design concepts spearheaded by artists and completely devoid of advertisements.  “Normally the construction part happens first and then the artists are commissioned. Here the architects, artists and engineers worked together from the beginning,” says artist Heike Klussmann. (more…)

$500 Million Private Sale of de Kooning and Pollock Works Reported

Friday, February 19th, 2016

Initial reports are circulating about a major sale of American Post-War expressionism, after Josh Baer broke news that Willem de Kooning’s Interchange and another work by Jackson Pollock sold to a Midwest Hedge Fund manager (assumed to be Chicago-based Citadel head Kenneth Griffin) in a private transaction for $500 million. (more…)

Cabaret Voltaire Seeking Solutions to Stay Independent

Friday, February 19th, 2016

The Cabaret Voltaire, birthplace of Swiss Dada, is currently seeking financial support to the tune of $13.1 million to remain open and independent.” It would be good to transform the Cabaret Voltaire into a centre for artists to manage the place and give it a more international dimension,” says director Adrian Notz.  (more…)