Archive for the 'News' Category
Monday, December 28th, 2015
Jenny Holzer is collaborating with Google to create an app commemorating HIV/AIDS victims, made in conjunction with her installation for the NYC AIDS Memorial. “Excerpts from Song of Myself by Walt Whitman will be the text on the granite paving stones. The Whitman poem is a beauty from a man in full and glad possession of his body,” Holzer said. “The app should add content from visitors and from other authors—I’m thinking a lot about David Wojnarowicz, for example—for a rich mix.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Jenny Holzer Designing Text Work for NYC AIDS Memorial
Monday, December 28th, 2015
The New York Times looks at the history of the Middle Eastern art magazine Bidoun, which has traced a unique voice in contemporary art discourse over the past 11 years. “Our vision of the Mideast extends to India, it extends to L.A. It certainly doesn’t fulfill the expectations of the ‘Clash of Civilizations’ vision that’s so pervasive,” says Senior Editor Negar Azimi. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Bidoun Art Magazine Reflects on Decade of Focus on Middle Eastern Artists and Art
Sunday, December 27th, 2015
The New York Times reports on the plans for the M+ Museum, an anchor of the West Kowloon Cultural District on Hong Kong’s waterfront, and the issues the city is facing in fully realizing its impressive scope after delays, infighting departures of key project members. “We have achieved everything we set out to do so far,” says Lars Nittve, the executive director of M+. “But it’s probably taken four to five times more work to make it happen compared to my experience in the London and Scandinavian situations. Almost every day and night is spent arguing.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on NYT Reports on Delays and Disputes Over M+ Museum
Sunday, December 27th, 2015
An article in The Chicago Reader this week notes the difficulties facing public art and installations in neighborhoods and areas where funding does not exist to maintain them, focusing on the destruction of acclaimed muralist Bill Walker’s All of Mankind at Chicago’s Stranger’s Home Missionary Baptist Church. “We had five and a half years to repair those murals and nothing happened. We got no support. The money wasn’t there,” says a Church spokesperson. “And our demographics have moved out. So we had no choice. The only logical decision was to paint [over] the murals.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | 1 Comment »
Saturday, December 26th, 2015
The negotiations for Germany’s exhibition of works from the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art may include a $3 million price tag, the Art Newspaper reports. “We are in early discussions on bringing these great treasures to the Hirshhorn—a first-time exhibition in the US. No loan fees have been discussed as yet,” a spokesperson from the Hirshhorn (which is also in talks with the museum) said. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Tehran Reportedly Looking for $3 Million Fee on Contemporary Collection Loan
Saturday, December 26th, 2015
Andy Warhol’s Hamptons estate has sold to dealer and collector Adam Lindemann for $50 million, the WSJ reports. The record price for the Montauk home, which has been held by J. Crew CEO Mickey Drexler, was a dream buy for Lindemann, who has collected Warhol for years. “It was like seizing the opportunity,” Lindemann says.
(more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Andy Warhol’s Montauk Home Sells for $50 Million
Thursday, December 24th, 2015
Allegations have been lodged that a set of Degas sculptures in the collection of the Chicago Art Institute are forgeries. “All Degas bronzes are non-disclosed second to third generation forgeries with counterfeit signatures and bogus editions,” says critic Gary Arseneau. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Critic Alleges Degas Sculptures at Chicago Art Institute are Forgeries
Thursday, December 24th, 2015
A new study by economics professor Kathryn Graddy at Brandeis University has shown that depression does not actually result in an artist’s best work. Looking at sales data and museum acquisition histories for 12,000 works executed between 1900 and 1920, Graddy noted that sales prices were notably lower for works that followed traumatic events or depression in an artist’s life. “The concept of a ‘flow state’ that people enter when being very creative has gained acceptance by psychologists,” Graddy writes in her report, “death and bereavement can reduce creativity.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Study Shows Depression Does Not Lead to Better Work by Artists
Thursday, December 24th, 2015
Ken Griffin, the billionaire head of Chicago-based hedge fund Citadel, has donated $40 million to MoMA in a non-specific gift, which the museum will use for education and exhibitions of modern and contemporary art, and will see a wing of the institution’s new expansion named after him. “It is my hope that visitors, artists and students from around the world will experience all that MoMA has to offer for generations to come,” Griffin, 47, said in the statement. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Ken Griffin Donates $40 Million to MoMA
Tuesday, December 22nd, 2015
A trial against the executors of the Daniel Wildenstein estate in Paris this month is set to cast light on the often murky ownership and backdoor dealing that goes on in the highest echelons of the art market, the New York Times reports. French authorities allege that over $250 million in art was shipped from the late dealer’s holdings days before his death, in an attempt to avoid a sizable estate tax. “It is really the first time that a trial like this in France is exploring the use of trusts and determining whether they are legal or illegal,” said Claude Dumont-Beghi, a lawyer who represented Daniel Wildenstein’s widow, Sylvia. “How did the family build its fortune and empire under this system?” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Daniel Wildenstein Estate Case Set for Trial
Tuesday, December 22nd, 2015
Artist Marilyn Minter has relaunched her Choice Works project, a nonprofit organization in collaboration with NYC’s Planned Parenthood locations. The project raises funds for the organization and helps initiate advocacy programs around the nation. “You know, I think there’s this whole thing where people are embarrassed by abortions,” Minter says. “I want to say, ‘Yeah, they do abortions. I’m proud of it.’ Places are suing them because of those lying video tapes and edited video tapes. It’s just getting worse and worse and worse, and I think we have to fight back.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Marilyn Minter Relaunches Planned Parenthood Project
Tuesday, December 22nd, 2015
With the first of the trials over the Knoedler Gallery’s fraudulent sales set to begin on January 25th, the Art Newspaper notes over twenty motions filed by both sides over the admissibility and reliability of various pieces of evidence by both Ann Freedman and collectors Domenico and Eleanore De Sole, who are suing for over $25 million in damages. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Lawyers File Multiple Motions in Advance of First Knoedler Trial
Monday, December 21st, 2015
Police in Mumbai have arrested four suspects in the murder of Indian artist Hema Upadhyay and her lawyer Haresh Bhambani earlier this month, including one suspect who has confessed to killing the artist over what he claims was an unpaid debt to a warehouse owner. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Police Arrest Four in Murder of Indian Artist
Monday, December 21st, 2015
Paris Museums are still reeling from attacks in the nation’s capital last month, with attendance at the Louvre down 35% from the same two month period last year. The drop is in part attributed to “instructions issued by the ministry of education forbidding schools from visiting museums,” says a museum spokeswoman. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Paris Museum Attendance Down in Wake of Attacks
Monday, December 21st, 2015
The New York Times covers the efforts of archivists to preserve the public artworks and installations created in the aftermath of the Paris terrorist attacks this fall. “We need to leave some of the objects, and at the same time, we need to make room for the sidewalk, sometimes even the road, so that life can go on,” says Guillaume Nahon, director of the Paris archives. “It’s a day-to-day process, and a contradictory one too, because these memorials are supposed to be ephemeral, but people still need a place to mourn for now.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Paris Archivists Seek to Collect, Preserve Memorials from Attacks
Saturday, December 19th, 2015
Gilbert and George are interviewed in a short video by Art Info this week, discussing their opening retrosecptive at the Museum of Old and New Art in Hobart, Tasmania, and their perspective on making and showing work. “We believe that we are all part of a great big Western triumph, but we want to take things forward,” the duo says. “We realized that people were using taste and preferences in art as a weapon against people they believed to be socially or educationally inferior to them.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Gilbert and George Interviewed in Art Info
Saturday, December 19th, 2015
Sotheby’s CFO Patrick McClymont will leave the company, Bloomberg Businessweek reports, noting some analyst’s perspectives that the move is part of an increased push by activist investors to boost profits. “Patrick brought financial discipline and transparency to the company,” Kristine Koerber, a senior analyst at Barrington Research. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Sotheby’s CFO Out Amid Drive to Push Profits
Saturday, December 19th, 2015
The Brooklyn Museum has appointed Nancy Spector to the dual positions of deputy director and chief curator, making her the first senior staff member hired by new director Anne Pasternak. “The Brooklyn Museum’s past is rooted in vision, courage, and a good measure of chutzpah,” Pasternak says. “With Nancy Spector as our chief curator, we can count on a trailblazing future that charts new territory for our museum. We can expect Nancy to explore the important questions of the role of art and museums for the twenty-first century, shaking up old canons and proposing new ones, while sharing our love of art and artists with ever-expanding audiences.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Nancy Spector Appointed Brooklyn Museum Deputy Director and Chief Curator
Saturday, December 19th, 2015
Benjamin Genocchio, the newly minted head of the Armory Show, is interviewed by Art News this week, discussing his views on art fairs, and his vision for the fair moving forward. “What does it mean to be an art fair in 2016?” Genocchio says. “Don’t you think they’re all so stale? They’re all so stale and there is very little excitement. And I don’t know why that is, but come on, we should be able to make it more exciting.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Benjamin Genocchio Interviewed in Art News
Saturday, December 19th, 2015
The Smithsonian has announced its reception of an important David Smith sculpture, Agricola IV from 1952, a work from one of the artist’s most renowned series. “‘Agricola IV’ is a transformative acquisition, one that anchors the story of sculpture in America and shows how Smith changed the arc of visual expression in three -dimensions in the 20th century,” Elizabeth Broun, director of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, said. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Smithsonian Receives Important David Smith Sculpture
Saturday, December 19th, 2015
The Art Newspaper reports on the strange goings-on behind the $37 million sale of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s The Field Next to the Other Road (1981) at Christie’s this year. The work was sold by Tony Shafrazi, but documents show that he still owned the work two months later, raising speculation that the buyer backed out. “We can confirm the lot was sold at auction,” said a spokeswoman for Christie’s.
(more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Art Newspaper Notes Mysterious Conditions Behind Basquiat Sale
Friday, December 18th, 2015
Current Editor-In-Chief of Artnet News, Benjamin Genocchio, has been announced as the successor to Noah Horowitz at the Armory Show. “Unfortunately, the price of success is opportunity,” Genocchio says, which first reported the story. “This is an opportunity that was too good to pass up.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Artnet News Chief Benjamin Genocchio to Head Up Armory Show
Friday, December 18th, 2015
Joseph Kosuth is interviewed in the WSJ this week, as the artist reflects on his work and his current show at Sean Kelly Gallery. “If you begin with the presumption that artists work with meaning, not with forms and colors, you get a whole other approach for seeing art,” he says. “The idea was to get rid of the aura around the work of art. It’s a burden, and we don’t need it.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Joseph Kosuth Interviewed in Wall Street Journal
Friday, December 18th, 2015
A long-standing conflict between the Prado and the Patrimonio Nacional in Madrid over the ownership of some of the Spanish nation’s most impressive holdings, including Hieronymous Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights, has been resolved. “Peace reigns,” says Prado board president José Pedro Pérez-Llorca. “No it’s stronger than that. You can say it’s just like a love affair.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Ownesrhip Dispute Over Bosch Settled Between Prado and Patrimonio Nacional