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

Archive for the 'News' Category

Artist and Curator Ingrid LaFleur Running for Mayor of Detroit

Friday, March 3rd, 2017

Detroit-based artist and curator Ingrid LaFleur has announced her candidacy for the mayorship of the Michigan city, announcing her candidacy this week.  “The truth is, my experiences as a creative and as a Detroiter have led me to this decision,” she says.  “As a curator, I observe, research, investigate, and then bring together the elements to make a cohesive statement and/or action. As an artist I tend to focus on out-of-the-box ways to resolve issues that I face. I am using all of those skills to create a healthy, sustainable city.” (more…)

Salon 94 Embarks on Design Program

Friday, March 3rd, 2017

New York’s Salon 94 gallery is embarking on a new design program called Salon 94 Design, and will begin exhibiting shows exploring forward-thinking and historically relevant design works.  “Design has a participatory way of communicating with us—it’s very, very direct,” says Gallery director Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn. “You automatically know that a chair is to be sat in, so there’s already a dialogue.” (more…)

Collector J Tomilson Hill Responds to Criticisms for Not Selling Pontormo Back to National Gallery in London

Friday, March 3rd, 2017

Collector J Tomilson Hill is in the Guardian this week, defending his decision not to give up the £30 million Jacopo Pontormo painting sought by the National Gallery in London, saying that he said he refused to take a loss on the painting after its purchase.   “They went ahead, despite the warning,” he says.  “Their argument that they wasted all this time and effort to raise the money, only to have the offer rejected, rings very hollow.” (more…)

NYT Reflects on Current State of Met Museum, Tenure of Thomas Campbell

Thursday, March 2nd, 2017

The New York Times’s Holland Carter has a piece reflecting on the challenges faced by Thomas Campbell over the course of his tenure at the head of The Met, and the steps the museum may take moving forward after his departure.  “A new emphasis on contemporary art was reinforced by people who ran the museum itself,” he writes. “They made Mr. Campbell’s pursuit of the contemporary a condition of hiring. Did no one notice that any buying would be at the top of a bloated market? That a Jeff-Koons-whatever would cost more than [former director Philippe] de Montebello’s $45 million-plus Duccio, ‘Madonna and Child?'” (more…)

MoCA Receives Major Gift of Twenty-Two Contemporary Works

Thursday, March 2nd, 2017

MoCA Los Angeles has received a major gift of twenty-two works from collectors Alan Hergott and Curt Shepard, including pieces by Doug Aitken, Matthew Barney, Thomas Hirschhorn, and Catherine Opie.  “As with many American museums, MoCA would not exist without the selfless engagement of its patrons. With this gift, Alan and Curt join a family of collectors who have changed museums in this country forever,” director Philippe Vergne says. “Their gifts to MoCA benefit the museum and its artists, the city of Los Angeles, and its citizens. This is true philanthropy at the highest level.” (more…)

Jack Whitten Interviewed in Paris Review

Thursday, March 2nd, 2017

Painter Jack Whitten is interviewed in the Paris Review, as the artist reflects on his works currently on view at Hauser & Wirth in New York, and the process used in creating his works, particularly in his use of units of paint he calls tesserae.  “The tesserae, in my mind, is the unit, it’s the thing that makes them. I can build anything I want with the tesserae, using all acrylic paint, built layer by layer by layer until I get the thickness that I want,” he says.  “As a rule, I work with a thickness of a quarter of an inch to three sixteenth of an inch. I have ways that I can calculate the thickness that I want. There is a lot more, deeper material than the paint, of course—all the psychological stuff.” (more…)

Former Met Curator Analyzes Recent Issues at Museum

Thursday, March 2nd, 2017

The Art Newspaper sits down with George Goldner, former head of the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s department of prints and drawings, to discuss the Thomas Campbell’s ouster, and the issues the museum was facing.  “I think they did a disservice to the institution because it’s impossible for Tom to improve morale in that kind of atmosphere,” he says.  “It is unconscionable that the pension of a person making $60,000 a year is cut through no fault of his or her own, whereas senior board members, who must in part take responsibility, have borne no part of the blame or burden.” (more…)

Dmitriy Rybolovlev Takes 74% Loss on Gauguin Painting

Thursday, March 2nd, 2017

Collector Dmitriy Rybolovlev has taken a 74% loss on the sale of a Paul Gauguin canvas Te Fare (La Maison) yesterday at Christie’s, Bloomberg reports.  The Russian collector bought the work in 2008 through dealer Yves Bouvier, who he is currently suing for allegedly overcharging him on the purchases of a series of works.  “As Singapore’s highest court noted, the buyers in this case ‘obtained the masterpieces which were precisely what they wanted, and these were all transacted at prices they agreed to pay,”’ says Ron Soffer, Bouvier’s lawyer. (more…)

1:54 Art Fair to Open Edition in Marrakech

Wednesday, March 1st, 2017

1:54, the art fair dedicated to the works of African artists, is establishing a new edition of its event in the Moroccan city of Marrakech, opening in February at La Mamounia Hotel.  “Because of space, the selection will be more specific,” founder Touria El Glaoui says. “We want North African and Moroccan galleries to feel included in the project.” (more…)

Pace Gallery to Represent Estate of Tony Smith

Wednesday, March 1st, 2017

Pace Gallery will now represent the estate of artist Tony Smith, the Art News reports, taking over from Matthew Marks Gallery.  “Sometimes it’s time for a change—and that’s happened to us, to0,” says president Marc Glimcher. “It’s just part of the dynamic now.” (more…)

Dealer Juan Garcia Mosqueda Denied Entry to U.S. After 36-hour Ordeal

Wednesday, March 1st, 2017

Juan Garcia Mosqueda, the founder of Chamber Gallery in New York, has been detained at the U.S. Border and forced to return to Buenos Aires.  The dealer and curator has issued an open letter detailing his rough treatment and the apparent oppression now faced by foreigners under the Trump administration.  “This thirty-six hour nightmare is nothing but clear evidence of a deeply flawed immigration system in the United States,” he says, “carried out by an administration that is more interested in expelling people than admitting them.” (more…)

Lincoln Center Groups Issue Joint Statement Calling for Preservation of N.E.A.

Wednesday, March 1st, 2017

The various organizations and groups of New York’s Lincoln Center have banded together in a call to save the National Endowment for the Arts, issuing a joint statement calling for the preservation of its funding.  “The total cost of the N.E.A. is less than one dollar a year for every American,” the statement reads. “But because it is so successful and its imprimatur so prestigious, every dollar the N.E.A. contributes leads to nine additional dollars being donated from other sources.” (more…)

Jordan Wolfson’s VR Work for Whitney Biennale Profiled in Art News

Wednesday, March 1st, 2017

Art News visits Jordan Wolfson this week, profiling the artist’s VR work soon to go on view at the Whitney Biennale, in which the artist pummels a digitally-rendered figure to near death.  “One of the problematic things with a medium like VR is that through its nature, people call it an experience,” he says.  “An experience means that something is hypothetically interactive, and I don’t think that interactive things make for good art.” (more…)

Show Cancelled in Turkey Finds New Life in Stuttgart Museum

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

A show cancelled in Turkey over alleged censorship has found a new home in Stuttgart, the Art Newspaper reports.  The show, which featured works from Russian, Turkish, Palestinian and Dutch artists, drew on interrelated concepts of war and peace.  “We need these kinds of support structures in the international art world more than ever,” artist Köken Ergun says. (more…)

Magazzino, An Italian Post-War and Contemporary Art Museum in Cold Spring, New York, Sets Opening Date

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

Magazzino, the Hudson Valley exhibition space dedicated to Italian Post-War and Contemporary Art, will open to the public this June with an exhibition on the impact of dealer Margherita Stein. “She was consistent with the exhibitions she was putting on. She believed in this group, in what the avant-garde was,” says Director Vittorio Calabrese.  “It was not just about exhibiting the artists’ work, but about living with them.”
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New Legislation Sees Lawsuit Over Looted Schiele’s to Move Forward

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

Following new legislation by the U.S. Congress over the recovery of expropriated art, a lawsuit by the heirs of an Austrian Jewish entertainer over a body of Egon Schiele works will go forward, Artforum reports.  The new law seeks to ensure “claims to Nazi-confiscated art are not unfairly barred by statutes of limitations and other similar time-based nonmerits defenses,” according to sponsoring Senator Ted Cruz. 
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Lisson Gallery Opening Second Exhibition Space in New York

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

Lisson Gallery is doubling down on its New York presence, opening a second space in Chelsea in less than a year.  “I started looking into it, and I realized we don’t have a space to show single-work exhibitions, or things that are a little more intimate. It was something that met the needs of a lot of our artists that make smaller work that we don’t exhibit all the time,” director Alex Logsdail said.  The new space is located at 136 Tenth Avenue.

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Danh Vo Explores U.S. Border Relations and Political History in New Large-Scale Work

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

Artist Danh Vo has unveiled a new permanent, large-scale sculpture exploring the roots of the United States and its current political conflicts with Mexico in Beirut.  “I was really interested in this idea of exploring the time when [the US] fought for independence, and then became the dominant world power,” the artist says. “What I’m really interested in is the continual misuse of power, and that’s always a changing subject.” (more…)

Pace Gallery Opening New Location in Seoul

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

Pace Gallery has announced plans for a new exhibition space in the South Korean city of Seoul, Art News reports.  The gallery is the first of the major American blue-chip spaces to touch down in the city.  (more…)

Doug Aitken Places Mirrored Ranch Home in California Desert

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

The Art Newspaper spotlights artist Doug Aitken’s installation in the California desert, on view starting this weekend; a mirrored ranch house titled Mirage.  “I wanted to take the vernacular of a West Coast suburban home… and reduce it of any human contact or belongings so it became pure form,” Aitken says. “I wanted the form to have a dialogue with the surrounding environment.” (more…)

Art Market Monitor Asks If Recent Sales Prices Indicate a Broadening Market

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

The Art Market Monitor does some interesting analysis on recent data released by Artprice this week, noting that the market may in fact not be slumping, but rather, broadening its distribution with an increasingly large number of galleries and players.   (more…)

Provenance Questions Resolved Over Gustav Klimt Portrait, Will Go to Auction Block Tomorrow at Sotheby’s in London

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

Questions over the provenance of a Gustav Klimt portrait have been resolved at Sotheby’s, allowing the sale of the painting to go forward during the auction house’s Modern and Impressionist Evening Sale tomorrow night in London.  The work was contested after a previous owner said she lost the painting while cleaning her house, but the issue has since been resolved after a formal claim was not filed.   (more…)

Thomas Campbell Out at Met Under Internal Pressure

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

Thomas P. Campbell will step down from his directorship at The Met, the New York Times reports, after mounting internal pressure over Campbell’s ambitious expansion plans and the financial problems it has caused the institution.  “I have decided to step down from my role as Director and CEO of The Metropolitan Museum of Art in order to pursue the next phase of my career,” Campbell said in a letter addressed to “Colleagues” today. “I couldn’t be more proud of The Met’s accomplishments during my tenure.”  Met President Daniel H. Weiss will serve as interim CEO as the museum considers its options. (more…)

Auctionata to Close

Tuesday, February 28th, 2017

Following its inability to find a buyer to support its current insolvency, digital auction house Auctionata will close its doors, the company announced today.  “All necessary steps were taken. In the end, however, investors did not come together to make sufficient funds available to operate the insolvent German company as a going concern,” says preliminary insolvency administrator Christian von Brockdorff. (more…)