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Archive for the 'News' Category

Kenneth Goldsmith Work Visited by Hilary Clinton

Monday, September 16th, 2019

Kenneth Goldsmith’s Venice project displaying Hilary Clinton’s privately stored emails received an unexpected visitor this past week, the former Secretary of State and First Lady herself, who read some of the emails back.. “It’s amazing—it completed the circle, in a way,” Goldsmith says. (more…)

Bay Area Collector Norah Stone Passes Away at 81

Monday, September 16th, 2019

Norah Stone, the Bay Area philanthropist and art collector who has long ranked on the ARTnews Top 200 Collectors list, has died at the age of 81. “The Stones really wanted to know what was happening in the world now. They loved the unusual art that paved new territory, and asked provocative and compelling questions,” says longtime advisor Thea Westreich. (more…)

Felix LA to Return with Expanded Gallery List

Wednesday, September 11th, 2019

Felix LA will return in 2020 with an expanded exhibitor list of 60 gallerists.  “We are thrilled to expand Felix’s community and welcome an incredible slate of new and returning exhibitors for the second edition,” founders Dean Valentine, Al Morán, and Mills Morán said in a statement. “The growth and diversification of our roster attests to the burgeoning Los Angeles art scene and the desperate need for the new type of art fair experience that Felix offered collectors and exhibitors alike.” (more…)

Tate Modern Brings on International Curators

Wednesday, September 11th, 2019

Four departments at the Tate Modern have brought on new talent under the title Curator, International Art, signaling an expanded focus for the institution’s programming.  “Their significant experience and expertise will play an important part in expanding our knowledge of modern and contemporary art from Africa, South Asia, and the Middle East, furthering our ambition to present a truly international story of art through our program and collection,” says Frances Morris, Tate Modern’s director. (more…)

Artist Nicholas Galanin on Pulling Work from Whitney Biennial

Wednesday, September 11th, 2019

Artist Nicholas Galanin has a piece in Art News this week as he discusses his decisions to pull work from this year’s Whitney Biennial.  “My decision to remove my work from the Whitney came when my hope for meaningful conversation was met with inaction—on the part of many but, most fatefully, by the museum, which for weeks and then months failed to issue any meaningful response to protests mounting within its walls,” he says. “For me, that inaction translated to complicity with militarized denial of the right of Indigenous people to freely move through land that we belong to.” (more…)

Larry Gagosian Profiled in GQ

Wednesday, September 11th, 2019

Larry Gagosian gets an interview in GQ this week, talking about his rise through the ranks of the art world, and his views on running a business in the arts. “All businesses are competitive,” he says. “If you’re not in a competitive business, you’re probably in a shitty business.” (more…)

Gagosian Gallery Now Represents Estate of Simon Hantaï

Wednesday, September 11th, 2019

Gagosian has taken over representation of the estate of artist Simon Hantaï, Art News reports. “If the works are of good quality, it’s always a good opportunity,” says Jean-Olivier Després, a director of Gagosian Paris. “There’s no strategy of focusing on living artists or estates. We’re focusing on good things.” (more…)

Tom Finklepearl Signals Emphasis on Diversity and Inclusion in Cultural Policy

Wednesday, September 11th, 2019

NYC Commissioner of Cultural Affairs Tom Finklepearl has a piece in the Art Newspaper this week emphasizes that the importance of diversity and inclusion in New York cultural institutions, and emphasizes the improvements to workplace culture that steps to emphasize these values can have at arts organizations. “Today, we are developing new plans that we hope will open our institutions’ doors wider than ever,” he writes. “It matters who leads and who makes decisions at these organizations: diversity, equity and inclusion at all levels will make our cultural community more dynamic, open and intellectually complex. (more…)

Tiona Nekkia McClodden Wins Whitney’s Bucksbaum Award

Tuesday, September 10th, 2019

The Whitney has awarded its $100,000 Whitney Biennial Bucksbaum Award to Tiona Nekkia McClodden. “McClodden’s work is bold and original and her contribution to the Whitney Biennial is extraordinarily rich with cultural, historical, and spiritual resonances,” says museum director Adam Weinberg. (more…)

Vija Celmins’s Market Explored in Bloomberg

Tuesday, September 10th, 2019

A piece in Bloomberg this week looks at the market for Vija Celmins, and how the artist’s growing market stature might explode after her show opens this fall at the Met Breuer. “Her collector base grew from the initial people who were interested to other people who saw her museum shows and wanted a work in their collection,” says dealer Renee McKee. “It was always as difficult to get her to release her work as it was to get her to raise her prices. That’s Vija.” (more…)

Mariane Ibrahim Gallery Challenging Art Handling Company Over Lost Artwork

Tuesday, September 10th, 2019

Art News reports on a clash between art handling company The British Shop and Chicago’s Mariane Ibrahim Gallery, after the company lost a work by artist Clotilde Jimenez.  “Where we are now is in a moment of a fight,” Ibrahim says. “I’m not going to let this go and pass by. It’s not something I or the artist should accept.” (more…)

Met Agrees to 63% Pay-Raise for HVAC Workers

Tuesday, September 10th, 2019

The Met has settled long-running negotiations with its HVAC workers, agreeing to a 63% pay hike for all licensed professionals after reports of overwork and underpay. “For about a year the Met Engineering Dept. had only 15 engineers, down from 35,” says Council Rep Dan McCabe. “They frequently worked double shifts and at times triple shifts, six or seven days a week. Because the museum paid significantly lower wages, no one applied for the HVAC postings or they’d only stay a year and leave for better pay elsewhere.”

(more…)

RIP – Mary Abbott, Abstract Painter, Dies at 98

Tuesday, September 10th, 2019

Mary Abbott, an abstractionist whose works filled the canvas with color and energy,  has passed away at age 98. The artist’s work was known for its fervent energy and her evolving approach to her compositions. “They change as you paint them,” she said of her works. “They are alive and they vibrate.” (more…)

Lucian Freud Biography Profiled in The Guardian

Tuesday, September 10th, 2019

Critic William Feaver has published a portion of his biography of Lucian Freud in The Guardian this week, a book that reflects on the artist’s work and the pair’s long friendship. “With him on the line, how blurred at any hour of day or night were the distinctions between personal and impersonal, between the private and the renowned,” he writes. (more…)

Sotheby’s and Ugo Rondinone Partner to Fight Bladder Cancer

Tuesday, September 10th, 2019

Sotheby’s and Ugo Rondinone are working together this fall to sell a selection of works to benefit bladder cancer research.  (more…)

Hammer Museum to Partner with Huntington for 2020 Made in L.A.

Friday, September 6th, 2019

For the fifth edition of Made in L.A., the Hammer Museum will partner with the Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens in San Marino, California to share the exhibition between the various venues. “We’re really looking at the legacy of our founders, Henry and Arabella Huntington,” says Christina Nielsen, the Huntington Museum’s director. (more…)

Wangechi Mutu Profiled in NYT

Friday, September 6th, 2019

Wangechi Mutu gets a profile in the NYT this month, as the artist prepares to place her new sculpture commissions for the Met on view, and reflects on her life growing up in Kenya after the end of British colonial rule. “The one thing that’s always missing — I think it’s part of the trauma — is the personal element,” she says. “My parents don’t often talk about their experiences in terms of how it made them feel.” (more…)

I.M. Pei Collection to Go to Christie’s

Friday, September 6th, 2019

Christie’s will sell the collection of renowned architect I.M. Pei over a series of sales in the coming months.  The Pei name is one that resonates around the world, integrated into the landscape of the dozens of cities that feature a Pei-designed art museum, concert hall, university, hospital, office tower or civic building,” says Marc Porter, Chairman for Christie’s Americas. (more…)

P.P.O.W. to Move to TriBeCa

Friday, September 6th, 2019

P.P.O.W will move to Tribeca in the fall of 2020. “There are things we could get [in Tribeca] that we just couldn’t get in Chelsea anymore,” says Wendy Olsoff, the gallery’s cofounder. “We’re able to gain a beautiful space in a neighborhood we felt comfortable in…. Chelsea just got to be too corporate for us and our identity. It just didn’t match anymore.” (more…)

Artist Tavares Strachan will Donate Part of Proceeds from Upcoming Shows to Bahamas Hurricane Relief

Friday, September 6th, 2019

Artist Tavares Strachan will give part of the proceeds from his upcoming shows to fund disaster relief in the Bahamas. “These things are more organic than we would like to admit,” he says. “I think the issues will be different in a week as people get evacuated and then it’s rebuilding effort. At this time, people on the ground need to be sheltered and fed.” (more…)

V&A Director Defends Fossil Fuel Sponsorships

Thursday, September 5th, 2019

London’s Victoria & Albert Museum  headTristram Hunt said he sees no problem with receiving support from  fossil fuel firms such as BP.  “I think that the pre-history of fossil fuel companies in muddying the science about climate change, in lobbying, in their political acts, have been pretty criminal and they will be judged on that,” he says. “But, I also think they will be part of the solution to dealing with climate change and they are engaged with it. It’s their technological reach, it is their facilities that will also be part of the solution and I think they’re getting there.” (more…)

UK to Increase Cultural Funding 4.1%

Thursday, September 5th, 2019

The UK Government will increase its culture budget by 4.1% in real terms to £1.6bn, after inflation is taken into account, Art Newspaper reports.  This announcement follows several years with no increase in budget. (more…)

Sotheby’s Shareholders Approve Acquisition Deal

Thursday, September 5th, 2019

Sotheby’s shareholders voted in approval of the acquisition of the auction house by Patrick Drahi, with 91 percent of voting shares counting in favor. “This is an historic moment for Sotheby’s and we are very pleased to have the validation of the company’s shareholders,” says CEO Tad Smith. (more…)

LAPD Catalogs Haul of Stolen Art Recently Recovered in City

Thursday, September 5th, 2019

The LA Times reports on the recent discovery of a series of works stolen from homes on the West Side of the city during the 1990’s, and the LAPD’s efforts to catalog the works. “We are in the process of identifying the specific art, artists and how much it might be worth,” says Capt. Lillian Carranza. (more…)