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

Archive for the 'Minipost' Category

Kim Gordon Interviewed in Art News

Monday, July 1st, 2019

Kim Gordon is interviewed in Art News this week, talking about her career and the development of her work. “I was writing, but I didn’t really think of myself as an art writer. I felt more like an anti-art writer,” she says.  (more…)

New LACMA Design Placed on View at LACMA

Monday, July 1st, 2019

The new design for LACMA by Peter Zumthor has been been placed on view at the museum, reproducing several blocks of the Miracle Mile with the new design spread over its expanse.  (more…)

Museum Head Barbara Hunt McLanahan Has Passed Away at 55

Monday, July 1st, 2019

Barbara Hunt McLanahan, who headed a number of New York arts institutions, including Artist’s Space and the Judd Foundation, has died at the age of 55 after a battle with cancer. “Barbara was a remarkable leader, truly a force of nature: dynamic, brilliant, passionate and above all deeply devoted to her family, of which she considered CMA to be a part—and we, her,” says Children’s Museum of the Arts president William Floyd. “She has left an indelible mark that can be seen in every aspect of the museum.” (more…)

Artists Reflect on Legacy of Stonewall Riots

Monday, July 1st, 2019

A piece in the NYT asks a group of artists to reflect on the Stonewall riots, and its legacy in the current American landscape. “The freedom to look how I look and to act how I act are forms of progress hard-won by queer people who fought, at Stonewall and elsewhere, for years,” says artist Rindon Johnson. “The stones thrown, the bones broken and the lives lost are with me now as I pursue my practice.” (more…)

Germany to Return Nazi Looted Painting to Florence

Monday, July 1st, 2019

Germany will return a Jan van Huysum painting stolen by the Nazis the Uffizi Gallery in 1943 to the museum, the BBC reports. The painting was rediscovered in 1991 following the reunification of Germany, but efforts to return it then failed. (more…)

Italian Government Moves to Merge Gallerie degli Uffizi with Galleria dell’Accademia

Monday, July 1st, 2019

The Italian government is moving to merge the Gallerie degli Uffizi with the Galleria dell’Accademia in Florence, Art Newspaper reports.  The merging has drawn criticisms over a perceived lack of autonomy for the respective institutions. (more…)

Lee Rosenbaum Looks at the Auction Landscape as Sotheby’s Goes Private

Monday, July 1st, 2019

Writer Lee Rosenbaum pens a think piece this week on Sotheby’s move to a private company, and what it means for the art world. “No longer subject to the fiscal discipline imposed by the disclosure requirements for publicly traded companies,” she writes, “Sotheby’s would not only have greater freedom to assume such risks; it would also have more freedom to fail without public embarrassment.” (more…)

NYS Supreme Court Dismisses Case Over Painting Ownership

Friday, June 28th, 2019

The Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court ruled has dismissed a court case against the family of art dealer and collector Yris Rabenou Solomon over ownership of four works from the collection of the late art historian, critic, and collector Paul Westheim, the onetime publisher of the German art magazine Das Kunstblatt. (more…)

Guggenheim Museum Workers Vote to Unionize

Friday, June 28th, 2019

Guggenheim Museum workers in New York voted to unionize at a meeting last night, the latest in a string of museums to see their employees join a union. “We feel really good,” an unidentified worker said. “It’s rewarding to know that we’re finally on relatively equal footing with management at the museum.” (more…)

Cindy Sherman Interviewed in Apollo

Friday, June 28th, 2019

Cindy Sherman sits down with Apollo this month, as she opens her retrospective at the National Portrait Gallery in London. “I’m trying to erase myself more than identify myself or reveal myself,” she says. “That’s a big, confusing thing that people have with my work: they think I’m trying to reveal these secret fantasies or something. It’s really about obliterating myself within these characters.’” (more…)

J. Tomilson Hill Buyer of Suspected Caravaggio

Friday, June 28th, 2019

American billionaire J. Tomilson Hill has been identified as the buyer of an early 17th-century work labeled a rediscovered Caravaggio.  “I think it was begun by Caravaggio and finished by another artist,” says Fabrizio Moretti, a leading old masters dealer in London. “It’s the most important painting associated with Caravaggio to have appeared on the market for 20 years.” (more…)

Timothy Taylor Expands to New Mayfair Space

Friday, June 28th, 2019

Timothy Taylor Gallery is moving to an expanded headquarters in London’s Mayfair district.  “Having programmed that [previous] space for 15 years, I wanted a change,” Taylors ays. “Quite frankly, I think many of the artists wanted a change as well.” (more…)

Christian Rattemeyer Named Director of SculptureCenter

Friday, June 28th, 2019

Christian Rattemeyer a longtime associate curator in the department of drawings and prints at the Museum of Modern Art will take over as SculptureCenter’s next director.  (more…)

Rem Koolhaas’s OMA Unveils New Museum Annex Design

Thursday, June 27th, 2019

Rem Koolhaas’s firm OMA has revealed a brand new design for the New Museum annex, which will house additional gallery space and room for other initiatives. “We wanted it to be complementary but not competitive,” Koolhaas says, “to be independently appealing but also make sure the coexistence of these two buildings gives something fresh.” (more…)

Creative Time Appoints Natasha Logan Deputy Director

Thursday, June 27th, 2019

Creative Time has appointed Natasha Logan as its next deputy director. “One priority for me is the Creative Time Summit—considering where this platform and this mechanism for dialogue is most useful and will have the most impact,” she says. (more…)

Protests Over LACMA Expansion Look to Next Steps

Thursday, June 27th, 2019

The LA Times has a piece this week on the continued protests and opposition over LACMA‘s proposed expansion, as groups organized to take further action against the museum.  “The [protest] group members all feel that public input has been discounted and curtailed, and they’re seeking to express the public voice, in the public interest,” says local Richard Schave. (more…)

NYT Looks at Art Fair Initiatives Looking to Reach and Teach Children

Thursday, June 27th, 2019

A piece in the New York Times looks at how some art fairs are making an effort to appeal to children, including events and projects that invite them to take part in pieces and workshops. “Education is incredibly important and part of the ethos of our fair,” says Philip Hewat-Jaboor, chairman of the Masterpiece London Art Fair. “We have a sort of duty to do this, apart from the fact that this is tremendous fun and tremendously exciting to see people of any age group, particularly young ones, get thrilled and interested in something they may not have looked at before.” (more…)

National Gallery Announces Major Philip Guston Retrospective

Thursday, June 27th, 2019

Philip Guston Now, the first retrospective for the artist in over 15 years has been announced by the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and will will travel to the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston for an opening in October 2020, and then on to Tate Modern in London in February 2021 and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston in July 2021. (more…)

SFMoMA Buys 11 Works with Funds from Rothko Sale

Thursday, June 27th, 2019

The $50.1 million sale of Mark Rothko’s Untitled (1960) from the SFMoMA collection at Sotheby’s last month has been used to buy 11 works by 10 artists as part of an initiative to diversify its holdings, with works by Leonora Carrington, Lygia Clark, and Mickalene Thomas, among others.  “This is just the beginning of what we will be able to accomplish with this fund, which allows us to broaden the scope of the stories we are able to tell in our galleries,” says Neal Benezra, director of SFMOMA. (more…)

Hauser & Wirth Now Represents Nicolas Party

Wednesday, June 26th, 2019

Hauser & Wirth now represents the work of artist Nicolas Party, the New York– and Brussels-based artist whose colorful paintings and sculptures have commanded attention in past years. “When I found out [Party] was Swiss, I of course paid attention,” said partner Marc Payot. “When you look at Party, there are very strong references to Swiss painting.” (more…)

New Museum Union Stages Action as Contract Negotiations Continue

Wednesday, June 26th, 2019

The New Museum workers union staged an action this week around its ongoing contract negotiations, handing out leaflets and buttons outside the museum. “We’re trying to work within the museum’s means and not ask for anything ludicrous,” says Francesca Altamura, a curatorial assistant at the New Museum.  (more…)

Kate Fowle Named New Head of MoMA PS1

Wednesday, June 26th, 2019

Kate Fowle, the former chief curator at Moscow’s Garage Museum of  Contemporary Art, will take over leadership of MoMA PS1, filling the space left by Klaus Biesenbach’s departure for MOCA in Los Angeles. “It’s an honor to take the helm of MoMA PS1 at this juncture in its rich history,” Fowle said in a statement. “I look forward to working with the team and board to create a generative environment where our outlook is transformed through artists and their perspectives on the world.” (more…)

Mike Steib Takes Over as CEO of Artsy

Wednesday, June 26th, 2019

Mike Steib is taking over as CEO of Artsy, as Carter Cleveland moves into a newly created role as executive chairman, Art News reports.  “He’s always been someone I’ve really admired, and I’ve been very inspired by what he’s achieved,” Cleveland says“When I look at the specifics of how he did it, I couldn’t imagine a better fit.” (more…)

Unesco will not Review Notre Dame Case at Next Meeting

Wednesday, June 26th, 2019

Unesco’s World Heritage Committee will not review the issues around Notre Dame’s fire in an upcoming meeting after France failed to turn in a report on the damage on time.  “The restoration works must be in conformity with the provisions of the World Heritage Convention,” a draft statement from Unesco reads. (more…)