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Archive for the 'News' Category

Etel Adnan Interviewed in Financial Times

Monday, October 31st, 2016

Artist Etel Adnan is profiled in the Financial Times this week, as the 91-year-old artist sees a resurgence in the market for her colorful, minimalist compositions.  “I like to say something in one go,” Adnan says. “Brushes you have to wash and it takes a lot of time. With the palette knife there is less interruption as you just wipe off the paint with a piece of tissue and carry on.” (more…)

London’s National Gallery Contesting Claims Over Matisse Work as Nazi-Loot

Friday, October 28th, 2016

London’s National Gallery is contesting a claim that one of its premier Matisse paintings is former Nazi loot.  Portrait of Greta Moll passed through several hands before purchase in 1979, at a time when provenance was not nearly as closely monitored or considered during acquisitions.  The museum is calling for dismissal of the case over “jurisdictional issues.”  (more…)

Baltimore Museum of Art to Organize Mark Bradford Show at Venice Biennale

Friday, October 28th, 2016

The Baltimore Museum of Art will organize the U.S. pavilion at the Venice Biennale next year, presenting the work of artist Mark Bradford.  “Without question, this is the greatest honor accorded in the contemporary art world,” says director Christopher Bedford said. “This is so prestigious, so deeply and totally global that it instantly plants the BMA in the international spotlight.” (more…)

Carrie Mae Weems Profiled in NYT

Friday, October 28th, 2016

Carrie Mae Weems is profiled in the New York Times this week, as the artist prepares to open a show of new works at Jack Shainman Gallery, and frames her recent work around modern television.  “I decided to go and stand in spaces where I think significant transformations are taking place in television as a way of pointing, trying to understand the role of black actors,”she says. “Directors like Lee Daniels and Shonda Rhimes are laying the foundation for what can be imagined within the context of American culture. Most people go for their programming to paid television, so there’s an economic shift. Network television has been left to poor people.” (more…)

Donald Moore Elected Chair of ICA London’s Council

Friday, October 28th, 2016

Donald A Moore, the chair of Morgan Stanley Group Europe, will take over as the chair of the ICA London’s council.  “I am looking forward to working with Donald, so that together we can make the ICA simply one of the most relevant and innovative contemporary arts organizations in the world today,” said recently hired museum director Stefan Kalmár. “Historically our outspoken program is what has made us ‘the’ ICA, but that ‘the’ ICA still exists at all, is due to the dedication and leadership of Alison and Gregor [Muir]—for this we can’t thank them enough.” (more…)

Lawrence Abu Hamdan wins 2016 Nam June Paik Prize

Friday, October 28th, 2016

Lawrence Abu Hamdan has won the 2016 Nam June Paik Prize, given each year by the Museum Folkwang in Essen, Germany.  Abu Hamdan’s work investigated the shooting of Palestinian teenagers by the Israeli army, and the attempts by soldiers to cover up the noise of the killings.  “In his installation [earshot] he has created an open space in which we can focus with precision on his subject, its means of representation and on our own role as viewers,” the jury wrote in a statement. “The topic of the representation of violence is of great contemporary relevance, and the artist encourages us to debate key moral issues in a different way.” (more…)

Mark di Suvero Gives NYT a Tour of His Studio

Friday, October 28th, 2016

The New York Times visits Mark di Suvero in his Astoria studio complex for a tour of the expansive location, which includes gallery spaces, several studios, and even several living spaces for artists to stay.  The article also profiles the artist’s ongoing engagement with the neighborhood around his complex, which he built and developed with the help of neighborhood residents.   (more…)

Mary Boone Accuses Alec Baldwin of Tax Fraud in New Court Filing

Friday, October 28th, 2016

Mary Boone is fighting back in her feud with Alec Baldwin this week, accusing the actor of attempted tax fraud in the purchase of a Ross Bleckner piece.  Baldwin had previously had the work shipped to California upon purchase, before sending it back to his New York apartment, a move Boone describes as an attempt to avoid New York sales tax.  “I respectfully submit that Baldwin cannot connive an elaborate scheme to evade sales taxes and yet claim that there are any circumstances under which he is entitled to punitive or exemplary damages in connection with the same transaction,” she said in a sworn affidavit. (more…)

Herzog de Meuron to Design Berlin’s Museum of the 20th Century

Friday, October 28th, 2016

Herzog de Meuron has won the contract to design Berlin’s Museum of the 20th Century with a low, squat design that many have likened to a train station or farmers’ market.  “A riding school? A station? A depot? All these associations are correct,” says the architect Jacques Herzog, emphasizing the space’s shared intent as a site for activity and community. (more…)

Sadiq Khan Pushing for More Affordable Studios in London

Thursday, October 27th, 2016

London mayor Sadiq Khan is pushing for more affordable studio space for artists in the city’s increasingly expensive real estate market, and establishing the “Creative Land Trust” to provide loans to artists looking to secure space.  “Culture is in the DNA of the capital but we cannot be complacent,” Khan says. “As property prices rise and new areas of the city grow, artists are finding themselves unable to put down roots here. I am committed to improving access to dedicated, affordable workspace so that the next generation of creatives are given the extra support they require to flourish.” (more…)

Frans Haals Forgery Profiled in NYT

Thursday, October 27th, 2016

The New York Times takes a deeper exploration of the Frans Haals forgery that had convinced experts at the Louvre and the Rijksmuseum, and which was recently discovered as a falsely attributed canvas.  “The ones who have researched it until now are good researchers, but they’re not familiar with the handwriting of Frans Hals, so to speak, so that’s an extra reason to be careful,” says Martin Bijl, a Dutch Masters restoration professional. (more…)

Townley Venus Returns from Restoration After Thumb was Knocked Off by Caterers Last Year

Thursday, October 27th, 2016

The Art Newspaper reports on the damage done last year to the British Museum’s Townley Venus, one of its most treasured holdings.  The statue had its thumb knocked off by caterers last December, but was subject to an extensive restoration before going back on view.  “We have taken steps to ensure it does not happen again. Any staff who are involved in managing or invigilating events have gone through retraining on the protection of objects before and during events,” the museum said in a statement. (more…)

David Rubenstein Tapped to Head Smithsonian Institution

Thursday, October 27th, 2016

Billionaire David M. Rubenstein will head the Smithsonian Institution board, the Washington Post reports.  “I love the museums, and I love the learning. It keeps me young,” Rubenstein says.  “I don’t play golf. I don’t drink alcohol, so I’m not going to bars.  At this point in my life, I only do the things I want to do. This isn’t work. This is pleasurable.” (more…)

Protestors Block Streets Outside SAIC Over Education Funding

Thursday, October 27th, 2016

A group of protestors were arrested outside Art Institute of Chicago on Monday after blockading Michigan Avenue in protest over one trustee’s alleged complicity in cuts to higher education funding.  The activity called on trustee Kenneth Griffin to “push for free, fully funded public higher education, funded by taxes on corporations and the rich.” (more…)

Derrick Adams Wins Studio Museum Joyce Alexander Wein Artist Prize

Thursday, October 27th, 2016

Artist Derrick Adams has won this year’s Studio Museum Joyce Alexander Wein Artist Prize, a $50,000 award.  The award is given each year since since 2006, to “an African-American artist of great innovation and promise.” (more…)

Pipilotti Rist Speaks to Artforum on New Museum Survey

Wednesday, October 26th, 2016

Pipilotti Rist speaks to Artforum this week, as the artist’s opens her New Museum survey, Pixel Forest.  “Pixel Forest is, in a way, reconciling daily and nightly lights with our synapses and inner feelings; I try to bring a poetic order,” she says. “It’s a very emotional, intuitive work that converges both the technological and the biological.” (more…)

Israel’s Divisive Culture Minister Miri Regev Profiled in NYT

Wednesday, October 26th, 2016

The New York Times has a lengthy piece on Miri Regev, Israel’s Culture Minister, and the rift she has created between the state and its left-leaning creative class.  “There’s a new group on the right that says: We’re unwilling to bow our heads any longer,” she says. “We’re unwilling to let the left decide for us if we’re in charge.” (more…)

Top Turin Museum Official Resigns Over Ongoing Spat with City’s Mayor

Wednesday, October 26th, 2016

One of the top museum officials in the Italian city of Turin has resigned following a public spat with the city’s mayor.  Patrizia Asproni, the head of the Turin Museum Foundation, stepped down after the city’s populist mayor, Chiara Appendino, publicly criticized her over the failure to secure a Manet exhibition.  The feud underscores growing uncertainty over support for the arts in the city, as Appendino’s stance towards the city’s institutions continues to garner criticism.  “It is a terrible thing that the mayor wants to decide which exhibitions go to museums,” Asproni says. “I think this [calling for my resignation] was a political move because of course I arrived with the previous mayor and he asked me to build the culture of the town and I said: ‘Yes, of course, why not?’” (more…)

Ulay Revisits His 1976 Art Heist Performance in Berlin

Wednesday, October 26th, 2016

Ulay is interviewed in The Observer this week, discussing his 1976 piece There’s a Criminal Touch to Art, in which he entered New National Gallery in Berlin and stole a painting by Carl Spitzweg.  “I made a statement that this was a demonstrative action, not a theft in the traditional sense,” he says, referring to the work as a “protest action, first of all against the institutionalization of art, secondarily about discrimination against foreign workers.” (more…)

Miami-Dade College Loses Court Case Against Dealer Gary Nader

Wednesday, October 26th, 2016

Miami-Dade College has been legally ordered to pay the legal fees for art dealer Gary Nader following litigation over Nader’s failed attempts to build a cultural center at the school’s campus.  Nader alleged that the school had conspired with another bidder in the attempt to redevelop a parking lot in downtown Miami that resulted in his failed attempt to build a museum. (more…)

Smithsonian Receives Major Challenge Gift from Walton Family for Digitization of Archives

Tuesday, October 25th, 2016

The Walton Family has offered a challenge grant of up to $900,000 to the Smithsonian to fund the digitization of the museum archives.  “The task of digitizing the archives’ vast collections for broad accessibility requires a dedicated team of experts and time,” director Kate Haw said. “This challenge grant from the distinguished Walton Family Foundation allows us to expand both our technical and staff capacities to ramp up our pace beyond what we could have imagined.” (more…)

London’s Mayor Gallery Suing Agnes Martin Catalogue Raisonné Publishers Over Excluded Works

Tuesday, October 25th, 2016

Mayor Gallery in London has filed a lawsuit against the publishers of the Agnes Martin catalogue raisonné, and the committee responsible for authenticating her works, claiming that 13 works left out of the book, and held by its clients, have been rendered worthless.  “When I read the complaint, I failed to see a legal claim. I’d never seen a legal complaint without a claim, until now. I compare it to an opera without music,” says Aaron Richard Golub, the lawyer representing the authentication committee.   (more…)

Galerie Perrotin to Open Tokyo Outpost

Tuesday, October 25th, 2016

Galerie Perrotin will open a new space in Tokyo in the Spring of 2017, the gallery announced this week.  The space will be located in the Roppongi neighborhood, on the ground floor of the Piramide Building, and is currently covered by wallpaper designed by French artist Pierre Le-Tan, reimagining works by the gallery’s artists. (more…)

Nina Katchadourian Puts a Focus on Dust at MoMA

Tuesday, October 25th, 2016

The New York Times has a piece this week on the pervasive presence and threat of dust towards the works in the MoMA galleries, the focus of a new new audio guide work by artist Nina Katchadourian.  “I like coming at the big things by what‘s immediate and observable to me,” the artist says. (more…)