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

Archive for the 'News' Category

Christie’s Sales Down 27% for 2016

Friday, February 10th, 2017

Christie’s has posted a sales tally of $5.4 billion for 2016, a 27% decline from a year prior, signaling the art market’s continued slump, and nearly matching Sotheby’s 30% drop in sales.   (more…)

Receding Waterlines at Great Salt Lake Bode Ominously for Robert Smithson’s Spiral Jetty

Friday, February 10th, 2017

As the waterline of Utah’s Great Salt Lake gradually recedes, some are questioning what impact a dried lake could have on Robert Smithson’s famed Spiral Jetty, a work intended to function in concert with changing tide levels.  “We don’t anticipate water back to the lake. We don’t anticipate more precipitation in the future. We anticipate that this drought is a permanent fixture and is likely going to get worse,” says Bonnie Baxter of the Great Salt Lake Institute. “And that’s based on data.” (more…)

Sotheby’s Files Lawsuit Over Allegedly Fake Frans Hals Work

Wednesday, February 8th, 2017

Sotheby’s has filed a lawsuit against dealer Mark Weiss and collector David Kowitz, alleging that a Frans Hals painting the pair sold through the auction house is a fake. “The painting was with the experts Mr. Weiss had instructed for a four-month period and was subject to extensive testing by them,” Sotheby’s said on Tuesday. “Mr. Weiss later suggested that additional tests be conducted by a new group of conservators, but Sotheby’s concluded that none of these further tests would change its conclusion.” (more…)

Bendor Grosvenor Expresses Concerns Over British Market After Brexit

Wednesday, February 8th, 2017

Bendor Grosvenor has a piece in the Wall Street Journal this week, raising concerns over the health of the British art market in the wake of the Brexit vote.  “For now, Britain’s art market is safe,” he writes.  “A weak pound has led to a small boom in London’s art auctions. And through a combination of tradition, solid British law and local expertise, the U.K.’s art-market leadership is difficult to challenge. But the real fear among U.K. art dealers and auctioneers is of a gradual decline in competitiveness.” (more…)

Tracey Emin Funds Scholarship for Syrian Refugees

Wednesday, February 8th, 2017

Tracey Emin is one of several benefactors behind a new scholarship at Bard College Berlin that aims to help those fleeing violence in Syria.  “I want to help and try to make things better, but in a way in which I know I can. If just one student makes it through that course and does something great with their life, for me it’s all been worth it,” she says.  “I love being an artist, I love my work and when I see the atrocities taking place in this world I realize how lucky I am.” (more…)

Yayoi Kusama Profiled in WSJ

Wednesday, February 8th, 2017

Yayoi Kusama is profiled in the Wall Street Journal this week, as the artist opens a series of major exhibitions, including her exhibition of Infinity Room works at the Hirshhorn opening later this month.  “In my mirror rooms, you see yourself as an individual reflected in an expansive space,” she says.  “But they also give you the sensation of cloistering yourself in another world.”   (more…)

NADA New York to Donate Half of Ticket Sales to ACLU

Wednesday, February 8th, 2017

NADA New York has announced that half of its ticket sales will go to benefit the ACLU this year.  “As it’s NADA’s mission to create an open flow of information, support, and collaboration, we must take advantage of opportunities to rally the resources of this community,” says Elyse Derosia, co-owner of New York’s Bodega Gallery and president of NADA’s board of directors.  “The diversity of New York is what makes it the city that it is, and the art capital that it is, and we’re better because of it. (more…)

Uk National Gallery’s £30 Million Bid for Jacopo Pontormo Painting Rejected After Drop in Pound

Tuesday, February 7th, 2017

A £30 million bid by London’s National Gallery to prevent the export of Jacopo Pontormo’s Portrait of a Young Man in a Red Cap (1530) has been rejected following the drop in value of the pound in the past months.  “While it’s not possible to save every object, the system is designed to strike the right balance between protecting our national cultural heritage and individual property rights,” says a spokeswoman for the Department of Culture, Media and Sport. (more…)

Christo Interviewed in The Guardian on Process for “Wrapped Reichstag”

Tuesday, February 7th, 2017

Christo is interviewed in The Guardian this week, discussing his process alongside partner Jean-Claude for creating his iconic Wrapped Reichstag work.  “In the course of 24 years, we worked with six different presidents of the Bundestag and were refused three times. I was so depressed, I was ready to give up,” he says. “Then finally, in 1994, it went to a vote and we won.” (more…)

Venice Biennale Announces Artist List for 2017 Exhibition

Tuesday, February 7th, 2017

The 2017 Venice Biennale has announced its list of 120 participating artists for this year’s edition of the event, opening May 13th.  “The role, the voice, and the responsibility of the artist are more crucial than ever before within the framework of contemporary debates,” says curator Christine Macel. “It is in and through these individual initiatives that the world of tomorrow takes shape, which though surely uncertain, is often best intuited by artists than others.” (more…)

2017 Prix Marcel Duchamp Nominees Announced

Tuesday, February 7th, 2017

The nominees have been announced for the 2017 edition of the Prix Marcel Duchamp, France’s most prominent contemporary art award.  This year’s nominees are Maja BajevicJoana Hadjithomas and Khalil JoreigeCharlotte Moth and Vittorio Santoro.   (more…)

Armory Week’s Spring/Break Moving to Times Square Office Building

Tuesday, February 7th, 2017

Armory Week’s popular Spring/Break art exhibition is moving locations this year to a Times Square office building, where it will take up two full floors.  “We’re interested in engaging iconic, atypical environments where contemporary art is often absent,” co-founder, Ambre Kelly said in a statement. “In past years this included the former Catholic school of one of the oldest cathedrals in Manhattan, then the decommissioned postal inspection offices of one of the city’s largest post offices. Our new space is an expansion of this—occupying the 12th largest commercial building in Manhattan, and with it, a new space and seat of American culture to occupy.” (more…)

Art World Sees New Efforts to Focus More on Women Artists

Tuesday, February 7th, 2017

The Guardian spotlights the ongoing work the The Guerilla Girls, and broader efforts in the art world to make a priority of presenting female artists.  The Tate Modern’s dynamic decision to devote half of its new exhibition space at the Switch House to female artists is spotlighted in particular.  “Very simply, we have made a commitment to rethinking our collection, how we build it and the choices we make,” says director Frances Morris. “And I think what we did with Switch House was in a way very simple. We didn’t dress it up as a strategy or positive discrimination – it was just great work by women and an attempt to redress the gender balance. Simple as that. And a lot of my peers said: ‘What a relief.’” (more…)

Paul Gauguin’s “Te Fare” Leads Christie’s March Sale in London

Tuesday, February 7th, 2017

Paul Gauguin’s Te Fare (La maison) will lead Christie’s Impressionist and Modern Evening Sale this March in London, carrying a £12 million estimate.  “Gauguin has increasingly simplified and monumentalized the landscape, transcending reality by turning the natural world into a mystic vision of color, line and form,” a statement reads. (more…)

Yves Bouvier Interviewed in Bloomberg

Tuesday, February 7th, 2017

Dealer Yves Bouvier is profiled in Bloomberg this week, as he reflects on the past two years of court cases against Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev, and his indefinite plans for the future.  “When something like this happens in your life, your outlook on life and on people changes, as do your priorities,” Bouvier said in an interview. “As to the future, I don’t know what I’m going to do.” (more…)

Paris Art Thief Claims Museum of Modern Art Theft “Easiest of my Career”

Monday, February 6th, 2017

Breaking into Paris’s Museum of Modern Art and stealing over $112 million in paintings was “one of my easiest and biggest heists,” according to Vjeran Tomic, whose outline of his theft points to a poorly maintained museum security system.   (more…)

Met Museum’s Budget Woes Profiled in NYT

Monday, February 6th, 2017

The New York Times looks at the recent health of The Met, and its reported $40 million budget deficit that has the institution struggling to decide on its next steps.  “One benefit from all this: It’s brought the departments together with the administration to sit down at a common table, and that’s something,” says Keith Christiansen, the chairman of the Met’s European paintings department.  “Now what do we do to move forward and make sure the mission of the museum is not compromised?”   (more…)

MoMA Rehangs Fifth Floor Galleries with Work from Countries in Trump’s Travel Ban

Monday, February 6th, 2017

The Museum of Modern Art has made its subtle commentary on the current attempts by Donald Trump to issue an immigration ban, hanging works by artists from the affected nations in its fifth-floor permanent-collection galleries.  (more…)

Performa Adds New Board Members, President of Board

Saturday, February 4th, 2017

Performa has added Joyce Liu and Ivan Pun, and promoted current board member Richard Chang as president of its board.  “In just a little over 10 years, Performa has made remarkable contributions advancing the scholarship and prominence of live performance, and I look forward to working with RoseLee Goldberg and the entire Board and staff to forge new relationships around the globe to support Performa’s ambitious mission and programs,” Chang said in a statement. (more…)

Uffizi Galleries to Begin Stronger Focus on Female Artists

Saturday, February 4th, 2017

The Uffizi Galleries in Florence has committed to exhibiting more works by female artists, beginning with an examination of Suor Plautilla Nelli, a 16th Century nun regarded as Florence’s first-known female Renaissance painter.  The decision was made in part following conversations with the famed feminist art collective Guerilla Girls.  “This is not just a special initiative to do for three or five years. I don’t know if I’m still going to be director, but I think we could easily go on for 20 years,” says director Eike Schmidt. (more…)

Adam Chinn Promoted to COO at Sotheby’s

Friday, February 3rd, 2017

Adam Chinn, the minority partner in Art Agency, Partners, will take on the mantle of COO at Sotheby’s, Art Market Monitor reports.  Formerly head of transaction support, Chinn will continue to look to improve the company’s margins on sales. (more…)

Kate Lewis Appointed Chief Conservator at MoMA

Friday, February 3rd, 2017

MoMA has appointed Kate Lewis as chief conservator of its David Booth Conservation Center and Department.  Glenn Lowry states that Lewis “will provide exemplary leadership to the museum’s conservation department in order to ensure that its vital work will continue in advancing our state-of-the-art conservation program, and in developing the most innovative conservation practice and scientific research.” (more…)

Glafira Rosales Sentenced to Time Served in Knoedler Gallery Case

Friday, February 3rd, 2017

More than five years after the fallout of the Knoedler Gallery fraud cases, dealer Glafira Rosales was sentenced to time served on Tuesday, closing a major part of the ongoing court cases over the sale of fake 20th Century paintings.  Rosales was granted leniency in the case over reports that she had been abused by her partner, Jose Carlos Bergantiños Diaz. (more…)

Public Art Fund Celebrates 40th Anniversary with Expansive Video Exhibition

Friday, February 3rd, 2017

The Public Art Fund is celebrating its 40th Anniversary this year, and will mark the occasion with an expansive series of video pieces shown across video screens in all five boroughs of New York.  Exhibiting artists include Cory Arcangel, Awol Erizku and Casey Jane Ellison.   (more…)