Global contemporary art events and news observed from New York City. Suggestion? Email us.

Archive for the 'Minipost' Category

Thomas Dane to Open in Naples

Thursday, January 25th, 2018

Thomas Dane is the latest in a string of major galleries opening locations in Italy, as the institution opens a space in the city of Naples. “The scene in Italy has always been discreet, established and savvy—not dissimilar to Germany, Holland and Belgium in the 1960s and 70s,” says François Chantala, a partner at Thomas Dane. (more…)

Stolen Emil Nolde Returned After Failed Ransom Attempt in Denmark

Wednesday, January 24th, 2018

An Emil Nolde painting stolen four years ago from a Danish church in Ølstrup has been returned after a failed ransom attempt. Police managed to track encrypted messages through a law firm to the thief, who is currently in prison. (more…)

Louvre Abu Dhabi Causes Uproar Over Map’s Omission of Qatar

Wednesday, January 24th, 2018

The Louvre Abu Dhabi has replaced a map in the museum that failed to include the Qatari peninsula after public outcry. The move was interpreted as a direct attack on the country amid difficult relations in the Gulf region. “Louvre Abu Dhabi is a universal museum which celebrates cross-cultural exchange and tolerance,” the museum said in a statement. “In line with international best practice, our curatorial narratives are shaped by the historic and cultural context of the fascinating objects.” (more…)

LACMA Looks to Expand in South LA

Wednesday, January 24th, 2018

LACMA is exploring plans to create a satellite campus in South Los Angeles, which will target underserved areas. “If you look at a map of L.A.’s public schools, the dots representing the neediest students are all through South Los Angeles,” Director Michael Govan says. “You start thinking, where can the value of your collection and program be the greatest, when you’re behind a big fancy fence on Wilshire Boulevard or out in the community?” (more…)

Getty Announces Traveling Series of Pacific Standard Time Shows

Wednesday, January 24th, 2018

The Getty has announced plans for a traveling version of the PST: LA/LA Exhibitions, Art News reports. “Although Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA will officially close at the end of January, in many ways this is just the beginning,” Getty Trust president James Cuno said in a statement. “Over the last four months, our many partners reexamined and realigned narratives of art history through their exhibitions and events, bringing together the many connections between Latin American and Latino art without regard to borders or categories. Their discoveries will live on in the many exhibitions that will travel far beyond Los Angeles.” (more…)

Danh Vo Profiled in New Yorker

Tuesday, January 23rd, 2018

Danh Vo gets a profile this week in the New Yorker, and explores his own perspectives on his field, as well as his unique practice and the years of travel that shaped his practice. “My work is really through installation,” he says. “It’s always about how things speak together.” (more…)

Alex Needham Takes Helm as The Guardian’s Arts Editor

Monday, January 22nd, 2018

Alex Needham has been named the new arts editor of The Guardian in London. Needham has worked at the Guardian for eleven years, and will take over guiding the newspaper’s expansive arts coverage.  (more…)

NADA New York Adds Acquisition Fund for Bronx Museum

Monday, January 22nd, 2018

NADA has added a new acquisition fund for the Bronx Museum to its programming for its New York fair, Art News reports. “We are thrilled to be partnering with the Bronx Museum,” Heather Hubbs, NADA’s executive director, said in a statement. “NADA was founded in New York, and we could not be more proud to have artwork from our exhibitors in such a venerable collection. This initiative reflects our continued commitment to providing our exhibitors with unique opportunities to connect directly with influential curators.” (more…)

Jill Magid Wins $50,000 Calder Prize

Monday, January 22nd, 2018

Artist Jill Magid has won the $50,000 Calder Prize, a grant issued biannually to a living artist by the Calder Foundation. “In his mobiles and stabiles, Calder unites symmetry and asymmetry, or parity and disparity, in ways that assimilate the larger, unseen forces at work in the natural world,” a statement from the organization reads. “Likewise, Magid pulls on loose ends both tangible and intangible—probing seemingly impenetrable systems—and finds unification in disparate elements. Her tenacity echoes Calder’s own in his radical transformation of sculpture.” (more…)

Smithsonian Institute To Stay Open Monday During Shutdown

Monday, January 22nd, 2018

The Smithsonian Institute is bracing for the effects of the government shutdown, but will remain open Monday using funds saved up for contingencies such as a shutdown. “I hope they can avoid the shutdown, obviously, because I would like for government employees to continue to draw a paycheck and the government to continue to function,” says one visitor to Washington D.C. “I’m praying that we can stabilize it.” (more…)

Jeff Koons Gift to Paris Rebuffed by Citizens

Sunday, January 21st, 2018

The Art Newspaper reports on Parisians’ response to Jeff Koons massive tulips installation offered to the city of Paris. “Placing this artwork in front of the Palais de Tokyo would taint the museum and take up too much of its landscape. Jeff Koons had enough attention with his installations at the Château de Versailles [in 2008-09] without resorting to benefit from the memory of the Paris attacks,” one citizen says. (more…)

Kurt Schwitters’s Merz Barn May Go Up for Sale

Sunday, January 21st, 2018

Kurt Schwitters’s Merz Barn in Elterwater is up for sale.  “Our fear is that we’ll be forced into selling it to a property developer,” owner Ian Hunter says. “We feel that we’ve been pushed into this situation by the Arts Council.” (more…)

Economist Explores Implications on Restoration and Appraisal Technology

Friday, January 19th, 2018

A piece in The Economist looks at recent technologies in art appraisal and conservation, and questions how these developments may challenge the authority and stability of work in the field. “In the pursuit of knowledge about works of art, the language of science and that of the humanities both have to be spoken,” claims Robert van Langh, the Rijksmuseum’s head of conservation.  (more…)

Andreas Gursky Speaks on His Early Work for The Guardian

Friday, January 19th, 2018

The Guardian has an interview with Andreas Gursky this week, detailing the artist’s early experimentations in a photo of Salermo harbor that brought him to realize his most iconic works. “My teachers, the conceptual artists Bernd and Hilla Becher, had told me to avoid photographing with sunlight, blue sky or strong shadows, he says. “But I thought the warm sunlight here made for something quite kitsch. Also, up until this point, human beings had been the focus of my work – but here there were none in sight. Yet I was overwhelmed by what I saw: the complexity of the image, the accumulation of goods, the cars, the containers. I hadn’t been sure the photograph would work. I just felt compelled. It was pure intuition.” (more…)

Tate Britain Director Alex Farquharson Interviewed in Art Newspaper

Friday, January 19th, 2018

Tate Britain director Alex Farquharson is interviewed in the Art Newspaper this week, detailing his vision for a major rehang at the museum. “Tate Britain has an exciting role in presenting art in a societal context, both past and present, so it is a question of the stories that we tell,” he says. “I have set out three pillars that inform our curatorial choices and how we communicate them. These are a trio of relationships: art and society, history and the present, and Britain and the world.” (more…)

Ghent Museum Embroiled in Controversy Over Fake Russian Avant-Garde Works

Thursday, January 18th, 2018

A major controversy is boiling over in Ghent over an exhibition that featured over 25 works attributed to Russian avant-garde artists like Kazimir Malevich and Wassily Kandinsky, which are being labeled as fake by a group of curators and museum professionals.  The news broke thanks to an open letter published by the group of professionals which is printed in full today at the Art Newspaper. (more…)

Moscow Embarking on Building Project to Recreate itself as “Cultural Capital”

Thursday, January 18th, 2018

Moscow is set to embark on a project to build its own “Museum Mile,” part of a project by the Russian city to make it a “cultural capital of the world.” “The idea arrived after understanding the level of cultural segregation in which Moscow has been for so long,” says Teresa Mavica of the V-A-C Foundation. “It’s time for the Russian capital to become more open, for institutions to work together and themselves become an important actor of the social movement—that is what I mean by an art revolution.” (more…)

Renovations at Corcoran Lead to Criticism from Current Students

Thursday, January 18th, 2018

Washington City Paper spotlights the current construction underway at the Corcoran Gallery and George Washington University Art School, and the issues it has caused for current students, some of whom accuse the institution of endangering their health.  “In terms of this being an environmentally safe place to be, it is, and if it were not, I would shut it down,” said Darell Darnell, senior associate vice president for safety and security at the George Washington University. (more…)

SSENSE Publishes Profile in New Artforum Editor David Velasco

Thursday, January 18th, 2018

Artforum’s new editor David Velasco is profiled in a piece at SSENSE today, spotlighting his vision for the magazine and his path forward following the resignation of Knight Landesman. “I can’t disappear anymore,” he jokes. “I used to love disappearing. Now I have to walk through the whole office to get to my corner. It’s more of a display.” (more…)

Global Auction Sales Up 25%

Wednesday, January 17th, 2018

Global auction sales grew 25% last year, reaching $11.21 billion, according to a new report by ArtTactic. New York continued its domination of the global market, with its market seeing 41.7% jump in overall sales, boosting market share to 48.7%.  (more…)

Dis Relaunches as Video-Based Site

Wednesday, January 17th, 2018

Dis Magazine has relaunched its website after a pivot to video, and features new work by Darren Bader, Casey Jane Ellison and more. “People want information and knowledge, but the way it needs to be delivered is changing. We saw a real gap in the market — creating new languages, culture, talking about the most recent thing hasn’t been translated to video,” Dis co-founder Lauren Boyle says. (more…)

Freedman Fitzpatrick Opening Paris Location

Tuesday, January 16th, 2018

Los Angeles gallery Freedman Fitzpatrick is opening a new location in Paris, Art News reports. “Paris is really similar to L.A. in that way,” Robbie Fitzpatrick says. “A lot of artists are moving there from all over. It’s manifesting itself as a dynamic city that has a lot of possibility to explore, on top of already being an incredibly important city for culture, historically.” (more…)

NYT Looks at Current Art Projects Using Cryptocurrency Technologies

Monday, January 15th, 2018

The New York Times takes a look at recent blockchain authorization technology, and fine art projects that have explored the blockchain as both a performative space and a place for authenticating ownership for work. “It’s early days, but this could happen in the blossoming art space as well. The blockchain is an entirely new medium for art,” Mack Flavelle, a developer and artist behind one project called CryptoKitties.  (more…)

Artists, Curators and Directors Pen Open Letter Over Documenta Controversy

Monday, January 15th, 2018

A group of art world professionals have penned an open letter over Kassel’s plans for the future of Documenta, expressing concern over the resignation of director Annette Kulenkampff.  The letter challenges the assertion that there “has been no proof whatsoever of (Kulenkampff’s) culpability” for the program’s budget deficits “which arose through a program concept for which all parties shared responsibility.” (more…)