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Archive for the 'News' Category

Nairy Baghramian and Maria Hassabi Win Performa’s Malcolm McLaren Award

Tuesday, November 26th, 2019

Nairy Baghramian and Maria Hassabi have won the fifth edition of Performa’s Malcolm McLaren Award.  “At this Performa biennial, we encountered the work of familiar artists, whose careers we’ve long followed, and of artists who were new to us,” says curator Nikki Columbus.  “[The pair’s work] TOGETHER, in particular—performed by Hassabi and Oisín Monaghan—marked a new level of achievement: While continuing Hassabi’s movement technique, the piece was about care and community, long-term relationships, and love.”  (more…)

Victoria Miro to Represent María Berrío

Tuesday, November 26th, 2019

Victoria Miro has announced representation of artist María Berrío, the gallery announced in a statement today. (more…)

Rashid Johnson Profiled in The Guardian

Monday, November 25th, 2019

Rashid Johnson gets a profile in The Guardian this week, as the artist reflects on his new pieces, and the mechanics of walking under the modern condition.  “We think of the grace of it, but also, the obstacles,” he says. “I think of my body moving while being followed by the police, the robotic movement. Not trying to move quickly. Not making reactions. That isn’t graceful in those terms, it isn’t beautiful or rhythmic.” (more…)

Pope.L Profiled in New Yorker

Monday, November 25th, 2019

Artist Pope.L gets a profile in the New Yorker this week, following the artist’s mass “crawl” this year, and his retrodspective at MoMA.  “People ask me what all this support will do for performance art,” he says. “They say, ‘Oh, wow, the problems for performance are over. Modern has come to our rescue! I don’t have to worry anymore.’ But I think performance always needs to be troubled. It needs to have its problems. That’s what gets work done.”  (more…)

Massive Contemporary Art Exhibition to Open in Moscow Next Year

Monday, November 25th, 2019

A massively-scaled exhibition responding to a world in flux following the fall of the Berlin wall to today will open at Moscow’s State Tretyakov Gallery next year, Art Newspaper reports.  “It’s hard for me to even recall something of comparable scale,” says Zelfira Tregulova, the director of the Tretyakov. “This exhibition will present a totally unique slice of Europe’s contemporary art, moreover Europe not just in the sense of the European Union, but Europe in a much broader sense of the word.” (more…)

Restoration of Michelangelo’s Florence Pietà to be Done in Public View

Monday, November 25th, 2019

Restoration of Michelangelo’s Pietà at Florence’s Museo dell’Opera del Duomo will take place in full public view, Art Newspaper reports. “We’re making the restoration part of the visitor’s experience,” says director Timothy Verdon.

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Saxon Royal Jewels Stolen from Dresden Museum in Major Heist

Monday, November 25th, 2019

Thieves have stolen three collections of jewelry from the royal house of Saxony, held in a Dresden Museum, in a heist labelled the most prominent and expensive since WWII. “Nowhere else in Europe has any other collection of royal jewels been preserved in this form and quality and quantity,” Dirk Syndram, director of the Green Vault said. (more…)

MOCA Workers Move to Unionize

Saturday, November 23rd, 2019

Around 50 workers at Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles are trying to form a union. “We recognize that management has identified a need to shift workplace culture in order to make equity, diversity, and accessibility a greater priority,” the group says. “So far, however, this has been a top-down structure that has involved spending undisclosed amounts of money on external consultants who speak on behalf of the entire staff. Instead of looking outside of the museum for answers, we ask that leadership listen to its own workers and hear our needs directly.” (more…)

Whitney Museum Receives $1 Million Grant from Keith Haring Foundation

Saturday, November 23rd, 2019

The Whitney Museum has received a $1 million grant from the Keith Haring Foundation to complete the construction of David Hammons’s Day’s End. “For a museum of our scale, it’s a heavy lift, no pun intended,” says curator Scott Rothkopf. “This is definitely one of the largest gifts toward the realization of this project.” (more…)

Van Gogh Sunflowers Head to Australia

Saturday, November 23rd, 2019

Van Gogh’s iconic Sunflowers (1888) will head to Australia next year for a show at the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra, traveling from London’s National Gallery(more…)

Dr. Oetker Returns Painting to Heirs of Jewish Collector Killed by Nazis

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

Dr. Oetker, a German food company, has returned a painting by Carl Spitzweg to the heirs of a Jewish tobacco dealer killed at Buchenwald concentration camp. “This settlement with a private collection on the basis of a solution that is both amicable and equitable is exemplary,” Gunnar Schnabel, the lawyer representing the heirs of collector Leo Bendel, said in a statement. “Unfortunately such solutions are still the exception to the rule.” (more…)

Barbara Kruger Heads to David Zwirner

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

Barbara Kruger has moved to David Zwirner, Art News reports.  “Her work has become even more essential in the decades since, speaking truth to power and transitioning from the museum into mainstream culture,” Zwirner says. “We are honored to represent her and look forward to exhibiting her work.” (more…)

Art Dealer Inigo Philbrick May Hold Upwards of $70 Million in Assets

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

New court filings alleged that London dealer Inigo Philbrick could hold upwards of $70 million in assets. Philbrick is accused of failing to deliver works he sold and inflating the prices of other pieces. “We have only seen the tip of the iceberg; there’s no question that this has impacted far more people than simply those who already have filed suit,” says lawyer Judd Grossman. (more…)

Labour Pledges £1 Billion to UK Arts if Elected

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

Jeremy Corbyn has promised £1 billion in arts funding if Labour is elected to lead the U.K., Art Newspaper reports.  The party’s plan calls for a Cultural Capital Fund  “to transform libraries, museums and galleries across the country.” (more…)

Art Basel Hong Kong Planning to Run as Scheduled this May Despite Protests in City

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

Amid escalating protests, Hauser & Wirth has postponed shows in Hong Kong, while Art Basel HK is planning to remain open.  “Some of you might be wondering if Art Basel is making an unconsidered decision by continuing to plan on holding an art fair in March amidst the unrest that we are witnessing in Hong Kong,” says Adeline Ooi, the director, Asia for Art Basel Hong Kong. “The answer is: we are not. The decision to continue with the show is made in support of everything you, we, our partners, the local art scene, art collectors from Asia and beyond have invested into Hong Kong, our fair and Asia in general over the years.” (more…)

New York Times Looks Into Maurizio Cattelan’s Still-Missing Gold Toilet

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

The New York Times has a piece on the theft of Maurizio Cattelan’s gold toilet, noting that the work is still missing, and spotlighting a number of locals’ thoughts on just where the work might be.  “It’s on a building site,” says taxi driver Susan Hughes, “that’s my theory.”  (more…)

Oscar Tuazon Profiled in LA Times

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

Oscar Tuazon’s “hippie outlaw architecture” gets a profile in the LA Times this week, and how he has applied his work towards conversations and critiques of current policy around water and other environmental issues.  “Ideas and conversations around water rights and indigenous histories is also this really powerful part of the story,” he says. “And it shapes the way the design is evolving now — to take this structure and break it into its constituent parts and think about how it could work in different landscapes. It’s trying to kind of absorb and learn from those places.” (more…)

LA Times Charts Challenges to MOCA’s New Free Admission Policy

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

A piece in the LA Times showcases the challenges MOCA in Los Angeles is facing over offering free admission. “It’s as much about philanthropy as it is about a financial transaction for member benefits,” says Asa Hursh, MOCA’s membership and annual fund manager. (more…)

Trump Once Again Proposes Eliminating Arts Funding in Budget

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

The Trump administration has once again proposed the elimination of funding for the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the Institute of Museum and Library Services. “Most of the eliminations and reductions in this volume reflect a continuation of policies proposed in the 2018 and 2019 President’s Budgets that have not yet been enacted by the Congress and highlight the Administration’s efforts to eliminate wasteful or unnecessary spending,” the budget document reads.

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Techno Legend Carl Craig Tapped for Dia:Beacon Show

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

Techno artist Carl Craig has been commissioned to create a new work in the spacious basement of Dia:Beacon. “The kind of space we’re working with at Dia, there are tons of abandoned spaces I’ve been working with my whole lifetime,” Craig says. “The fall of the automotive industry in Detroit left all these factories that turned into party spaces—and a lot of them are still there.” (more…)

Manchester Museum Returns Works to Indigenous Australian Groups

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

The Manchester Museum has repatriated 43 objects considered sacred to four indigenous groups in Australia, Art News reports, making it the first institution in the UK to embrace a repatriation program.  “We’ve always known that during the process of colonization, which is continuing today in various respects, that our cultural heritage items were removed from us, were stolen from us and taken from us,” says Mangubadijarri Yanner, who received the objects in Manchester for the Gangalidda Garawa people. “With these specific items, I can say with authority that they were taken without permission.” (more…)

Christie’s to Sell Marina Abramovic Augmented Reality Work

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

Christie’s will look to sell the first mixed-reality artwork at auction next year, offering Marina Abramović’s The Life, which was on view at The Serpentine earlier this year.  “As the technology around AR and VR evolves at an incredibly fast pace, the market is evolving and adapting to the demand,” says Christie’s specialist Stefano Amoretti. “Christie’s is in an avant-garde position by offering this to the market and we look forward to the response.” (more…)

Lisson Gallery Takes on Estate of Hélio Oiticica

Wednesday, November 20th, 2019

Lisson Gallery will represent the estate of Hélio Oiticica estate worldwide. “My father, Nicholas, saw his show at Whitechapel [Gallery in London] in 1969, two years after the gallery opened,” Alex Logsdail says. “He was somewhat intimidated by him at the time—he was a wild guy. So, it’s been a long time.” (more…)

French Court Upholds Sentence for Picasso’s Electrician

Wednesday, November 20th, 2019

France‘s top appeals court has upheld a two-year suspended jail sentence for the former electrician of Pablo Picasso and his wife, who kept 271 of the painter’s works in a garage for upwards of 40 years.  “It is a triumph of truth and marks the end of a cover-up”, said Jean-Jacques Neuer, the lawyer for Picasso’s son Claude Ruiz-Picasso. (more…)