Archive for the 'News' Category
Friday, February 3rd, 2017
Lisson Gallery is preparing to release a 1,000-page text celebrating its 50th anniversary, and will embark on a series of special exhibitions underscoring its continued dedication to conceptual and forward-thinking practices. (more…)
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Friday, February 3rd, 2017
The Dia Art Foundation has added six works by Anne Truitt to its permanent collection, and will put the pieces on long-term view at Dia:Beacon. “When we bring an artist into our group, which is not very large, we want to bring them in at least at the level of those who have come in in recent years,” Dia’s director, Jessica Morgan, says. (more…)
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Friday, February 3rd, 2017
The Louvre has been temporarily closed after a knife attack on a soldier in the museum that officials are saying was of a “terrorist nature.” Two men have been apprehended after the attack. (more…)
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Friday, February 3rd, 2017
The UK has seen a 2 million visitor drop in museum attendance in the past year, The Guardian reports, with the highest rate of decline coming from educational trips. “These figures are clearly disappointing,” says Alistair Brown, a spokesperson for the Museums Association. “As schools come under greater pressure, they are finding it harder to devote time to out-of-class activities such as museum visits. Children are increasingly missing out on valuable experiences that bring history, science and culture to life and expose them to new ideas.” (more…)
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Friday, February 3rd, 2017
Ari Wiseman, the deputy director of the Guggenheim Museum, is stepping down to pursue an independent design studio project with his brother in Los Angeles. The pair’s Frogtown district space will open in 2018. (more…)
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Wednesday, February 1st, 2017
MoMA has released the full list of acquisitions made in the past year, tallying a large-scale painting by Mark Bradford and James Turrell’s Meeting among its new pieces.
(more…)
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Wednesday, February 1st, 2017
Tracey Hejailan-Amon, the New York socialite suing her former husband Maurice Alain Amon after he moved his art collection to avoid her claims during divorce, has lost her case. Amon’s art collection, including works by Basquiat and Warhol, was moved from the couple’s New York apartment shortly before filing. (more…)
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Wednesday, February 1st, 2017
The New York Times recaps the current travel ban on seven predominantly Muslim countries enacted by President and how it may affect future exhibitions and plans for artists in the U.S. and abroad. “We have no idea yet how this might affect us, but we do have at least one important exhibition of art mostly from Iran that would be impacted by travel restrictions that would make it difficult to do research and work with artists and authors, as well as borrow works of art that would require couriers from collections in Iran,” a spokesperson from LACMA says. (more…)
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Tuesday, January 31st, 2017
In the wake of Donald Trump’s increasingly hostile executive orders, the New York Times asks what might happen if the president’s intent to defund the NEA actually happens. The article looks at a number of projects funded by the NEA, from major museum exhibitions to art therapy classes for American veterans. “It is the mark of a great democracy to support the arts, which are an expression of what makes us human,” the piece quotes from a statement by the Association of Art Museum Directors. (more…)
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Tuesday, January 31st, 2017
The New York Times looks at the increasingly predominant conversations among older artists over the representation of their estates, as the artists of the baby boomer generation age. “You have the greatest number of artists there has ever been who are wealthy from their own creative work and have to make provisions for the posthumous stewardship of that work,” said Christine J. Vincent, project director for the Artist-Endowed Foundations Initiative. “More and more entities are getting involved in servicing it.” (more…)
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Tuesday, January 31st, 2017
As the trial over the theft of €100 million in art from Paris’s Museum of Modern Art begins, one of the accused on trial has stated that he threw away the works after taking them, including pieces by Picasso, Matisse, and Modigliani, although authorities believe the works were actually moved outside the country. “I threw them into the trash,” Yonathan Birn, the accused, said in tears during the court proceedings. “I made the worst mistake of my existence.” (more…)
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Monday, January 30th, 2017
The New York Times questions the ability to sell an earthwork, as a piece of land containing a Robert Smithson piece goes on the market. “In a sense, a park is already a work of art,” the articles quotes Smithson. “It’s a circumscribed area of land that already has a kind of cultivation involved in it.” (more…)
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Monday, January 30th, 2017
Betty Mugar Eveillard will serve as the Frick Collection’s new board chair, Art News reports. Eveillard has served on the museum’s board since 2017. “I am thrilled to have the opportunity to build on the remarkable legacy of the Frick Collection as a haven for contemplative engagement with the arts,” she said in a statement. (more…)
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Monday, January 30th, 2017
Dina Amin, former senior director and senior specialist for post-war and contemporary art at Christie’s, is leaving the auction house for Phillips. “Dina is a well-established and respected expert internationally and will be a transformative addition to our team,” CEO Edward Dolman says. “By expanding our specialist teams and building a global platform, we are uniquely positioned to work with collectors in a more comprehensive way across all of our company initiatives.” (more…)
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Monday, January 30th, 2017
NADA has named seven new member galleries to its organization, including Carbon 12 in Dubai, and Proyectos Ultravioleta, Guatemala City, underscoring its commitment to international exhibition spaces. The organization also added Elyse Derosia of New York space Bodega as the new president of its board of directors. “We can do a lot in a New York, but it’s always been our goal to find ways to be relevant to people outside of New York City,” Executive Director Heather Hubbs says. “That’s reflected in the growing numbers of galleries in Los Angeles and Chicago, and outside of that.” (more…)
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Monday, January 30th, 2017
Vjeran Tomic will go on trial this week over alleged art heists of over €100 million, including works by Picasso and Matisse, at the Modern Art Museum. The thefts earned the thief the nickname “Spider-Man,” over the impressive acrobatic feats performed in the heist. (more…)
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Monday, January 30th, 2017
A collaboration between the Musée National-Picasso in Paris and the Tate Modern will result in Picasso, 1932, a “once-in-a-lifetime” exhibition exploring the artist’s work over the course of his “year of wonders.” “This exhibition will invite you to get close to the artist, to his ways of thinking and working,” says co-curator Achim Borchardt-Hume, “and to the tribulations of his personal life at a pivotal moment in his career.” (more…)
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Sunday, January 29th, 2017
The Hammer Museum is planning a major expansion and renovation, which will add 40,000 square feet to its space on Wilshire Boulevard. “This transformation will provide 60 percent more exhibition space including collection galleries and a works on paper gallery to highlight our growing collection of photographs and drawings,” Ann Philbin, the Hammer’s director, said in a statement. (more…)
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Sunday, January 29th, 2017
LACMA has acquired Random International’s Rain Room, the popular installation where viewers can pass through a space filled with falling water. “It is especially appropriate that the Rain Room is a gift to Lacma as we are near to marking the 50th anniversary of the museum’s landmark Art & Technology program,” director Michael Govan says. “The response to the work in Los Angeles has been tremendous over the past year. The public here has come to ‘own’ the Rain Room , so it’s great that it will stay in the city.” (more…)
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Saturday, January 28th, 2017
Tania Bruguera is asking that her work be removed from an exhibition at the Bronx Museum of Arts over the institution’s “reliance” on the Cuban government for its recent exhibition, a government which has long suppressed her work and even imprisoned her. “We asked her but she never signed anything protesting what was happening to me or any of the artists in Cuba at the time who were being oppressed,” Bruguera says of Bronx Museum director Holly Block. (more…)
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Saturday, January 28th, 2017
Glenn Ligon is featured in the latest iteration of the New York Times’s “Show Us Your Wall” section, taking the paper on a tour of his TriBeCa apartment, and its impressive selection of works, including one of David Hammons’s bouncing basketball works. “David is one of those artists who sparks the idea to come,” he says. “That’s the reason to have a work of art. Besides the visual pleasure, it gives you ideas.” (more…)
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Saturday, January 28th, 2017
Collector Henry Bloch has donated a considerable portion of his collection of Impressionist masterworks to Kansas City’s Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, and is now showing digital reproductions in their place. “Every museum should be offering this service,” Bloch says, noting how difficult it is to note the difference between work and reproduction. (more…)
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Saturday, January 28th, 2017
The New York Times reports on the growing potency of Hawaii’s contemporary arts community, as a group of young artists and galleries explore the island’s tropical climate and burgeoning resources. “There’s energy here,” says collector Cristiano Cairati. “It’s the same energy of endless possibilities that New York had in the late ’80s and ’90s, when you could be and do anything.” (more…)
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Saturday, January 28th, 2017
Simon Lee Gallery is opening its first show in the U.S. this week at its Upper East Side townhouse. “We needed more energy really,” the dealer says. “This is the first relaunch, and it’s pretty fun actually. It’s a very sort of zeitgeist-y sort of show.” (more…)
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