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

Archive for the 'Minipost' Category

Seventeen Corbusier Buildings Added to UNESCO World Heritage Site List

Thursday, July 21st, 2016

Seventeen buildings by Le Corbusier have been named UNESCO World Heritage Sites this week, with the organization calling his work a “testimonial to the invention of a new architectural language that made a break with the past.”  The Complexe du Capitole in Chandigarh in India; the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo, Japan; and the House of Dr Curutchet in La Plata, Argentina are all included on the list. (more…)

Leslie Waddington’s Art Collection to Go On Sale at Christie’s This Fall in London

Thursday, July 21st, 2016

The £20 million private collection of late dealer Leslie Waddington is set for the auction blocks this fall at Christie’s in London, the Telegraph reports.  The sale includes landmark pieces by Jean Dubuffet, Alexander Calder, and Agnes Martin.   (more…)

Iranian Artist Permitted to Leave Country

Thursday, July 21st, 2016

Previously detained, Iranian artist Parviz Tanavoli has been allowed to leave Iran for Vancouver, where he operates a studio.  “I am accused by the police,” Tanavoli says.  “The accusations are that my art is based on ‘spreading the falsehood’ and ‘creating public anxiety’. On 10 July I went to court with my lawyer and I was given the above allegations.” (more…)

MoMA Acquires Early Faith Ringgold Piece

Thursday, July 21st, 2016

MoMA has acquired and hung an early Faith Ringgold piece from 1967 in its galleries, a searingly critical piece that echoes a renewed critical and institutional appreciation of her early career.    (more…)

Kimberly Drew Profiled in New Yorker

Thursday, July 21st, 2016

Kimberly Drew, social media manager at The Met and founder of the popular Black Contemporary Art blog, is profiled in The New Yorker this week.  “I built the blog as a critique of the art world, and now it has a seat in that world,” she said. “There’s a lot of work I post that I don’t particularly like, but maybe it will resonate with someone else’s experience.” (more…)

Yayoi Kusama Illustrates Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Little Mermaid”

Monday, July 18th, 2016

Yayoi Kusama has unveiled a recently completed version of the Hans Christian Andersen classic, The Little Mermaid, featuring her illustrations for a collaboration with Denmark’s Louisiana Museum of Modern Art.  “In the past few years there have been many exhibitions of my work touring the world,” Kusama said recently.  “I would like people to feel my creation and its message. Once they manage to feel it, I am reminded of the greatness of the hymn of being human and the mystery of it and that makes me very happy.” (more…)

New York Times Reports on Misguided Nazi Loot Repatriations

Monday, July 18th, 2016

The New York Times has further details on the return of Nazi-looted artworks to the families of Nazi officials who had looted the pieces in the first place.  “The basic element of this story is this: They stole from my family,” says John Graykowski, the great-grandson of collectors Gottlieb and Mathilde Kraus, “and then they gave it back to the guy who stole it from them. How does that work?” (more…)

Jeff Koons Studio Lays Off Workers in Midst of Unionization Attempts

Monday, July 18th, 2016

Anonymous sources have reported that Jeff Koons’s studio has allegedly laid off a group of painters after the group attempted to unionize, Art F City reports.  Legal proceedings are reportedly underway, but no sources were available to comment on the case.  If proven that the lay-offs were the result of a unionization attempt, the studio is in violation of the National Labor Relations Act. (more…)

UCLA Set to Move Forward on Art School Expansion

Monday, July 18th, 2016

The UC Board of Regents is set to approve the UCLA Art School expansion, funded in part by gallerist Margo Leavin.  “We’ve had these plans, but it sat fallow there for the longest time,” says painter and UCLA educator Lari Pittman.  “But Margo drove it. She asked questions. She wanted to know things. She wanted to meet the dean. That’s how it slowly got its legs.” (more…)

New Tests Lead to Withdrawal of Formaldehyde Exposure Concerns on Damien Hirst’s Works

Monday, July 18th, 2016

The recent report that Damien Hirst’s formaldehyde sculptures are potentially harmful to viewers’ health has been retracted by its author, who now claims the findings are “inaccurate and unreliable.”  “Science Ltd and the authors of the paper co-operated to conduct further tests on formaldehyde works using the equipment referred to in the paper as well as commercially available equipment used by Science Ltd to test the presence of formaldehyde fumes,” a spokeswoman for Hirst said. “It was agreed that there cannot have been formaldehyde present at the dangerously high levels originally cited in the paper and, accordingly, there was never any risk to the public.” (more…)

Met Could Cut Upwards of 100 Jobs in Coming Months

Monday, July 18th, 2016

The Met’s job cuts could likely reach 100 in core areas after its buyouts, as the museum continues to seek relief from a $10 million operating deficit.  “There is no letting up on the quality and the commitment we have to excellence — nothing we’re doing will be discernible or visible to the public,” says the museum President and COO Daniel H. Weiss. “We’re planning to streamline our budgets but not to diminish our mission.” (more…)

BBC Claims it Has Identified Lost Lucian Freud Work Already Denied by Artist

Monday, July 18th, 2016

The BBC is claiming it has identified a lost Lucian Freud work, despite the fact that the artist had repeatedly claimed he never painted the work over the course of his lifetime.  “Freud is a colossus of 20th-century modern art, and challenging his word was something we undertook with some trepidation,” says Fiona Bruce, host of Fake or Fortune, where the show was analyzed. (more…)

Financial Times Charts Art Market Weaknesses

Monday, July 18th, 2016

The Financial Times looks deeper on recent market strength, noting a drop in both the volume and value of sales at Sotheby’s after the auction house released its first half earnings for 2016.  Sotheby’s will release its private sales figures in August. (more…)

Ai Weiwei Installs Life Jacket Piece in Vienna’s Belvedere Palace Pool

Saturday, July 16th, 2016

Ai Weiwei has installed one of his life jacket sculptures in the pool outside of Vienna’s Belvedere Palace this month, continuing his work advocating for and exploring the crisis of Syrian refugees on the Greek island of Lesbos.  “There are more than 500,000 life jackets left on [Lesbos] and it looks like a landscape,” he says. “It is something so related to individuals. It could be the last thing you grab when you have to escape.” (more…)

LA Neighborhood Activists Calling for all Art Galleries to Leave Boyle Heights

Saturday, July 16th, 2016

The LA Weekly reports on recent conflicts between art galleries and neighborhood activists in the East LA neighborhood of Boyle Heights, where a group of residents are calling for all art galleries to leave the neighborhood.  “We’re not against art or culture,” says Maga Miranda, who spoke at a recent community meeting . “Obviously, the Eastside has been an incredibly active place when it comes to art and culture. But the art galleries are part of a broader effort by planners and politicians and developers who want to artwash gentrification.” (more…)

LACMA Attendance Grows to 1.4 Million Visitors Yearly

Saturday, July 16th, 2016

LACMA has posted a attendance total of 1.4 million visitors for the past year, marking the continued impact of Michael Govan’s programming and perspective.  Since taking over in 2008, Govan’s projects have grown the museum attendance from 800,000 visitors yearly.  (more…)

David Bowie’s Art Collection to Go on Sale this November

Thursday, July 14th, 2016

David Bowie’s personal art collection is set to go on view this fall in London, shortly before hitting the auction block in November at Sotheby’s.  Rarely seen, the collection includes works by Damien Hirst, Henry Moore and Marcel Duchamp.  “David Bowie’s collection offers a unique insight into the personal world of one of the 20th Century’s greatest creative spirits,” says Oliver Barker. (more…)

Louvre Announces New App

Thursday, July 14th, 2016

The Louvre has launched its own museum browsing app, which will, among other things, help viewers to locate themselves within the institution’s sprawling layout.  “The Louvre is a palace and doesn’t have the logic of a museum,” says Museum President Jean-Luc Martinez. “The little revolution here is that our application instantly gives your location in three dimensions.” (more…)

Walker Art Center Receives $1 million Mellon Foundation Grant

Thursday, July 14th, 2016

The Walker Art Center has received a $1 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, which has been earmarked for artist commissions, projects and research.  “Contemporary artists have blurred the lines between artistic disciplines for decades, and museums and performing art centers like ourselves must remain responsive to these evolving practices,” The Walker’s executive director, Olga Viso, said. (more…)

Jerome Bêl Launching Performance Featuring MoMA Staff This Fall

Thursday, July 14th, 2016

Jerome Bêl has been invited to perform a work in the MoMA atrium this October, and will feature 25 Museum staff performing the artist’s unique choreography.  “Bel has invited each participating member of staff to choreograph a brief solo dance of their choice,” a release says. (more…)

New York Times Charts the Recent Life of Chuck Close

Thursday, July 14th, 2016

The New York Times writes on the recent life and work of Chuck Close, who has suddenly filed for divorce from his wife, moved out to Long Beach, New York, and dealt with health issues that have made working increasingly difficult.  “I’ve been in a struggle with my children to see which of us was going to be a grown-up first, and they won,” Close says. “I still live entirely in the moment. I don’t think about the past. It drives the people around me crazy.” (more…)

Diane Arbus Profiled in New York Magazine

Thursday, July 14th, 2016

Diane Arbus is profiled in New York Magazine this week, as the Met Breuer opens an impressive exhibition charting her life and development as an artist.  “Once you’ve become an adventurer, because Diane was really an adventure,” a friend says, “you’re geared to adventure, you seek out further adventures, and your life is really based upon them.” (more…)

Artists Constructing Wall on Mexican Border, Sending Bill to Mexico

Tuesday, July 12th, 2016

A pair of artists have begun constructing the oft-debated wall Donald Trump has called for on the Mexico-US border this week, with the intent of sending the bill for their work to Mexico.  “Art has to be present more in these disruptive and contentious moments,” participating artist David Gleeson said. (more…)

Bloomberg Recounts the Legal Battle Over the Wildenstein Family’s Inheritance Lawsuit

Tuesday, July 12th, 2016

Bloomberg reports on the ongoing battle surrounding the inheritance tax lawsuit of the Wildenstein family, as Guy Wildenstein continues to sell off assets to pay off what may be a $500 million tax bill, and seeks to maintain what has been a notoriously private life away from his business.  “My brother and I were clueless,” the article quotes. “My father never spoke of his business. He would not come to ask me for advice to manage his fortune or dispose of his property while he was alive. I knew he had the trusts, but he never informed me of detail.”  (more…)