Archive for the 'Minipost' Category
Tuesday, December 8th, 2020
A mural on the wall of the restaurant at Tate Britain has been deemed offensive, and will likely lead to the restaurant’s closure. The mural was criticized for racist depictions of non-Europeans. The museum’s trustees have not been satisfied with explanations of the work by the museum. (more…)
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Monday, December 7th, 2020
Dia Chelsea will reopen in April, the NYT reports. “From the beginning, we’ve been trying to do this in an economical fashion and really not overextend,â€Â says director, Jessica Morgan. (more…)
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Monday, December 7th, 2020
Artist Titus Kaphar has an interview this week on CBS News, discussing his work and recent show at Gagosian. “I think the paintings do speak to those different kinds of disappearance that happens to young Black children, that is the violence against them by police, that is being poisoned by the water in our communities, Flint, that is natural disasters that the country hasn’t come up and really completely finished resolving and repairing yet,” he says. (more…)
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Monday, December 7th, 2020
An artist group called The Most Famous Artist has taken credit for the monoliths installed in Utah and California this past month. “I am not able to say much because of legalities of the original installation,†says group member Matty Mo. “I can say we are well known for stunts of this nature and at this time we are offering authentic art objects through monoliths-as-a-service. I cannot issue additional images at this time, but I can promise more on this in the coming days and weeks.†(more…)
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Monday, December 7th, 2020
An investigation into Dutch Museum restitution policies has found that the restitution review panel in the country too frequently sides with the institutions which hold the works in question. “If it’s looted art and there’s an heir, the interests of the museum shouldn’t be taken into account,†Jacob Kohnstamm, a lawyer who led the panel that wrote the report. “We’re trying to strive for justice.†(more…)
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Friday, December 4th, 2020
The Supreme Court will consider a case over whether the heirs of Jewish art dealers can sue to recover works and/or compensation for looted works, a case concerning forced sale and the question of whether works are recoverable. “The Nazi regime stripped German Jews of the protection of the rule of law from the moment Hitler took power and declared explicitly that Jews were not ‘German.’â€Â says Boston attorney Nicholas O’Donnell. (more…)
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Friday, December 4th, 2020
Frieze has taken gallery space in London’s Mayfair District. “We can confirm that Frieze is planning to take a lease on 9 and 9a Cork Street, subject to obtaining all relevant permissions, with a view to create a space for ambitious exhibition projects. Further updates and information will be available in the forthcoming months,” a spokesperson says. (more…)
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Friday, December 4th, 2020
In a new study, an AI algorithm capable of creating Chinese landscape paintings fooled human evaluators over 50% of the time. Princeton student Alice Xue’s work on whether a machine could pass a Visual Turing Test showed that machines are now able to create works able to fool evaluators over half the time. (more…)
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Friday, December 4th, 2020
Tracey Emin has an interview in the Art Newspaper this week, as she discusses her recently opened shows and challenging 2020. “I think when I was younger, I had more of a blind ambition,†she says. “Now I haven’t got that at all. I just need to do the things I want to do.â€Â (more…)
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Thursday, December 3rd, 2020
Artist Christoph Büchel is being pressured by the Venice Biennale to return the sunken boat he exhibited at last year’s Venice Biennale in memory of the drowned migrants who died onboard. “Starting in November 2019, we have repeatedly asked Christoph Büchel and his gallery Hauser & Wirth, to respect the commitment the artist made to return [the boat] to its owner, the municipality of Augusta in Sicily, which loaned it to Büchel,†the Venice Biennale said in a statement. (more…)
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Thursday, December 3rd, 2020
The Tate has announced plans to cut around 12% of its workforce, amounting to around 120 full-time positions, in order to survive the economic impact of the pandemic. “We hope that this voluntary process will help us make these significant savings, but we cannot rule out having to move to compulsory redundancy in 2021 to meet the necessary level of reductions. If so, we will protect as many jobs as possible and ensure that no area of the workforce is unfairly hit harder than any other,†says director Maria Balshaw. (more…)
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Wednesday, December 2nd, 2020
A young boy thrown from a viewing platform at the Tate Modern can now walk, CNN reports. “Despite everything, he continues to make efforts and progress: he begins to walk with a tetrapod cane while we hold him by the back of the coat for balance,” the boy’s family says. (more…)
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Tuesday, December 1st, 2020
A piece in Art News this week charts former banker David Schrader’s impact on Sotheby’s private sales division. “He knows a lot about the art world and a lot about business,â€Â says Pace CEO Marc Glimcher. “When someone like that enters the art world, it can be a disaster. But for him it was not. He is great to work with.†(more…)
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Tuesday, December 1st, 2020
A series of collaborative works by Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns created for a window display at Bergdorf Goodman will head to auction at Christie’s, Art Market Monitor reports. (more…)
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Tuesday, December 1st, 2020
Sarah McBride, the newly elected state senator for Delaware, and the highest ranking openly transgender elected official in the country, has an interview in Art Newspaper this week, where she speaks on her experiences as a trustee at the Delaware Art Museum. “The arts were an integral part of my self-discovery, my journey toward authenticity,” she says. “It was in the performing arts that I was able to explore my identity, my gender, different experiences and emotions.” (more…)
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Monday, November 30th, 2020
Art News reviews rumors that Frieze is planning an art fair edition in Seoul, South Korea, as local vendors clamor to get an upper hand on any potential announcements. “We are always looking at potential new opportunities and have a great relationship with the Korean galleries, institutions, and collectors,” said a Frieze spokesperson. “Anything is possible, but there’s nothing to report at this stage.†(more…)
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Monday, November 30th, 2020
Art Basel Miami Beach is cancelled, but Miami Art Week is still rolling this week in the Florida city, leading many to question the city’s art scene and motivations, including a dinner party hosted by the recently-divorced Libbie Mugrabi. “Now I settled a divorce and I have a lot of money,†she says. “And I can do whatever I want with it. It’s my choice. And this is what I want to do.†(more…)
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Monday, November 30th, 2020
The German government has approved the highest-ever cultural budget for the country, Art Newspaper reports. “This resounding acknowledgement by parliament of the critical importance of culture and the media is a major signal in these difficult times,†says Culture Minister Monika Grütters. (more…)
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Monday, November 30th, 2020
The mystery around the monolith discovered in the Utah desert has gotten deeper, after the metal structure, which some attribute to artist John McCracken, disappeared from its location. “Almost as quickly as it appeared it has now disappeared,â€Â a statement from the Department of Public Safety reads. (more…)
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Monday, November 30th, 2020
A piece in The Atlantic this week charts the ongoing internal debates over race and representation currently roiling art museums, and points to a long-overdue reckoning amongst arts institutions. “Historically, I would say [collecting decisions depend on] institutional curatorial expertise right there with artists’ intent, and way down the road, thinking about the visitor experience or relevance to the community,†says Lori Fogarty, the executive director of the Oakland Museum of California. “That is shifting … I think we are at a moment of complete reimagination for museums.†(more…)
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Wednesday, November 25th, 2020
A piece in the Art Newspaper details what a Biden administration could mean for the arts. “The big idea was to create a White House office on arts, culture and the creative industries,†says Megan Beyer, the co-chair of the campaign’s Arts Policy Committee and a former executive director of the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities under Obama. (more…)
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Wednesday, November 25th, 2020
A piece in the New York Times looks at the recently discovered steel monolith found in the Utah desert, and asks if the work might actually be a long-hidden piece by John McCracken. “The gallery is divided on this,â€Â the artist’s gallerist, David Zwirner said in a statement. “I believe this is definitely by John.†(more…)
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Tuesday, November 24th, 2020
At least 32 fake invitations to participate in the prestigious Documenta art festival in Kassel have gone out to arts professionals around the globe, Art Newspaper reports. “Unfortunately we don’t know yet who sent them,†says a spokeswoman for Documenta. “We are in contact with experts, but the emails are very well encrypted. Some recipients have noticed that the invitations are not genuine, but others have not and of course it is a great disappointment to them when they find out. We feel very sorry about this.†(more…)
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Tuesday, November 24th, 2020
Hank Willis Thomas does an interview this week with Art News, and holds forth on how he sees his practice working in politics and activism. “If we are dealing with centuries old problems in century old ways, if we really want to transcend we’re going to take action,†he says. (more…)
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