Archive for the 'Minipost' Category
Tuesday, March 22nd, 2016
Phyllida Barlow is on the shortlist for the Hepworth prize, joining Helen Marten and David Medalla for the prestigious UK sculpture award. “Without doubt, it will be a thrilling experience to exhibit at the Hepworth Wakefield and to take into consideration its dynamic architecture which has sculpture very much in mind,” she says. (more…)
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Tuesday, March 22nd, 2016
Phillips has announced a trio of Mark Bradford compositions will lead its May Contemporary Auctions in New York. “Phillips is honored to have been entrusted with the sale of this collection, led by these three fantastic Mark Bradford paintings,” says Jean-Paul Engelen, Phillips Worldwide Head of Contemporary Art. “In recent years, Bradford has emerged as one of the foremost contemporary artists of his generation. This powerful group of works not only demonstrates the artist’s tremendous technical skill, but also the depth of his subject matter. He’s truly a contemporary master.” (more…)
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Tuesday, March 22nd, 2016
A joint collaboration between The J. Paul Getty Trust in Los Angeles and the Netherlands Institute for Conservation, Arts and Science (NICAS) will see the two museums engage in the development of new archival and conservation technology. “We want to continue moving the field forward. By identifying where we want to be in the future, we can design a course of research and development to get there,” Getty President James Cuno says. “This joint effort helps us chart that course.” (more…)
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Saturday, March 19th, 2016
The First Division Appellate Court has ruled that Christie’s must pay out over $700,000 in damages to Madison Avenue Gallery Chowaiki & Co over damages to its artworks stored at the auction house’s Red Hook facility during Hurricane Sandy, the NY Post reports. “I am pleased with the decision,” says attorney Eliot Greenberg, who represents the gallery. (more…)
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Saturday, March 19th, 2016
The Art Market Monitor points to a recent Swiss news article that seems to refute Picasso heir Catherine Hutin-Blay’s claims that Yves Bouvier stole works from her storage facility and resold them. The article points to paperwork that pokes holes in the claim that Hutin-Blay never knew or did business with the dealer. (more…)
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Saturday, March 19th, 2016
Karma is moving to the Lower East Side this week, and opened its new location on last night Orchard Street with a show of works by Paul Lee. “It could be temporary or it could be permanent. I really like the idea of it, and the location is really great,” says owner Brendon Dugan. “There’s lots of new foot traffic here.” (more…)
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Saturday, March 19th, 2016
One of Francis Bacon’s strongest self-portraits will go on sale at Sotheby’s this coming May, carrying an estimate of $22-$30 million. “Two Studies for a Self-Portrait goes straight in at number one of all the paintings I’ve handled in my career” says Oliver Barker, Senior International Specialist in Contemporary Art. “It’s certainly among the greatest self-portraits ever offered at auction.” (more…)
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Saturday, March 19th, 2016
The New Art Dealers Alliance has announced the dates and exhibitor list for the 2016 edition of its New York Fair, taking place during Frieze Week at Basketball City downtown. (more…)
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Thursday, March 17th, 2016
Thirteen Italians and Moldavians have been arrested in connection with the art heist last fall from the Museum of Castelvecchio, which saw works by Tintoretto, Pisanello, and Rubens disappear in an overnight theft. “We hope to succeed in recovering all the paintings in good condition,” says Flavio Tosi, the mayor of Verona. (more…)
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Wednesday, March 16th, 2016
The Russian deputy culture minister, Grigory Pirumov, has been arrested on charges of embezzlement, taking state funds intended for restorations at historical sites. “This is a real shock for all of us,” says culture minster Vladimir Medinsky. “We are working with the investigators, we will provide all necessary assistance, and the official position of the ministry will be formulated in the nearest future.” (more…)
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Wednesday, March 16th, 2016
The New York Times looks at recent trends towards sustainability in museum construction and renovation, including the use of repurposed or receycled material in recent projects like The Whitney and The University of California, Berkeley, Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. “At its very fundamental core, this is a project about sustainability,” says Lawrence Rinder, the director of UC Berkley’s museum. “At a philosophical level, it was about the sustainability of our institution — we were in a seismologically unsound building and had to move to preserve our collection and our audience and our programming.” (more…)
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Tuesday, March 15th, 2016
The Art Newspaper reports on Robert Mapplethorpe’s upcoming exhibitions at LACMA and the Getty, and the challenges of presenting works from his X Portfolio, a sexually provocative body of work that was used in the artist’s early 1990’s obscenity trials. “One must ease the public into it—that’s an art in itself,” Mapplethorpe is quoted in reference to the work. (more…)
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Monday, March 14th, 2016
Five paintings by Francis Bacon, valued at upwards of €30 million, have been stolen from a home in Madrid, The Guardian reports. One unnamed expert states that they will be difficult to sell on the market. “It is not at all easy to sell a Francis Bacon, large or small, without that getting to the ears of those who pore over such a rarified sector,” they said. (more…)
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Monday, March 14th, 2016
Jeffrey Deitch will be reopening his famed Deitch Projects gallery space at its former 18 Wooster Street location, Art News reports, with current resident Swiss Institute relocating at the conclusion of its lease. Deitch is the owner of the building that houses the gallery. “Swiss Institute has been a fixture of the NYC art community since our founding almost 30 years ago, and we will continue to present exhibitions at our location at 18 Wooster Street until our lease ends,” says director Simon Castets. “We will soon be announcing details about our future plans.” (more…)
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Monday, March 14th, 2016
British Petroleum is withdrawing its controversial sponsorship of the Tate next year, citing an “extremely challenging business environment,” rather than the ongoing protests over its contributions to the museums. “They are free to express their points of view but our decision wasn’t influenced by that. It was a business decision,” says Peter Mather, head of BP in the UK. (more…)
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Monday, March 14th, 2016
Pelham Holdings, which represents the legal interests of the Qatari royal family, has filed a new legal complaint in Manhattan federal court, providing a detailed chronology of the sale of the disputed Picasso bust. The filing states that Maya Widmaier-Picasso’s daughter Diana received a lucrative contract for the work’s $106 million sale to Larry Gagosian, shortly after the original sale to the Qatari family was canceled. (more…)
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Monday, March 14th, 2016
The New Yorker has published a selection of photos by Bill Jacobsen, documenting the transitional period between the Whitney’s departure and the Met’s arrival in the Breuer building. The photos, showing the space’s stripped bare architecture, welcomes both a familiarity with the Whitney’s former home, and an appreciation for the unique architecture its original designer had embraced. (more…)
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Monday, March 14th, 2016
The New York Times takes a tour of Tom Sach’s studio this week, as the artist prepares for an upcoming installation of a ceremonial tea house at the Isamu Noguchi Museum in Queens. “It’s a way of creating an armature for ritualized activity, where we overcome our differences,” the artist says. “Within the act of preparing and serving a bowl of tea, we have the opening to investigate human relationships and the human condition.” (more…)
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Sunday, March 13th, 2016
The New York Times interviews artist Maria Hassabi this week, as her piece Plastic gains increasing attention at MoMA this month for its placement of shifting, gradually moving bodies across the floors and stairwells of the institution. “It was really important for me, while making the work, to keep thinking of the three-dimensionality,” says Ms. Hassabi, “to know there would be people everywhere around us, that people were going to ignore us, and that somewhere in there, somebody would stay and pay attention to us.” (more…)
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Sunday, March 13th, 2016
The FT profiles Andrew Butterfield this week, a dealer known for his impressive work in researching and rediscovering lost Old Masters works. In the story, Butterfield discusses some of his greatest finds, like a rare Donatello sculpture, and how these works can go overlooked for so long. “Often what you’re looking at is literally covered in paint from later periods,” he says. “Varnish is a very common mode of second-tier restorers. It’s an easy and a cheap way of solving problems. You’re getting rid of any imperfections. But you’re also getting rid of the perfections.” (more…)
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Sunday, March 13th, 2016
A Francis Bacon painting has been discovered on the back of two paintings by Irish artist Tony O’Malley. O’Malley seems to have divided the wooden board backing his works, on which Bacon’s piece, Figure, is painted, to create two other paintings, but the pair have recently been reunited, and are being sold at Christie’s in London as a set, estimated at £20,000- £30,000. “Now these paintings, and the lost Bacon study, will be reunited and viewed together for the first time in almost 60 years,” the auction house said in a statement. (more…)
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Sunday, March 13th, 2016
The Kunsthaus in Zurich is facing criticism over its construction over a 14th Century Jewish cemetary, and its inclusion of works from the collection of Nazi arms dealer Emil Georg Bührle. “We were playing with open cards about the past when the vote took place in 2012,” said Björn Quellenberg, a spokesman for the Kunsthaus. “That was the time to discuss it.” (more…)
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Sunday, March 13th, 2016
The Annual sales reports from TEFAF (The European Fine Art Fair) this year have 2015’s total sales figure at $63.8 billion, a 7% decline from 2014. “The main reason for the negative growth is that the bigger the market gets, the harder it is to keep growing at as fast a pace,” says economist Clare McAndrew, who presented the report. (more…)
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Friday, March 11th, 2016
Gagosian Gallery has announced plans to open a gallery in San Francisco, across the street from the newly renovated SFMoMA. “This makes sense with the new museum opening and with the emerging collector base in Silicon Valley,” Larry Gagosian said. (more…)
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