Jim Shaw Joins Gagosian
Friday, June 25th, 2021Jim Shaw has moved on to Gagosian, finding a new home after Metro Pictures announced its closure.
Jim Shaw has moved on to Gagosian, finding a new home after Metro Pictures announced its closure.
The Pompidou has tapped Laurent Le Bon, president of Musée Picasso in Paris, as the its new president. Le Bon will oversee the museum’s new outpost being built in Jersey City. (more…)
The Guggenheim Bilbao is crowdfunding €100,000 to restore Jeff Koons’s sculpture Puppy.  “The museum has chosen to enlist the collaboration of society to ensure that this beloved and representative work will remain in great condition for the next 25 years,†a museum statement reads. (more…)
After delays, Christo’s ambitious wrapping project for the Arc de Triomphe will launch in September. “More than a year after Christo’s death, Paris is continuing the work of this great artist,” says Says Paris’s mayor, Anne Hidalgo. “It is an opportunity to say ‘thank you’ to him and to defend our attachment to contemporary creation.†(more…)
Interpol has launched a new app to help identify stolen art. “It’s a concrete tool for police and customs—and for museums and private individuals,†says Corrado Catesi, who heads Interpol’s Works of Art Unit. “It is not the panacea, but it can really help.†(more…)
Artist Dorothea Rockburne is suing her upstairs neighbor, former Twitter CEO Dick Costolo over irreparable damage to a series of her early works, after Costolo’s leaky plumbing flooded into the artist’s loft. “I watched helplessly as the water poured down over the cabinet and onto my early work,’’ she says. (more…)
Phyllida Barlow has been awarded damehood during the Queen’s annual Birthday events in the UK, Art Newspaper reports. Ceramicist Edmund de Waal was also awarded a CBE. (more…)
Hauser & Wirth will open a second Los Angeles space in West Hollywood, the LA Times reports. “Since the beginning, we always thought of L.A. as a city where we would love to have more than one location,â€Â says President Marc Payot. “We really expect L.A. to come back to its full bloom after the pandemic, and this is really the next step for us. It’s first and foremost a commitment to L.A.†(more…)
The 2022 Venice Biennale will take the title “The Milk of Dreams,” taking its name from work by the writer Leonora Carrington. “Carrington’s stories describe a world set free, brimming with possibilities,†says curator Cecelia Alemani says. “But [the book] is also the allegory of a century that imposed intolerable pressure on the individual, forcing Carrington into a life of exile: locked up in mental hospitals, an eternal object of fascination and desire, yet also a figure of startling power and mystery.â€Â (more…)
The future of a Keith Haring mural painted in a former nightclub is unclear as the owners plan a demolition to build an elderly care facility. “This painting should stay where it is,” says DJ Cesar de Melero. “First it was in a night club, then a billiard hall, now a care home. Why not?†(more…)
A piece in Art Newspaper details the Italian Carabinieri’s use of drones to prevent theft of cultural and heritage works. Italy is currently reporting a drop in stolen works due to new efforts and to the recent pandemic. (more…)
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation will launch a $125 million plan to help support and aid the arts economy in New York. “The artists whose work helps to sustain us have faced particularly devastating circumstances resulting from unemployment, underemployment, and a lack of predictable paid incomes,†Mellon Foundation president Elizabeth Alexander said in a statement. “It’s critical for the vibrancy of our cities that we recognize that making art is work.†(more…)
The Centre Pompidou is opening its first North American satellite in Jersey City, the NYT reports. “Our idea is to be confronted with what is very different,†says president Serge Lasvignes. “For us, it’s a way to learn — to learn new circumstances, a new way of presenting art, a new way of presenting exhibitions.†(more…)
Artist Bridget Riley gets an interview in the BBC this week, as the artist turns 90. “I held a mirror up to human nature and reported faithfully,” she says. (more…)
Art Basel will return this September, the Swiss fair has confirmed, with VIP services that include video tours of the event. “It is a bespoke 1:1 service. The Show Experience Assistant arranges a zoom, or other communication channel depending on the VIP, and helps them view specific works and discover artists and presentations, as well as facilitate introductions to specific galleries,” a spokesperson says. (more…)
Artist Luis Manuel Otero Alcantara was released from a Havana hospital this week following a hunger strike. “After a month in the hands of the beast, we’ll see how things go in the streets to continue the struggle,” he said. (more…)
Sunjung Kim, head of the Gwangju Biennale Foundation, will leave the organization after a labor dispute. “Contrary to the international reputation of Gwangju Biennale, the staff has been suffering from the president’s lack of leadership, the lack of principles and transparency in operations, as well as the abandonment of duty and abuse of authority by the head of the HR team,†a union rep says. (more…)
A new survey of museum directors shows that 15% of museum directors have said there is a significant risk of closing permanently. “The museum field will take years to recover to pre-pandemic levels of staffing, revenue and community engagement,†says Laura Lott, president and chief executive of the American Alliance of Museums. She continues: “far fewer museums than expected are in danger of permanent closure.†(more…)
The Whitney has formally recognized its union, Art News reports. “I do think that the Whitney is genuinely trying to create a community of people that want to be there,” says union leader Karissa Francis. “But a lot of what you think you’re doing right as a company doesn’t work for your employees. Unionizing allows for a reshuffling of priorities for these institutions and [shines] a light on some blind spots that they maybe didn’t even realize they had.†(more…)
Tacita Dean has an interview in The Guardian this week, detailing her recent work and time during the Covid-19 pandemic. “Well, you have all this free time,†she says, “and you think, ‘How am I going to use it? Am I going to be one of these people who makes a drawing every day?’ And of course I wasn’t. I was useless!†(more…)
Sprüth Magers now represents the estate of John Baldessari, the gallery announced this week.“Monika [Sprüth] and I had the unique pleasure of working with John since the late 1980s, and his work has remained a cornerstone of Sprüth Magers’ presentations of cutting-edge international artists for over thirty years, cementing his crucial importance both to our work and to global audiences,” says Philomene Magers. “As we established our Berlin, London and Los Angeles galleries, we regularly presented his ever-evolving and inventive projects.— (more…)
Brooklyn Museum employees are moving towards a vote on forming a union, adding the institution to a list of museums with ongoing unionization efforts. ““Unionizing is an extension of our existing institutional commitment to nurturing a diverse community of talent,” says Akane Okoshi, a researcher at the museum, said. “Our ability to advance the Brooklyn Museum’s professed institutional goals of creating a more connected, civic, and empathic world is contingent on the passion and labor of workers.” (more…)
Laurence des Cars will become the first female president of The Louvre this year, the New York Times reports. “A great museum must face history, including by looking back at the history of our own institutions,†she says. (more…)