Archive for the 'Minipost' Category
Wednesday, June 7th, 2017
Tate Britain is planning a rehang of its full collection, Artforum reports, changing the previous hanging strategy of director Penelope Curtis. “We want to look at how social factors caused art to take the forms it did,” director Alex Farquharson said. “So there could be big themes, like London as an urban space in the eighteenth century or Britain in the post-war age of anxiety.” (more…)
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Wednesday, June 7th, 2017
Former financier Asher B. Edelman is charging that Dutch art dealer Remko Spoelstra deceived him in the sale of an Edvard Munch painting. Edelman claims that a loan he secured from his mother’s estate to help sell the piece was never repaid, even after the work was sold for $7 million. (more…)
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Wednesday, June 7th, 2017
The New York Times reports on the ongoing discussions over artist Sam Durant’s artwork recently de-installed at the Walker Art Center, as the Dakota governments in Minnesota debate whether to destroy the work permanently. “There is discussion now within the broader Dakota community about whether it should burn or not burn,” says director Olga Viso. “We’re really clear that it’s for them to decide, not for the Walker or the artist.” (more…)
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Wednesday, June 7th, 2017
David Rockefeller’s art collection is heading to auction at Christie’s, the WSJ reports, carrying a total estimate of over $700 million that would make it the most expensive single collection of art in auction history. “Because he was blessed with great wealth, he always felt a responsibility to give back to society,” says family spokesman Fraser Seitel. “He lived that credo every day of his life.” (more…)
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Wednesday, June 7th, 2017
Artist Glenn Ligon is profiled in the New York Times this week, as he prepares to unveil a new curatorial project in St. Louis, inspired by Ellsworth Kelly’s piece Blue Black. “When I was in the building, the Ellsworth Kelly is massive,” he says. “I had this very funny aural hallucination where I kept hearing Louis Armstrong’s voice singing ‘What did I do to be so black and blue?’” (more…)
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Wednesday, June 7th, 2017
London’s Victoria & Albert Museum has revealed plans for a photography center, the Art Newspaper reports. The Bern and Ronny Schwartz Gallery will open in the fall of next year, and will serve as the home for the institution’s expanded holdings in the medium, and also includes future plans for a darkroom and library. (more…)
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Tuesday, June 6th, 2017
Maria Balshaw has begun her tenure as the Director of the Tate, taking over from Nicholas Serota on June 1st. Balshaw will preside over the increasing scale and scope of the Tate’s varied exhibition spaces, and will push for a more events-driven schedule in the coming years. (more…)
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Tuesday, June 6th, 2017
Rashid Johnson is profiled in The Guardian this week, as the artist embarks on a residency at Hauser & Wirth’s Somerset exhibition space. “Regardless of where you are, the psychological aspect of otherness will follow you,” Johnson says. “I’ve never seen blackness as a ghettoizing concept. I think it can be very empowering. It’s fed my understanding of culture, identity and presence, both socially and psychologically.” (more…)
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Tuesday, June 6th, 2017
The LA Times has a profile on Mexico City’s thriving arts scene, noting its continued growth even in the midst of the country’s occasionally fraught political landscape. “Carlos Monsivais once said that whoever was bored in Mexico City was bored of living,” says Kurimanzutto co-founder José Kuri. “The art infrastructure, the ecology, has become really developed. Galleries, artists, museums — everyone — is responding to the new reality.” (more…)
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Tuesday, June 6th, 2017
Los Angeles’s Acme Gallery will close after 22 years in business, the Art News reports, following the conclusion of its final shows on June 10th. Founders Robert Gunderman and Randy Sommer first opened the space in 1994. (more…)
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Tuesday, June 6th, 2017
The Frick Collection is moving its Pay-What-You-Wish Hours to Wednesday afternoon, moving away from its usual slot on Sunday mornings. The move comes alongside the announcement of a free program on Friday nights, which the museum will aim to pair with its new admission schedule. “By shifting our pay-what-you-wish period to Wednesdays, we hope to accommodate those audiences who aren’t able to take advantage of these free Friday programs,” Frick director Ian Wardropper said in a statement. (more…)
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Tuesday, June 6th, 2017
Dealer Timothy Sammons, a former director at Sotheby’s, is facing extradition to the United States to face trial for fourteen charges of grand larceny, the Times of London reports. Sammons is accused of stealing over $10 million from the sale of works by Pablo Picasso, Henry Moore and Marc Chagall, among others. (more…)
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Tuesday, June 6th, 2017
The New York Times profiles the recently opened exhibition of works from New York’s Hispanic Society of America at the Prado Museum in Madrid, and the response the exhibition has already garnered among viewers. “When some of the society employees saw the exhibition for the first time, some of them started to cry,” said Miguel Falomir, the new director of the Prado and a curator of the show. “They felt such emotion to see their objects on display in a way they had never seen before.” (more…)
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Tuesday, June 6th, 2017
Dan Colen is set for his first major exhibition in London this fall at Damien Hirst’s Newport Street Gallery. The show opens in October, and according to Colen, will be “the first time I’ve been able to present the full range of my work and the wide-ranging ideas, crafts, materials, technologies and processes that I engage with. It will also include large-scale installations that have been specially reconfigured for the show.” (more…)
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Tuesday, June 6th, 2017
Artist Sheena Rose is profiled in the New York Times this week, taking the news on a tour of her home in Barbados, and reflecting on her performative and sculptural work in the past few years. “The trick is just to be honest,” she says. “People want to see themselves.” (more…)
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Friday, June 2nd, 2017
Art Basel is suing Adidas for its release of an “Art Basel” branded shoe last year during an event in Miami. “The complaint speaks for itself,” a spokesperson for the company said. (more…)
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Friday, June 2nd, 2017
SFMoMA has appointed Eungie Joo as its first curator of contemporary art, and will begin her tenure at the museum next month. “Eungie’s arrival signals a deepening of SFMoMA’s commitment to contemporary art. Her international experience in Asia, the Middle East, South America and beyond positions her to convene important conversations and create innovative projects that will help define the art of our time in the broadest sense,” says Ruth Berson, deputy museum director of curatorial affairs. “We look forward to seeing how her leadership in the field and the support of our community will help keep SFMoMA at the forefront of this dynamic field.” (more…)
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Friday, June 2nd, 2017
The Whitney Museum has appointed Kim Conaty as its curator of drawings and prints this July. “Following a tremendous period of growth, the museum has broken new ground in its exhibition program while also making a decisive commitment to the care, research, and presentation of its collection,” Conaty says. “I look forward to collaborating with the museum’s exceptional team and to developing future projects and research initiatives that will highlight the richness and diversity of its extraordinary collection of drawings and prints.” (more…)
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Thursday, June 1st, 2017
MoMA is preparing to unveil the final designs for its $400 million renovation project, with a distinct move toward more historically and thematically-oriented hanging strategies. “It’s a rethinking of how we were originally conceived,” director Glenn Lowry says. “We had created a narrative for ourselves that didn’t allow for a more expansive reading of our own collection, to include generously artists from very different backgrounds.” (more…)
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Wednesday, May 31st, 2017
Tate Britain’s David Hockney retrospective has been tapped as the institution’s most popular exhibition, boasting attendance of nearly 500,000 viewers. “The response to this retrospective – the first in 29 years – has been incredible,” says Alex Farquharson, director of Tate Britain. “It is wonderful that so many people have had the chance to see it, and that they found the exhibition so exciting, thought-provoking and moving. We look forward to many more people seeing the exhibition when it travels to Paris and New York.” (more…)
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Wednesday, May 31st, 2017
As the Robert Rauschenberg exhibition opens at MoMA, the New Yorker looks back at one of the artist’s smallest works, a small thumbprint he made for the magazine in 1964. “’We must pay him something,'” writer Calvin Tomkins remembers his editor William Shawn saying of the piece. “‘What do you think? Would fifty dollars sound right?’”
(more…)
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Wednesday, May 31st, 2017
Artist Grayson Perry is set to open a show of works at the Serpentine Gallery, cheekily titled The Most Popular Art Exhibition Ever!, and featuring a range of pieces exploring Brexit, modern politics, and other themes. (more…)
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Wednesday, May 31st, 2017
Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa is featured in the New York Times, discussing his decision to purchase a number of Jean-Michel Basquiat works for his private museum collection. “I want to show beautiful things and share them with everyone,” he says, adding that he plans on loaning his works around the globe. “It would be a waste just to keep it all to myself.” (more…)
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Wednesday, May 31st, 2017
Following several protests and vocal criticism, artist Sam Durant will remove a sculpture depicting a gallows from the Walker Art Center sculpture park. The work, originally conceived as a critique of racist executions and state-sponsored killings in the United States, particularly the execution of 38 Dakota men by the U.S. Government, saw fierce protest from Dakota residents in Minneapolis, ultimately leading Durant to dismantle the work. “Whites created the concept of race and have used it to maintain dominance for centuries, whites must be involved in its dismantling,” he said in an emailed statement. “However, your protests have shown me that I made a grave miscalculation in how my work can be received by those in a particular community. In focusing on my position as a white artist making work for that audience I failed to understand what the inclusion of the Dakota 38 in the sculpture could mean for Dakota people. I offer my deepest apologies for my thoughtlessness.” (more…)
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