Archive for the 'News' Category
Thursday, August 27th, 2020
Christie’s is preparing its first sales after merging its Contemporary and Modern departments for October, leading with a $25 million Cezanne. “We’re giving consignors and buyer multiple opportunities this fall to buy at auction,” Alex Rotter, Christie’s Chairman of Postwar and Contemporary Art in New York says. “These collectors are happily making use of a wide range of platforms, they are buying works across categories, and they certainly are not glued to the conventional auction schedule.” (more…)
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Thursday, August 27th, 2020
A who punched a £20 million Picasso last year at the Tate Modern will face 18 months in prison. “I have concluded without hesitation the impact upon the public and the gravity of this offense, together with the need to deter others from this form of conduct requires the imposition of an immediate custodial sentence,” said Judge Jeremy Donne in the sentencing. (more…)
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Wednesday, August 26th, 2020
The Whitney Museum of American Art has canceled an upcoming exhibition following controversy over its decision to include work purchased during a fundraiser for racial justice charities, a move that drew criticism over its perceived capitalization on the work of artists of color without compensating them directly. The museum is facing additional criticism over pulling the show instead of paying artists. “Instead of canceling, they should actually pay us for the full price of our work and hold the exhibition instead of cowering in the face of everyone calling them out,” says artist Dana Scruggs. (more…)
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Wednesday, August 12th, 2020
The Tate will make half of its commercial workforce redundant, The Guardian reports. “Sadly, at the moment, the trading business is too big because we won’t be able to open all the cafes and the shops in the same way,” says director Maria Belshaw. (more…)
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Wednesday, August 12th, 2020
Oregon philanthropist and collector Jordan D. Schnitzer has purchase an archive of prints and works on paper by Judy Chicago. “This will enhance the abilities of art historians to understand her process,” says dealer Tonya Turner Carroll. (more…)
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Tuesday, August 11th, 2020
Part of the collection of late financier Don Marron, works on paper by Jasper Johns, Brice Marden and more, will go on sale at Pace Gallery’s Hamptons outpost this month. “The reason for this show is the same reason we are having the gallery here,” says Marc Glimcher. “To get people reengaged and in front of art again.” (more…)
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Monday, August 10th, 2020
The Philadelphia Museum of Art staff has voted to unionize. “We are all incredibly happy and excited to get to this point,” says organizer Nicole Cook. “It works out to an 89% victory, which feels really great. The win was very emphatic.” (more…)
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Monday, August 10th, 2020
The Met has laid off an additional 79 workers as the financial impact of COVID-19 continues to worsen. “Our goal has always been to minimize the impact of the financial crisis for our staff,” reads an open letter from director Max Hollein and president/CEO Daniel Weiss. “Unfortunately, with staff salaries comprising around 65 percent of our annual budget, we are confronted by the difficult reality that reducing the size of our workforce and furloughing additional staff is the responsible next step to address our urgent financial challenges.” (more…)
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Monday, August 10th, 2020
A piece in the Art Newspaper traces the Lebanese art scene’s mourning after the massive explosion in the city last week. “All I hope now is for the quick recovery of those who have been injured and a safe return to the now-scattered people,” says Naila Kettaneh Kunigk, owner of Gallerie Tanit said in a statement. (more…)
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Tuesday, August 4th, 2020
Kerry James Marshall unveils a body of new works in the NYT this week, inspired by the drawings of John James Audubon, and by historical assertions and evidence that the ornithologist and artist was black. “I didn’t know what to make of it, honestly,” he says. “If somebody did the research and put it in a book, then maybe it must be true. And I never forgot that assertion was made.” (more…)
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Tuesday, August 4th, 2020
Artist Hank Willis Thomas has an interview in The Guardian this week, as he exhibits a new sculpture in Atlanta’s Fourth Ward Park. “To me, the work is a celebration and a provocation,” Thomas says. “It’s a symbol of community, strength, justice and belonging that aims to inspire action and demand social change.” (more…)
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Monday, August 3rd, 2020
Sotheby’s announced earnings for the first half of 2020 at $2.5 billion with sales volume for the year down 25%, but impressive gains shown in online sales. “The art and luxury markets have proven to be incredibly resilient, and demand for quality across categories is unabated.” says CEO Charles Stewart. (more…)
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Monday, August 3rd, 2020
Yayoi Kusama’s retrospective at the Gropius Bau in Berlin has been postponed until 2021. “To Covid-19 that stands in our way/I say Disappear from this earth/We shall fight/We shall fight this terrible monster,” the artist said earlier this year in a statement on the current challenges caused by the virus. (more…)
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Wednesday, July 29th, 2020
Protests have begun in Norway, as the government begins tearing down a massive Picasso mural damaged in the 2011 terrorist attack in Oslo. “There is a grieving process that this is happening,” “At the same time, the spirit that many displayed to campaign to protect the building has been very positive. People have woken up to the value of this art.” (more…)
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Wednesday, July 29th, 2020
The site of Van Gogh’s last painting has been discovered as Auvers-sur-Oise, village north of Paris where the artist died. “Having worked for hours on a painting which shows a preoccupation with the relentless struggle between life and death, Van Gogh, feeling alone and seeing no alternative, decided to find his earthly rest with the setting sun, on the outskirts of the village with a view of a freshly harvested wheatfield,” says researcher Wouter van der Veen. (more…)
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Wednesday, July 29th, 2020
The Tate is under fire after trade unions accused the museum of disproportionately cutting black and minority ethnic staff members as it reopens. “Many of these colleagues will be amongst the lowest-paid staff on the Tate estate, with some at risk earning little more than the national minimum wage, and in some of the most diverse teams across Tate,” the union representing employees stated. (more…)
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Tuesday, July 28th, 2020
Pace has informed a number of previously furloughed employees that they will not be returning to work. “The economic situation caused by the global pandemic means we cannot sustain our previous level of staffing,” says gallery spokeswoman Amelia Redgrift. “This decision was taken after every other measure to ensure we are prepared for an extended period of financial uncertainty and to protect as many jobs as possible in the long-term.” (more…)
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Tuesday, July 21st, 2020
Gavin Brown is closing his solo gallery, and partnering with Barbara Gladstone, the NYT reports. “It’s been a very rapid process,” Brown says. “Barbara is someone I’ve held in esteem for three decades. I remember, vividly, seeing the Matthew Barney show on Greene Street.” (more…)
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Tuesday, July 21st, 2020
A trove of paintings, including work by Willem de Kooning and Alexander Calder, have been discovered in the basement of Stony Brook Hospital, The New York Post reports. “It was a great find,” says art consultant Vincent Mazo “It was like opening up King Tut’s tomb.” (more…)
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Tuesday, July 21st, 2020
The Frick Collection will reopen at 945 Madison, the Marcel Breuer-designed building formerly serving as the home of the Whitney and Met Breuer. The space, titled Frick Madison, will be used while the Frick undergoes an ambitious renovation. (more…)
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Tuesday, July 21st, 2020
Washington D.C.’s National Gallery of Art reopened Monday, the first cultural institution in Washington to welcome the public back since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. “The gallery is always a spiritual place, but it’s a spiritual place that’s meant to be filled with people,” says museum director Kaywin Feldman.
(more…)
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Tuesday, July 21st, 2020
A piece in the NYT notes the current re-evaluation of the historical resonance and market of Ruth Asawa, the Japanese-American artist whose pioneering wire sculptures and influential practice at Black Mountain College are receiving a renewed interest. (more…)
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Tuesday, July 21st, 2020
Bloomberg charts the ongoing challenges faced by The Shed, as the COVID-19 crisis continues to prevent exhibitions and performances at the fledgling space. “Every department had cuts” says artistic director Alex Poots. “We’re not transforming the Shed into something different; it still needs marketing and programming and production departments. But it needs less of all of those because we’re doing less.” (more…)
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Monday, July 20th, 2020
As New York enters Phase 4 of its reopening plan, the city is keeping museums shuttered, which officials attribute less to a resurgence than federal negligence in containing the virus. “We are still in a precarious position, not because of anything we have done, but because of the negligence of the federal government, and the states that, frankly, listen to the federal government,” says governor Andrew Cuomo. “I am very worried about the spread that we see across the country, and the inevitability that the spread will be here.”
(more…)
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