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Archive for the 'News' Category

Art Basel Hong Kong Announces 2017 Exhibitor List

Tuesday, October 25th, 2016

Art Basel has announced the exhibitor list for the 2017 edition of its Hong Kong art fair, bringing a group of 187 galleries to the Hong Kong Convention Center.   (more…)

Paula Cooper’s Contributions to New York Art World Profiled in NYT

Monday, October 24th, 2016

Paula Cooper is featured in the New York Times this week, as the paper spotlights her impact on the New York art world, and her pioneering approach to running a gallery, including her opening of the first gallery south of Houston during the 1970’s.  “I went because that’s where the artists were,” she says. (more…)

William Eggleston Profiled in NYT

Monday, October 24th, 2016

William Eggleston is profiled in the New York Times this month, as the artist reflects back on his work and his studious sense of the photographic image.  “I know they’re there, the angles and compositions,” Eggleston says. “Every little minute thing works with every other one there. All of these images are composed. They’re little paintings to me.” (more…)

Steven Cohen’s Collection Profiled in Fortune

Monday, October 24th, 2016

Steve Cohen’s art collecting gets a spotlight in Fortune this week, as the Hedge Fund Manager shares his vision and strategies on acquiring works.  “I am purely from the gut,” he says. “And I know right away. If it stays in my brain—let’s say I go see a picture, if I keep thinking about it, I know it’s something I like. If I forget about it, then I know, couldn’t care less.” (more…)

Mark Leckey Profiled in NYT

Monday, October 24th, 2016

The New York Times has a profile on Mark Leckey this week, as the artist opens his exhibition at MoMA PS1, and considers his place in the modern art world.  “Art is changing — I don’t know if what I’m doing feels like it belongs to an older era, one older white man having a show,” he says. “The idea of celebrated artists is being rightly questioned. So to do a show like this, though it comes with all this excitement and energy, at the same time, it might already be — not archaic — but belong to the past.” (more…)

WSJ Profiles Collaboration Between Sculptor and Architect for WWI Memorial

Monday, October 24th, 2016

The Wall Street Journal spotlights the collaboration between architect Joe Weishaar and sculptor Sabin Howard to create a WWI Memorial in Washington, D.C., an effort that will create one of the largest bronze sculptures in the world.  “When I got to his website, I just knew he was the one I wanted to work with,” Mr. Weishaar says of Howard’s work. “There’s a level of craft there that has completely disappeared from American sculpture and drawing schools.” (more…)

Ai Weiwei Opening Four Shows in New York This November

Monday, October 24th, 2016

Ai Weiwei returns to New York this fall in a big way, opening a pair of exhibitions at Mary Boone, as well as a show at Deitch Projects, and another at Lisson Gallery, returning to the city he lived in for much of the 1980’s.  “I wish I had known him in New York in the 1980s when he was here for a whole decade, and it turns out that many of my friends knew him,” Jeffrey Deitch says. (more…)

Robert Olnick Collection Set for Christie’s Sales Next Month

Friday, October 21st, 2016
Real Estate magnate Robert S. Olnick’s art collection is set to go on sale at Christie’s next month, counting major Agnes Martin and Roy Lichtenstein works among its holdings.  The first selecton works offered next month, are spread over both the evening and day sales, and are valued at a total of $20 million.  “It was really about them making the rounds and buying what they liked,” says Laura Paulson, deputy chairman of Christie’s Americas.

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Guy Wildenstein’s Fate to be Decided by Court Tribunal

Friday, October 21st, 2016

Guy Wildenstein’s fate has been left to a tribunal following arguments in his tax evasion case, the NYT reports.  The judges will spend up to three months considering the case before reaching their decision, which could include jail time and a 250 million euro fine for alleged deceptions in how the works were held.  “The bank knows only what the family told them,” says Alexandre Bronstein, a laywer pushing a criminal case over several of the works seized from the Wildenstein collection.   (more…)

Phillips Announces $12-$18 Million Clyfford Still for November Evening Sale

Friday, October 21st, 2016

Phillips’s Robert Manley announced the auction house’s star lot for its upcoming November Contemporary Evening Sale in New York, a colorful Clyfford Still priced between $12 million and $18 million.  “Formerly in the collection of the artist’s friend and student, the painter Edward Dugmore, the painting has been off the market for decades and has never been to auction,” Manley notes of the work. (more…)

Frick Collection Taps Selldorf Architects for Renovation

Friday, October 21st, 2016

The Frick Collection has announced that Selldorf Architects will helm the museum’s upcoming renovation, returning to plans that had been put on hold after protest over the original expansion blueprints.  “It’s about enhancing the visitor’s experience and making it utterly seamless, so that it doesn’t harm any of the existing experience that people cherish, myself included,” Annabelle Selldorf said. “We’ll do our darndest.” (more…)

MOCA Chicago Spends $500,000 to Restore Concrete-Block Cadillac

Friday, October 21st, 2016

Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art is spending $500,000 to restore Wolf Vostell’s concrete encrusted Cadillac sculpture, a piece which has long sat in a yard lot until the museum decided to rehabilitate its blocky frame.   “Restoration and conservation is what we do, but I’d never done a project like this,”says Stephen Murphy, the general manager of Chicago Vintage Motor Carriage, where the car was restored. (more…)

Ai Weiwei Interviewed in New York Times

Friday, October 21st, 2016

Ai Weiwei is interviewed in the New York Times this week, as the artist prepares to open an exhibition at Deitch Projects, displaying the cast-off garments and shoes of migrant travelers.  “The migrants are there but they’re not there. These clothes are existing, something you can touch,” he says.  “I grew up in a similar condition. I would wear a shoe worn by my brother. It was often too big, but I would wear it. It’s better than no shoes. My father used his ties as a belt because he didn’t have a belt. When he was doing hard labor in the winter, he would open up the tie to wrap on his feet because he had no socks and they were so cold.” (more…)

Yoko Ono Opens Public Sculpture in Chicago

Friday, October 21st, 2016

Yoko Ono has opened her first large-scale public installation in the US this week, Skylanding, in Chicago’s Jackson Park.  “Skylanding is a place where the sky and earth meet and create a seed to learn about the past and come together to create a future of peace and harmony, with nature and each other,” Ono says. “Peace among all people and nations begins with peace in our hearts, streets and parks.” (more…)

Hans Ulrich Obrist Tops ArtReview’s “Power 100” List

Thursday, October 20th, 2016

The annual ArtReview “Power 100” list for the art world has been released, with curator Hans Ulrich Obrist topping the list for the first time since 2009.  “Obrist’s project is perfectly suited to a globalized, networked age,” the magazine writes.  He is trailed by Documenta 14 curator Adam Szymczyk and Iwan and Manuela Wirth.

Schukin Collection Set for Paris Exhibition

Thursday, October 20th, 2016

The Art Newspaper spotlights the arrival of over 100 Modernist masterworks of the Sergei Shchukin collection at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris, the first time this many of the works from the renowned Russian collection have been shown together outside the country.  “All curators working on the Modern period dream about staging a Shchukin exhibition,” says Anne Baldassari, former director of the Musée Picasso in Paris. “It’s one of the great pioneering collections that has never received a comprehensive presentation.” (more…)

NADA New York Moves to March During Armory Week

Thursday, October 20th, 2016

NADA will move its annual New York edition to March in 2017, aligning the event with the Armory Show, and taking place at the Skylight Clarkson North, a venue at 571 Washington Street in Hudson Square.  “NADA is always looking for new ways to bring contemporary art to the public on behalf of our international exhibitors and membership base,” says executive director Heather Hubbs. “We’re looking forward to this venture with Skylight Clarkson North, and returning to the west side for our sixth edition of NADA New York in March. (more…)

David Nahmad Claims Ownership of Monet Piece Thought to be Owned by Malaysian Billionaire Jho Low

Thursday, October 20th, 2016

Dealer David Nahmad has claimed ownership of one of the works targeted for seizure in the collection of Malaysian billionaire Jho Low, stating that the work, a Claude Monet waterlily piece, is actually in his possession.  “My painting has been solely owned and possessed by me since its purchase up to the present time,” Nahmad said in a court statement. (more…)

Marina Abramovic Profiled in New York Magazine

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016

Marina Abramovic is profiled in New York Magazine this week, as the artist turns 70, and reflects back on the course of her life and career.  “I am one of the few people who don’t have secrets,” she says. “All of my secrets, I made performances out of them, or theater pieces.” (more…)

Ann Freedman Reaches Settlement in Another Knoedler Forgery Lawsuit

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016

Ann Freedman, former director of the Knoedler gallery, has settled another of the 10 cases against her for selling forged works, reaching an agreement with collector Frank Fertitta, owner of the Ultimate Fighting Championship.  This case is the eighth to reach a settlement. (more…)

Yayoi Kusama to Get Wax Statue at Madame Tussauds Hong Kong

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016

Artist Yayoi Kusama is set to be preserved in wax at Madame Tussauds Hong Kong, the Art Newspaper reports, part of an “artistic themed zone” with the Japanese artist at the center.  “I hope everyone who passes through Madame Tussauds Hong Kong can fully embrace the positive energy evoked by the zone,” Kusama said in a statement. (more…)

Edinburgh’s Inverleith House to Cease Hosting Art Exhibitions

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016

Inverleith House at the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh will cease using its space for art exhibitions in the wake of budgetary constraints.  “These are hard financial times for everyone, and we couldn’t afford to sustain it, and at the moment we have to focus on our core programs, which are botany and horticulture.” (more…)

Rumors Circulate Over Raf Simons/Sterling Ruby Collaboration for Calvin Klein

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016

Rumors are circulating that artist Sterling Ruby is collaborating with designer Raf Simons again, this time for Calvin Klein, where Simons was recently hired as chief creative officer.  Ruby has reportedly been spotted several times at the Calvin Klein offices, and has worked with Simons on several capsule collections in the past.   (more…)

Jérôme Bel Profiled in NYT

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016

Jérôme Bel is profiled in the New York Times this week, as he prepares his new performance at MoMA, featuring a group of MoMA employees performing in the museum atrium.  “I’m more interested in human beings than in objects, obviously,” he says.  “A human being is so complicated, especially a dancing human being, especially a nonprofessional dancer.” (more…)