Archive for the 'Minipost' Category
Tuesday, June 13th, 2017
Artist Wu Tsang is creating an underground library space, The secret life of things is open in Basel this week at Club de Bâle, located at Rheinsprung 5, for the Art Basel Parcours section. The three-year long project, made in collaboration with writer Fred Moten, features films, sound works and printed texts. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Wu Tsang to Open Underground Library at Art Basel
Tuesday, June 13th, 2017
LACMA has added three new members to its board, including collector Allison Berg, Spotify executive Troy Carter and Carter Reum, founder of LA brand-development and investment company M13. “With LACMA’s ambitious building campaign underway, we value these forward-thinking leaders who have a vested interest in shaping the cultural landscape of Los Angeles,” director Michael Govan says. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on LACMA Adds New Board Members
Tuesday, June 13th, 2017
An article in the BBC questions how a museum may shape the perception of an artist’s work by including dark details from their past in the exhibition itself, pointing to a recent show in London where the museum includes details of an artist’s murder and suicide, and asking how these power dynamics might play out in various situations. The piece also points to the controversy surrounding Carl Andre’s work, who was acquitted of the death of artist Ana Mendieta, but whose work is still the subject of fierce protest as a result of her unsolved death. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on BBC Questions How to Separate Artists’ Dark Pasts from Their Work
Tuesday, June 13th, 2017
The Estate of California businesswoman Madeleine Rast has willed $9 million to the National Museum of Women in the Arts in D.C., the largest donation the museum has ever received. “You can’t help but cry tears of joy,” says director Susan Fisher Sterling. “She felt we were doing the job she wanted us to do. She was eager to support an institution that was thriving.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Madeleine Rast Wills $9 million to the National Museum of Women in the Arts
Monday, June 12th, 2017
The estate of painter James Rosenquist has named Thaddaeus Ropac as its global representative, the Financial Times reports. “Jim’s work and legacy is in great hands,” says Mimi Thompson Rosenquist, board director of the estate and the artist’s widow. The gallery is offering his work The Meteor Hits the Swimmer’s Pillow at Art Basel this week. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Thaddaeus Ropac to Represent James Rosenquist Estate Worldwide
Monday, June 12th, 2017
The Financial Times profiles the Fondation Beyeler this week, as the privately run museum in Riehen prepares to open for another Basel Art Week. “One instantly gets a sense of vision when entering the Fondation Beyeler,” says Reto Thuring, curator of contemporary art at the Cleveland Museum of Art. “It’s a place where art and everything that surrounds and supports it seem to be truly balanced and in a productive dialogue with each other, and that’s a rare thing nowadays.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Fondation Beyeler Profiled in Financial Times
Monday, June 12th, 2017
Lisson Gallery founder Nicholas Logsdail is profiled in the Financial Times this week, as his gallery celebrates its 50th year in operation. “The Cork Street crowd were snickering down their sleeves at me and I knew they were, and I enjoyed it,” he says of his early years. “We had been showing some of the greatest artists of our time in the present rather than their wallowing in the past.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Nicholas Logsdail Profiled in FT
Monday, June 12th, 2017
Writer and artist Michel Houellebecq is profiled in the New Yorker this week, as the artist opens his new show of photographs at Venus Over Manhattan. “I don’t take pictures of human beings, because I prefer literature for describing a human being,” he says. “And I don’t do much description of the landscape in my books, because I find that a photo is better.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Michel Houellebecq’s Photographs Profiled in New Yorker
Monday, June 12th, 2017
Marina Abramovic and Jeff Koons are part of a new virtual reality art project, Acute Art, which will promote and exhibit new works in virtual reality by the artists. “One of the things I noticed with VR is a tremendous sense of center,” says Koons. “Knowing that I am within a space and understanding the parameters around me. I have also noticed that one’s affirmation of existence is always missing. You look down at your feet and there’s nothing there, so there’s a lot to be said about defining your own presence.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Marina Abramovic and Jeff Koons Fronting Virtual Reality Art Project
Monday, June 12th, 2017
Agnes Gund has sold a Roy Lichtenstein painting from her collection for over $150 million, using the money to fund a criminal justice reform project. “The larger idea is to raise awareness among a community of art collectors that they can use their influence and their collections to advance social justice,” says Darren Walker, president of the Ford Foundation. “Art has meaning on a wall, but it also has meaning when it is monetized.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Agnes Gund Sells $150 Million Lichtenstein to Fund Criminal Justice Reform
Monday, June 12th, 2017
As William Pope L.’s Claim goes off view at the Whitney this week, the Atlantic reflects on recent challenges to art conservation, particularly with works involving food or other perishable materials. “I bet you can ask me about any food in existence and I’ll tell you at least three significant concerns. Food drastically changes in composition over time,” says Emily MacDonald-Korth, founder of the Art Preservation Index. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Atlantic Notes Challenges of Perishable Materials to Conservators
Monday, June 12th, 2017
Lisson Gallery has taken on the foundation of painter Leon Polk Smith, and will present a show of the artist’s works in New York this fall. The artist was considered a major influence on a younger generation of color field and hard-edged abstractionists like Ellsworth Kelly and Al Held. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Lisson Gallery to Represent Leon Polk Smith
Monday, June 12th, 2017
Painter Lynette Yiadom-Boakye is profiled in the New Yorker this week, spotlighting the artist’s dramatic work on view at the New Museum this summer, and her parallel work as a writer. “I don’t paint about the writing or write about the painting,” she says of her work. “It’s just the opposite, in fact: I write about the things I can’t paint and paint the things I can’t write about.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Lynette Yiadom-Boakye Interviewed in New Yorker
Monday, June 12th, 2017
An article in the New York Times this week examines the shifting tastes and popularities of various mediums, artists and styles in the secondary market, as the contemporary market’s continued hegemony leaves dealers and galleries scrambling to keep up. “There’s a domino effect,” says dealer Howard Rehs, who specializes in classical art. “People see high levels of unsold lots and it becomes difficult to attract works that can carry the market. Where have all the paintings gone?” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on New York Times Examines Market Trends and Challenges for Classical Art
Saturday, June 10th, 2017
Artist Huguette Caland is profiled in the New Yorker this week, as the artist’s work begins to see broader exposure at the Venice Biennale and elsewhere. The piece profiles the artist’s life and work, including a story from her daughter, Brigitte, in which the artist entreated a woman to rescue a painting from a Beirut restaurant threatened by bombing, then gifted her with the piece. “Mom says, ‘Now that the painting is safe, you can keep it if you wish,’ ” her daughter says. “She has it in her living room.”
(more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Huguette Caland Profiled in New Yorker
Saturday, June 10th, 2017
Artist William Pope L. has been awarded the Whitney Biennial’s $100,000 Bucksbaum Award for his work in the 2017 edition of the exhibition. “For almost four decades, Pope.L has challenged us to confront some of the most pressing questions about American society as well as about the very nature of art,” Museum Director Adam Weinberg says. “We are thrilled that he is joining the illustrious group of American artists whom we have honored with the Bucksbaum Award.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on William Pope L. Wins 2017 Bucksbaum Award at Whitney Biennial
Friday, June 9th, 2017
Katie Hollander has stepped down as the head of Creative Time, with deputy director, Alyssa Nitchun, will serve as acting director in the interim. “After almost a decade at Creative Time, the time is right for me to explore new possibilities,” Hollander said in a statement. “My time spent with this organization—the incredible artists, partners, and colleagues that I’ve had the pleasure to work with and the inspiring projects that we’ve created together—will always be a career highlight.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Katie Hollander Steps Down as Head of Creative Time
Friday, June 9th, 2017
Artist Andrea Fraser is embarking on a project to chart the various political donations made by American museum patrons and trustees, which will explore ties between museum institutions and American political power. “For me, the larger question about the relationship between museums, trustees and the political field has to do with plutocracy—the fact that the United States is now a plutocracy and that museums, in their origins, are a product of plutocracy,” she says. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Andrea Fraser Takes on Museum Trustees in New Project
Friday, June 9th, 2017
Karole P.B. Vail will take over in Venice as the next director of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, the Art News reports. Vail has worked as a curator at the Guggenheim Museum in New York since 1997. “I have the deepest respect for her scholarship, curatorial insight, unfailingly sound judgment, and collegial management style,” Guggenheim director Richard Armstrong said in a statement. “I have the utmost confidence in her ability to lead the Peggy Guggenheim Collection into the future, and know that her personal ties to the institution and roots in Italy and Europe will add an unmatched depth and nuance to her work.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Karole P.B. Vail to Head Up Peggy Guggenheim Collection
Friday, June 9th, 2017
LACMA is launching its first-ever Kickstarter Project, aiming to raise funds to bring Guatemala City’s Nuevo Museo de Art Contemporáneo, a small, egg-shaped museum, to Los Angeles for its upcoming Pacific Standard Time exhibition. “It’s playful, but it was also dead serious when it comes to the effort,” said LACMA’s Rita Gonzalez, co-curator of PST. “We were really impacted going to NuMu. It was the spirit of the place — two artists who launched a contemporary art museum in a former egg stand.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on LACMA Launches Kickstarter to Bring Egg-Shaped Museum to LA from Guatemala City
Friday, June 9th, 2017
The Fondazione Piero Manzoni will be represented by Hauser & Wirth, the Art News reports. “Manzoni already has quite a strong following in American collections and museums,” gallery partner Marc Payot said. “But what I think is important is engaging with a new, younger crowd of critics, curators, and thinkers, and really bringing this to life today.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Fondazione Piero Manzoni to Move Representation to Hauser & Wirth
Friday, June 9th, 2017
New York’s Armory Show has named Gabriel Ritter, curator at the Minneapolis Institute of Art, and Jen Mergel, former senior curator at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, as curators for its 2018 edition. “The growth of these curated sections and the introduction of a curatorial leadership summit reflect the Armory Show’s core identity as a place for presenting new ideas and strong curatorial viewpoints,” says Benjamin Genocchio, the Armory Show’s executive director. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Armory Show Names Curators for 2018 Edition
Friday, June 9th, 2017
The Art Newspaper profiles the work of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, an organization that has promoted the work of African-American artists of the South working beyond the traditional gallery system, and which will take over the DeYoung Museum in San Francisco for a major exhibition this year. “We’ve spent a lot of time trying to illustrate to people that a great Gee’s Bend quilt or a Thornton Dial sculpture or a Lonnie Holley can stand next to any contemporary work,” says board member Michael Sellman. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Art Newspaper Profiles Souls Grown Deep Foundation
Friday, June 9th, 2017
Kurt Schwitters’s Merz Barn in Cumbria, UK, is under threat as funding dries up to maintain the artist’s small stone studio and installation, and many art institutions refuse to take on its maintenance. “Don’t get me wrong, we love it – but we’re two old people who realistically can’t be here laboring for much longer,” says Ian Hunter, one of the lone people currently working to maintain the space. “So what we’ve tried to do is keep it going as best we can because we feel like we have a moral responsibility.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Kurt Schwitters’s Merz Barn Under Threat in Cumbria