Archive for the 'Art News' Category
Tuesday, August 28th, 2018
Okwui Enwezor’s recent interview with Der Spiegel is reprinted in e-flux this week, as he reflects on his departure from the Munich Haus der Kunst, and the conflicts over his health that caused the separation. “I cannot talk about all the details of this separation. As early as 2016, when my contract renewal was due, I was wondering if I should stop,” he says. “I got the impression that I was no longer wanted. You know, as the director of such an institution, you need not only financial but also moral support.” (more…)
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Tuesday, August 28th, 2018
The New York Times makes its analysis on President Trump’s escalating trade war with China, examining how the current political climate may harm the art world. “It will have a chilling impact,” says dealer James Lally. “It will quickly reduce the market for Chinese art in America to a backwater.” (more…)
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Tuesday, August 28th, 2018
The ancient city of Palmyra in Homs, Syria will be restored by 2019, the Art Newspaper reports. “The authorities now have a project to repair all the damage caused to Palmyra’s Old City,” says Homs’ provincial governor Talal. “There are also good offers from the world powers to restore the artefacts and historical value of Palmyra. I suppose that Palmyra will be completely ready for receiving tourists by summer 2019.” (more…)
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Monday, August 27th, 2018
Former Curator and Director of MOCA Los Angeles, Richard Koshalek, is interviewed in the Art Newspaper this week, as he reflects on the vision Klaus Biesenbach will bring to the museum as its new director, as well as the challenges he will face. “I think he is a dynamic, accomplished individual with experience in Europe and also New York. I’m not sure how he familiar he is with Los Angeles or what’s happening in the Pacific Basin or Latin America, but I think he has the potential to bring the different constituencies together in Los Angeles,” he says. “I think he’s challenge-driven and he’s a problem solver, but he also has to be an opportunity seeker.” (more…)
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Monday, August 27th, 2018
Curator and writer Darren Flook, cofounder of the Independent Art Fair, will open a new project space in London. “I spent a long time thinking about small galleries after Hotel closed and what I saw at fairs including Independent,” he says. “Young galleries trying to play the same game as big galleries and failing.” (more…)
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Monday, August 27th, 2018
Artist Fred Tomaselli is featured in the New York Times this week, showing off a collection of works by friends and fellow artists Amy Sillman, Allen Ruppersberg, and more. “It’s an ad hoc thing, networks of friends who brought these works into our lives,” he says of his works. “You’re looking at the objects that come with aging.” (more…)
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Monday, August 27th, 2018

David Wojnarowicz, Americans Can’t Deal with Death (1990), via Art Observed
Few artists have managed to fly so consistently under the microscope of the art world’s fascination with downtown New York in the way that David Wojnarowicz has for so many years. Beginning in the late 1970s, the artist created a body of work that spanned photography, painting, music, film, sculpture, writing, and activism. Largely self-taught, he came to prominence in New York in the 1980s, a period marked by creative energy, financial precariousness, and profound cultural changes, yet his body of work has long been held off from the more hallmark names of the era in terms of impact and historical resonance. This month, The Whitney seeks to remedy this situation, granting the artist his first major museum retrospective, and turning its focus on a body of work that has long shone brightly even away from the limelight. (more…)
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Monday, August 27th, 2018
The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego is facing protest over a $75-million expansion, which critics say will destroy an historic building. “We recognize the museum’s need to expand, but we ask that it do so without irreparably damaging a cultural landmark and in the process severely weakening La Jolla’s beloved village center,” an open letter to the museum reads.
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Monday, August 27th, 2018
A museum dedicated to the work of Old Master Pieter Bruegel the Elder has been put on hold due to Belgian laws on over-spending. “The project is not abandoned but for the moment it is on hold,” says Samir al-Haddad, a spokesperson for the Royal Museums. “It is not that we are begging for money. The strange situation is that we have €5m in our reserves, but with this financial regulation we cannot dig into those reserves.” (more…)
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Monday, August 27th, 2018
The Uovo Art Storage company will open a new space in Bushwick, Brooklyn, Crain’s reports. “Since opening Uovo in 2014, we have seen an unprecedented demand for our integrated art storage and services,” founder Steven Guttman said in a statement. “Opening Uovo: Brooklyn is our latest contribution to supporting New York’s cultural community.” (more…)
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Saturday, August 25th, 2018

James Turrell, Logos (97) Medium Glass Circle (2017), via Kayne Grifffin Corcoran
Kayne Griffin Corcoran Los Angeles is currently exhibiting a selection of new and historic works by James Turrell, including four unique glass works, together with his Autonomous Structures series, a as well as models and prototypes of architectural spaces made between 1989 and 1991. The works on view epitomize his ongoing conversation with light in a retrospective that looks back on the last fifty years through a focused group of pieces. Light and space become a mode of understanding space and time, echoing the circumstances of perception, and building an architecture in its own right. The viewer perceives his sites only through consciousness, with light functioning as an interior mirror reflecting the spatial and temporal depths of one’s seeing, and the presence within space. “I’ve always wanted to make a light that looks like the light you see in your dream,” Turrell says. “Because the way that light infuses the dream, the way the atmosphere is colored, the way light rains off people…we don’t normally see light like that. But we all know it.” Turrell does not aim at bringing the viewer to a dazed, exotic zone; he wants to recall this other dimension we know innately. (more…)
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Friday, August 24th, 2018
A portrait of Prince Camillo Borghese by the French painter François Gérard, purchased by the Frick last year, is currently the subject of controversy after Italy revoked an export license on the work, and demanded that the Frick return it to the nation. (more…)
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Friday, August 24th, 2018

Nicholas Hlobo, Phantsi Komngcunube (2017), via Lehmann Maupin
Artist Nicholas Hlobo’s work has long explored the potentials for using various material sources and referential systems, using a range of elements like metal piping and fabric stitching to create elegant, arcing forms and figures that operate as self-contaned metaphors of sorts. Free-flowing and adventurous, the artist’s work allows him to work instinctively while drawing his forms directly onto canvas from his subconscious, a mode that invites both critical participation and quick impulse at the same time. His work is presented in some sense as a catharsis or exorcism, purging from himself the indoctrination of cultural dichotomies that set boundaries of either/or, where Hlobo wishes to portray the multitude. (more…)
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Thursday, August 23rd, 2018

Julia Phillips, Failure Detection (Installation View), via Art Observed
Currently on at MoMA PS1, New York-based artist Julia Phillips makes her solo museum debut with a show of tense, stimulating sculptures that explore both the presence and absence of the human form. Featuring six newly commissioned major works alongside existing sculptures, Phillips’s work dives into the space around the body as reflective of the internal, and external politics shaping the world beyond its limits.
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Thursday, August 23rd, 2018
Artist Bjarne Melgaard has been denied by local councils in Norway from building an ambitious home and sculpture near Edvard Munch’s Oslo studio. “We want the site where the death house was intended to be placed to remain a green area for the benefit of the local population, and we encourages Bjarne to find a new site for the project,” city councillors from the Labour, Socialist Left, Green, and Progress Party said in a joint statement. (more…)
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Thursday, August 23rd, 2018
Collectors Manfred and Ingrid Rotert have donated their collection of one hundred and fifty works by Joseph Beuys to the Westphalian State Museum of Art and Cultural History in Münster, a major gift consisting of many of the artist’s small-scale “multiples” and film reels. “We were never so ambitious to own everything made by Beuys, but from our first purchase on, we knew: That’s it,” Rotert said. (more…)
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Thursday, August 23rd, 2018
Yasuaki Ishizaka has been appointed chairman & managing director for Sotheby’s Japan, Art News reports. “We are delighted to welcome Aki back to Sotheby’s,” says Kevin Ching, CEO of Sotheby’s Asia. “Not only is Aki an art world veteran with over three decades in the field, he also has extensive experience in both auction and private sales businesses.” (more…)
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Thursday, August 23rd, 2018
Roya Sachs is taking over as curator for the Lever House Art Collection, and will open the fall art season with a two floor installation in the space by Peter Halley next month, Art News reports. “There’s something really quite inexplicably magic about this building, because its interior and exterior are in constant dialogue with one another,” Sachs says. “It’s public, but it’s private. It’s a lobby, but it’s also a glass box.” (more…)
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Tuesday, August 21st, 2018

Subodh Gupta, Adda/Rendez-vous (Installation View), via Art Observed
On view through the end of the summer at the Monnaie de Paris, Indian artist Subodh Gupta has orchestrated a series of large scale installations and sculptures spread throughout the halls of the famed Parisian institution, a body of work that runs throughout the artist’s focused and expressive sculptural practice. Selected pieces will be on display in conversation with the Monnaie’s permanent collection of metal artifacts to encourage reflection on the medium of metal both in terms of its symbolic value as well as the technical and artistic skill required to manipulate and bring meaning to it. (more…)
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Tuesday, August 21st, 2018
France is developing a new “culture pass” app, which will aim to improve access to arts and culture for young people across the country. “No cultural or artistic offering will be excluded,” says France’s culture minister, Françoise Nyssen. Every organization active in the cultural arena will be welcome on the pass – public or private, physical or virtual.” (more…)
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Tuesday, August 21st, 2018
Zona Maco’s sister fairs, Zona Maco Salón and Zona Maco Foto will return this month after cancellations last September over the earthquake that ripped through Mexico City. The fairs open tomorrow, August 22nd. (more…)
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Monday, August 20th, 2018
A visitor to an Anish Kapoor show at the Serralves museum in Porto was injured after falling into one of the artist’s works, an 8-foot deep hole titled Descent into Limbo. The visitor is believed to have slipped and fell, although an investigation is still underway. (more…)
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Monday, August 20th, 2018
The New Yorker has a piece this week on Alex Katz, and his impressive influence on the field of painting, despite remaining relatively overlooked by the art market’s blue-chip buyers. “I never fit in,” he says. “I’m not a Pop artist, and people can’t see my work as realistic, either.” (more…)
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Sunday, August 19th, 2018

Gordon Matta-Clark, Day’s End (1975), via Art Observed
Featuring one hundred artworks by Gordon Matta-Clark, Jeu de Paume anchors its summer offering with a show dedicated to the artist’s equally enigmatic and engaging practice, one that worked through principles of urban encounter, agency and abstraction with a unique sense of humor. The show, titled Anarchitect explores the importance of Matta-Clark’s practice towards a rethinking of architecture after modernism. Embracing a diversity of media that include photography, film and printmaking, the exhibition features a number of works related to contemporary urban culture that further contextualize Gordon Matta-Clark’s compelling critique of architecture. (more…)
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