Archive for the 'Minipost' Category
Monday, April 22nd, 2019
The Guggenheim’s Hilma Af Klint: Paintings for the Future has officially become the most-visited exhibition in the museum’s 60-year history, the museum has reported. The show has topped the impressive figure of 600,000 visitors. (more…)
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Monday, April 22nd, 2019
The blockchain based digital art registry Artory has raised $7.3 million through a Series A funding round, Art News reports. “By exceeding our initial goal with our Series A funding round, we’ve proven that the [Artory] Registry is a viable commercial product that will change the way collectors and buyers—established and new—engage with the marketplace for fine art and collectibles,” says Nanne Dekking, Artory’s founder and chief executive. (more…)
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Monday, April 22nd, 2019
The New York Times profiles the life of Jayne Wrightsman today, a benefactor of the arts and grande dame of New York society whose celebrated collections of decorative and fine arts became a major part of the Met collection, and who passed away this week at 99. “Jayne Wrightsman’s incredible impact on the Metropolitan Museum of Art cannot be overstated,” says Met director Max Hollein. “Through her beneficence, expertise and guidance, she has forever transformed the museum, and the museum will be forever connected with her.” (more…)
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Monday, April 22nd, 2019
Artist Olu Oguibe’s 50-foot-tall obelisk sculpture Das Fremdlinge und Flüchtlinge Monument (Monument for strangers and refugees), which caused protests and challenges by far-right protestors, has gone back on view in Kassel. “It means a lot to me that this important Documenta 14 art work is now permanently back in Kassel’s center,” says Sabine Schormann, the director general of Documenta, where the work was first show. (more…)
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Thursday, April 18th, 2019
A Swiss farmer, Hanspeter Benz has won a competition by the Fondation Beyeler to hang a Picasso in his barn for 24 hours. The work was shown in Benz’s barn on April 16th. (more…)
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Thursday, April 18th, 2019
The Chicago Artists Coalition has unveiled its list of 15 Chicago-based artists who will receive its first-ever round of micro-grants, which come with unrestricted purses of $2,000 each. “We have truly visionary artists living and working in every neighborhood across the city. We hope that this new line of support will help bring some of their visions to life, for their individual benefit and that of their broader communities,” says Tracie D. Hall, director of the Joyce Foundation’s culture program. (more…)
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Thursday, April 18th, 2019
Brooklyn Museum head Anne Pasternak gives NY Magazine a tour of her office, showcasing her art collection, which includes work by Kiki Smith and Kara Walker, and shares a story about a graffiti artist showing up to paint part of her wall. “So one day he shows up in a clown outfit, complete clown outfit, doesn’t say a word, has a bucket with spray paint in it, puts down a tarp, paints for twenty minutes and leaves, never said a word,” she says. (more…)
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Thursday, April 18th, 2019
Following Phillips’s $12m success with the sale of Mark Bradford’s Helter Skelter I in London last Winter, the auction house will sell the second part of the work this spring, carrying an $8m low estimate and a third party guarantee. “We are thrilled to offer Mark Bradford’s masterpiece, Helter Skelter II, in our May Evening Sale after realizing a world-record price for its companion work last year,” says Jean-Paul Engelen, Worldwide Co-Head of 20th Century & Contemporary Art. (more…)
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Wednesday, April 17th, 2019
The Pollock-Krasner Foundation has announced 111 grants to artists and 13 to nonprofit organizations, with $3.17 million distributed in total. “At the core of the Pollock-Krasner Foundation’s mission is fostering the work and development of artists, and our 2018–19 grant and award recipients highlight the impact we can have due to Lee Krasner’s legacy,” says Ronald D. Spencer, the foundation’s chairman and CEO. (more…)
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Wednesday, April 17th, 2019
A piece in the NYT spotlights the works removed from Notre Dame just days before its massive fire. “Reconstruction and renovation of Notre-Dame could take between 10 and 20 years, probably for a cost of several hundred million euros,” says Patrick Palem, a veteran restoration expert with SOCRA. (more…)
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Wednesday, April 17th, 2019
Gagosian Gallery will stage an exhibition this June in Paris, from which all proceeds from sales will go to initiatives to rebuild the cathedral after its massive fire this week. Full details for the show have yet to be announced. “Notre-Dame is one of the most widely recognized symbols of the city of Paris and the French nation,” Larry Gagosian, the gallery’s founder, said in a statement. “I wish to contribute to the reconstruction of this iconic cathedral after watching, with devastation, as it was engulfed in flames.” (more…)
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Wednesday, April 17th, 2019
Arts and culture now have a higher contribution to the UK economy than agriculture, The Guardian notes “It tells you about their commitment and determination in spite of the cuts. It also tells you if they had a bit more money they would do something rather wonderful with it,” says Sir Nicholas Serota. (more…)
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Wednesday, April 17th, 2019
The Fondation Prince Pierre de Monaco has announced the shortlist of works for the 47th edition of its Prix International d’Art Contemporain (PIAC), featuring work by Yto Barrada, Arthur Jafa, and Rayyane Tabet. “As an organization, we are determined to continuously broaden our perspective and are deeply committed to offer a platform to a plurality of diverse voices in the field of contemporary art and visual culture,” says PIAC’s artistic director, Lorenzo Fusi. (more…)
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Wednesday, April 17th, 2019
The Noguchi Museum will allow the public to visit the artist’s studio for the first time after restoration is complete. “What I really admire about Noguchi was that he was one of the great 20th-century polymaths,” says director Brett Littman. “He worked across so many disciplines.” (more…)
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Tuesday, April 16th, 2019
The NY Review of Books has a piece on Vincent Van Gogh this week, charting the artist’s time in London and his fascination with the city, documented in many of his letters. “He was a writer before he was a painter,” says author Carol Jacobi. (more…)
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Tuesday, April 16th, 2019
A new French task force for recovering Nazi look has received a broad mandate to search for and return artwork that had been looted or sold under duress, the NYT reports. “We are not starting from nothing, but we are amplifying the work,” says David Zivie, a Culture Ministry official. (more…)
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Tuesday, April 16th, 2019
A selection of paintings from inside Notre Dame have been transferred to the Louvre for restoration after suffering smoke damage yesterday during the Cathedral’s fire. The paintings are largely still intact. (more…)
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Tuesday, April 16th, 2019
The French nation launched a major campaign to restore Notre Dame after its tragic blaze yesterday, with collectors Bernard Arnault and François Pinault both pledging $226 million and $113 respectively. “The Arnault family and the LVMH Group, in solidarity with this national tragedy, are committed to assist with the reconstruction of this extraordinary cathedral, symbol of France, its heritage, and its unity,” a press release from LVMH, Arnault’s company read. (more…)
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Monday, April 15th, 2019
30 pieces from the collection of Texas oil heiress Cecil Amelia Blaffer will go to auction at Christie’s New York next month, with works by Picasso, Rothko and more expected to earn more than $40 million. “What we are seeing more and more is the interesting collections that were put together 40, 50 years ago,” says Adrien Meyer, Christie’s co-chairman of Impressionist and modern art. “They precisely represent moments of collecting history” and people who were “buying at the moment of pivotal art innovations,” he said.
(more…)
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Monday, April 15th, 2019
New York’s Independent Curators International will give its Leo Award (named after Leo Castelli) to collector Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo. “Since the beginning, the passion and daily work of the Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo has been to contribute to an opening up of contemporary art to a wider audience,” she says of her work . “Investing in young curators and artists has been an exciting, rewarding and vital part of Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo’s program, which we are seeking always to develop.” (more…)
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Monday, April 15th, 2019
The European Commission has approved new laws concerning an overhaul of copyright law, making online platforms liable for copyright infringement on their sites and forcing companies like Google and Facebook to pay publishers for the information they repost. “It was a long road and we would like to thank everyone who contributed to the discussion,” says IMPALA executive chair Helen Smith. “As a result, we now have a balanced text that sets a precedent for the rest of the world to follow, by putting citizens and creators at the heart of the reform and introducing clear rules for online platforms, “By adopting this landmark text, the EU has proved itself a leader in terms of delivering a fair, open and sustainable internet. This text clarifies the position of platforms, building on European case law. It is a first of its kind, and sets an example for other countries across the globe.” (more…)
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Monday, April 15th, 2019
The Cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris has caught fire, with much of the building engulfed in flames and its main spire partially collapsing. “These cathedrals and houses of worship are built to burn,” says Vincent Dunn, a fire consultant and former New York City fire chief. “If they weren’t houses of worship, they’d be condemned.” (more…)
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Friday, April 12th, 2019
Research into a Baroque painting by Artemisia Gentileschi in Florence has revealed an underpainting that is almost identical to a canvas recently purchased by London’s National Gallery. (more…)
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Friday, April 12th, 2019
The painting of Judith beheading Holofernes, recently (and controversially) attributed to Caravaggio, will go on show at Galerie Kamel Mennour next week, alongside work by Daniel Buren’s site-specific work, Pyramidal, haut-relief – A5, travail (2017). “I think giving audiences the opportunity to view these two works together [Buren and Caravaggio] is fantastic. It is about the parcours [journey] of 400 years between the avant-garde then and now,” the Kamel Mennour says. (more…)
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