Archive for the 'News' Category
Saturday, December 24th, 2016
The New York Times profiles Chi-Tien Lui, an electronics repair store owner and technician who previously worked with Andy Warhol, Bruce Nauman and Nam June Paik, and is currently assisting with a number of conservation projects for early new media works. “I can’t do what he does,” his daughter Jennifer says. “I’ve been telling all the museums, use him or lose him, because he is a resource.” (more…)
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Saturday, December 24th, 2016
Jean-Louis Goldwater Bourgeois, the son of Louise Bourgeois, has given the artist’s West Village home to the Lenape tribe, which counts the island of Manhattan as its historical home. The home may become a prayer house for the tribe. “This building is the trophy from major theft,” Bourgeois, an activist for Native American causes, says. “The right thing to do is to return it.” (more…)
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Saturday, December 24th, 2016
A group of canvases stolen from a Verona museum, valued at $17 million, have returned to Italy from the Ukraine. The works, including works by Rubens and Tintoretto were recovered on an island on the Dniester River, and were returned in a ceremony this week. “The theft of masterpiece paintings is akin to stealing part of the city’s heart,” Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko said during the event. (more…)
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Saturday, December 24th, 2016
The Art Newspaper looks at the history and reputation of Gustave Courbet’s Origin of the World, charting stories of the work, including one in which the artist responded to praise over the beauty of his image. “You think this beautiful …and you are right. …Yes, it is very beautiful, and listen, Titian, Veronese, Raphael, I myself, none of us have ever done anything more beautiful.” (more…)
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Saturday, December 24th, 2016
The Financial Times traces the recent push by auction houses and other arts businesses towards consulting for artist’s estates, as a group of baby boomer artists get older. “We’re witnessing the first wave of baby-boomer artists that are beyond retirement age and have not prepared for their artistic legacy or the financial wellbeing of their beneficiaries,” says Allan Schwartzman, chairman of Sotheby’s Fine Art Division. (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
The Art Market Monitor analyzes Mike Kelley’s work and its market, framing the current exhibition of the artist’s Memory Ware works at Hauser & Wirth as a presentation of his most commercially-viable pieces. “This is the second time the Memory Ware Flats have appeared on the auction market and broadcast a new level of pricing,” notes Marion Maneker. (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
The decision to build a statue depicting Andy Warhol is causing fierce debate in the Serbian capital of Belgrade, as politicians rally against the decision to monumentalize the artist’s contributions. “Even abroad, Andy Warhol and Pop art are not recognized as great art but as a fad, and testifying to this is the fact there are only two monuments to Warhol, while this would make Belgrade only the third city in the world to recognize him in this way,” says Uros Jankovic, the vice president of the Democratic Party of Serbia. (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
Art dealer Nancy Wiener has been charged with selling illicit art objects and artifacts to both Sotheby’s and Christie’s, the WSJ reports, a note that once again raises questions about the auction houses’ due diligence procedures. “Sotheby’s has been cooperating fully with the government’s investigation,” a spokesperson says. (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
The Atlantic examines the number of high-profile, all-woman art exhibitions this year, and the historical discussion these exhibitions have continued over the experience and social position of women artists, including addressing longstanding problems with diversity in museums. “The only way you get diversity is to actually do it,” says Helen Molesworth, the chief curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art. “Some of the dudes don’t get shows.” (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
Bloomberg looks at the art collection of Ivanka Trump, including works by Dan Colen, Christopher Wool and others, even as a number of artists protest her holdings. “Dear [Ivanka] please get my work off of your walls. I am embarrassed to be seen with you,” Alex Da Corte wrote underneath an Instagram image of Trump next to one of his works. (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
Pipilotti Rist has been tapped for the next iteration of the Times Square Advertising Coalition’s “Midnight Moment” project, and will show her work Open My Glade on billboards and video screens in the intersection over the month of January. “At a time when the larger political currents are making many women feel both the glass ceiling and the walls closing in on their bodies, this work resonates more than ever,” says Times Square Alliance president Tim Tompkins. (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
Painter Jonas Wood is working on a massive mural outside of the Museum of Contemporary Art on Grand Avenue in Los Angeles. “It’s going to be pretty exuberant,” the artist says. “As the light shifts, it’ll get a great light on it. The colors will really come to life.” (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
The LA Times profiles the meeting and partnership between Senator Harry Reid and Michael Heizer to preserve a stretch of land in Nevada where the artist has created his monumental work City. “What Michael Heizer has done is about as visionary as anything that one can imagine,” Reid says of the artist. “It’ll be there for a long time. It’s going to be there forever.” (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
A piece in Apollo Magazine this week takes a hard look at the impact a Trump presidency may have on New York cultural institutions, examining both sources of funding, and the systems of local and national government that ultimately support these museums and spaces. “The withdrawal of tax privileges for museums could prove an irresistible weapon in any recrudescence of the culture wars, especially as the president-elect has no record of interest in the stewardship of material culture, scholarship (witness Trump University), community engagement, or any of those things that are the last resort of the museum director under pressure to legitimate their institution’s tax status,” writer Adrian Ellis, a cultural advisor, says. (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
The Art News has an interested examination of movements and changes in the landscape of the New York art world in the past several years, noting a number of high-profile changes in neighborhoods, and a list of galleries that have ceased operations in the turbulent months of 2015 and 2016. (more…)
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Thursday, December 22nd, 2016
The French town of Poissy is set to build a museum dedicated to the work of Le Corbusier, where the architect built his famous Villa Savoye. “The foundation had the long-standing ambition to create a place in tribute to [Le Corbusier]. This has crystallized in recent years because there is a real political will to go in this direction,” says Antoine Picon, president of Fondation Le Corbusier said. (more…)
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Wednesday, December 21st, 2016
The Dedalus Foundation, which represents the estate of Robert Motherwell, has won a court case against a former employee and board member who claims she was fired from the organization for being a woman. Banach had allegedly been selling works attributed to Motherwell at various galleries without telling the foundation. “It is not unreasonable that someone who is responsible for ensuring the accuracy and authenticity of Motherwell artwork and inventory would be terminated for not including her ownership of Motherwell artwork on that inventory,” the court said in its statement. (more…)
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Tuesday, December 20th, 2016
The New York Times takes a first look at the 2nd Avenue Subway, which is set to open on New Year’s Day, and which will include works by Chuck Close, Vik Muniz, and Sarah Sze. “At some point government adopted an attitude that its job was to build things that were functional but unattractive and unappealing,” Governor Cuomo said in a statement to The New York Times. “But that’s not how it has always been, and it’s not how it should be. With every public works project, I believe there is an opportunity to elevate the everyday, to build a public space where community can gather and where culture and shared civic values are celebrated.” (more…)
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Tuesday, December 20th, 2016
Protestors leaving an event at Artists Space‘s new Tribeca location were attacked by Trump supporters this past weekend. “When we were trying to leave they followed us and one of them — a white man with a lot of tattoos — started swinging at one of us across the face,” says Michael Basillas, who was attacked. (more…)
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Tuesday, December 20th, 2016
Jeff Koons has designed a limited edition snowboard for Burton, a $5,000 board comes from an edition of 50, and draws on Plato’s allegory of the cave for its graphical layout. The image uses large-scale foil inlays to echo this allegory. “When you’re on a snowboard, there is a sense of oneness, and I’m just mesmerized by it, Koons says. “So I created an idea for a board that reflects the philosophy of this feeling, starting with Plato’s Cave – the idea of transcendence, freeing oneself and walking out of that cave in a higher state of consciousness. That’s what the act of snowboarding does for me.” (more…)
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Monday, December 19th, 2016
Ai Weiwei has expressed a desire to travel to Syria in his ongoing engagement with human rights issues around the globe. “When I fight (for) human rights in China, I never think that’s human rights in China. I think that’s human rights everywhere,’’ the artist says. “Human rights is the value which I believe is universal.” (more…)
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Monday, December 19th, 2016
A gunman has assassinated Andrey Karlov, the Russian ambassador to Turkey during a press conference at the CerModern in Ankara. The shooting took place during the opening of “Russia Through Turks’ Eyes,” a new exhibition at the museum. The gunman, who was also shot and killed at the museum, reportedly shouted “don’t forget Aleppo, don’t forget Syria!” after opening fire.
(more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
Marian Goodman is profiled in the New York Times this week, as she reflects on her career, and the current state of the art market. “I think money speaks more than it ever has before,” she says. “The auctions have been good for business, but I’m not sure it’s been so good for the art world.” (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
Despite the UK’s exit from the EU, several British cities are pushing to become the next “European Capital of Culture” for 2023. Leeds, Dundee and Milton Keynes are all pushing to host the event, which is seen as a benefit to local economies. “The United Kingdom is leaving the European Union, but we are not leaving Europe. We want that relationship to reflect the kind of mature, co-operative relationship that close friends and allies enjoy,” says Culture Secretary Karen Bradley. (more…)
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