Archive for the 'Art News' Category
Tuesday, August 1st, 2017
Christie’s is holding its first Modern and contemporary Middle Eastern art sale in London this fall, as it looks to expand the market for Middle Eastern work on a global scale. “Moving to London will help engage a wider audience, particularly on the contemporary side,” says Michael Jeha, managing director and deputy chairman, Middle East. “Stylistically, Modern art tends to appeal more to regional collectors.” (more…)
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Tuesday, August 1st, 2017
Adam Lindemann is planning a massive development in Los Angeles’s Arts District, a 12-story mixed use building with live-work spaces and street-level retail and art spaces. The space, located at 641 South Imperial Street, will continue Lindemann’s engagement with Los Angeles’s East Side. (more…)
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Tuesday, August 1st, 2017

Painting the wall at Watermill Center, via Art Observed
The 24th Annual Watermill Center Summer Benefit & Auction took place this past Saturday evening, returning to Robert Wilson’s expansive performing and interdisciplinary arts campus with a new selection of performances and installations laid out across the grounds. Honoring performer Laurie Anderson and actress Isabelle Huppert this year, the event also served as a tribute to the late artist and musician Lou Reed, while also serving to benefit the Watermill Center’s continued residency and research projects. Anderson and Reed previously performed a work together, The Wildebeests, at the event in 1997, reprised this year as a culmination of the evening’s proceedings.
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Monday, July 31st, 2017
Mark Grotjahn’s work is profiled in the New York Times this week, and the artist’s aggressive business strategies that have kept his works consistently in-demand. “He’s probably an artist who’s in more demand today than any other,” says Alberto Mugrabi. “He’s so good that he controls everything. He controls when galleries make shows, he controls who they sell a painting to — he’s on top.” (more…)
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Monday, July 31st, 2017
Musa Mayer, daughter of painter Philip Guston, is interviewed in The Telegraph this week, as she reflects on her father’s expansive and innovative body of work, and the toll it occasionally took on her family. “My father was never overtly cruel,” she says. “He was just largely absent, working. From an early age, I was given to understand that I was not to disturb his important work.” (more…)
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Monday, July 31st, 2017
The New York Times profiles the growing trend in New York condo developments to incorporate monumental pieces of art into the project’s building plans, as new buildings commission pieces from Yayoi Kusama and other artists. “10 years ago, I thought we were pioneers to incorporate an artist into the design,” says developer Izak Senbahar. “But since then, it has become a little more common.” (more…)
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Monday, July 31st, 2017
The Art Newspaper reflects on recent reviews of federally-protected land ordered by the Trump administration, and how reclassification of land in Nevada may harm artist Michael Heizer’s City installation in Basin and Range. “Monuments have been adjusted… 18 times before,” Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke said in an interview. “So I don’t think there’s too much question that a monument can be adjusted. Whether a monument can be rescinded or not, that is a question for the courts.” (more…)
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Sunday, July 30th, 2017

John Graham, Mascara (1950), via Osman Can Yerebakan for Art Observed
Divided into two opposite galleries inside the Parrish Art Museum’s sleek architecture, John Graham: Maverick Modernist, a comprehensive survey of the 20th century Ukrainian-American painter, offers a breakdown of the artist’s ever-evolving four-decade long career from 1920s and onward. Curated by Alicia G. Longwell, the show recaps Graham’s defiant approach to Modernism, considering his sharp divergence from his dedication to modern art for the sake of figurative portraiture of female sitters in the 1940’s. Even then, at the height of his career, referring to Graham as a maverick would not be misguided: his models’ cross-eyed expressions, excessive make-ups, and mathematical details on their faces clash with easy readings as representational, and offer an intriguing historical context for much later practice in contemporary painting. (more…)
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Saturday, July 29th, 2017

Taryn Simon, Charles Irvin Fain, Scene of the crime, the Snake River, Melba, Idaho, Served 18 years of a Death sentence for Murder, Rape and Kidnapping; The Innocents (2002), courtesy Taryn Simon Studio and Guild Hall
Since Taryn Simon first delivered her seminal The Innocents series in 2002, the New York-based artist’s work has continued to revisit and re-examine the concepts of power, identity and their interrelated social effects, examining how varied political conditions render real human effects on the body, and on space. This summer, East Hampton’s historic art and culture center, The Guild Hall re-contextualizes Simon’s compelling photography series about misconceptions of guilt and impossibility of rewinding time on its 15th anniversary, serving as a backdrop for ongoing discussions around prejudice, injustice, and empathy. Organized by Guild Hall Chief Curator Christina Mossaides Strassfield, the exhibition reiterates a selection of photographs and video from the overall series that had its debut at MoMA PS1 in 2003. (more…)
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Friday, July 28th, 2017

Gerry Bibby & Henrik Olesen, Fernseher (2016), via Queer Thoughts
Hosting the Munich-based Deborah Schamoni for its entry in the CONDO New York exhibition, downtown space Queer Thoughts presented a group show featuring artists from both gallery rosters. Comprising works by Gerry Bibby (including a collaboration with Henrik Olesen), Siera Hyte, David Rappeneau, and Davide Stucchi, the exhibition centered around the body, and its suspension in broader informational or social networks. (more…)
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Friday, July 28th, 2017
A group of South Korean officials have been sentenced to prison terms for their roles in maintaining a black list of artists opposing former president Park Geun-hye. “It’s against the Constitution to exclude artists from government support programs according to the taste of political power,” presiding judge, Hwang Byeong-heon, said in his ruling. (more…)
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Friday, July 28th, 2017
Critic Jerry Saltz takes a tour of MoMA this week with architect Liz Diller of Diller Scofido + Renfro, and examines the prospects for the museum’s new expansion project. “This next version of the museum is going to be the best version we’ll get for a while,” he writes. “Which is okay. I can’t live without this museum. I love it. It’s where we all come from — and need to return in order to spawn new ideas of modernism.” (more…)
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Friday, July 28th, 2017

Philippe Vandenberg, No Title (ca. 2007), via Art Observed
When the Belgian artist Philippe Vandenberg committed suicide at his Ghent home in 2009, he left behind an expansive body of work, including a drawing book that brims with semi-abstract watercolor sketches detailing the artist’s inner conflicts. Dedicated to the work Vandenberg created between 2006 and his death, Hauser & Wirth’s exhibition at its uptown space in New York aims to bring the legacy of the pioneer painter back to the New York art world’s attention. While Vandenberg left a significant footprint in his hometown during the European Neo-Expressionist movement of the 1980’s, he maintained a relatively low profile in the United States, with only a handful of solo exhibitions in the last three decades. This show, organized by Anthony Huberman, the director of San Francisco’s CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Art, expands throughout the gallery, bringing together a group of milestones from his last years that underscores his unique vision. (more…)
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Friday, July 28th, 2017
The Menil Collection in Houston has postponed a major expansion project that included a new Drawing Institute building, after Director Rebecca Rabinow shuffled construction schedules this week. “We’re in it for the long haul and have very exacting standards,” she says. “Better to take time and get it perfect than open too early.” (more…)
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Thursday, July 27th, 2017
Former Met Director Thomas Campbell has been awarded the Getty Rothschild Fellowship, which will see him embarking on eight months of research at the Getty Museum in Los Angeles, and at Windsor Manor in Buckinghamshire, England. Campbell’s research will investigate “the related question of how we can use art and culture as a gateway to promote understanding in an ever-more connected but ever-more divided world,” according to a statement. (more…)
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Thursday, July 27th, 2017
Former Met Museum director Philippe de Montebello will become the new director at Acquavella Galleries, Art News reports. “I think it’s one of the great art galleries,” de Montebello said. “We have been talking over the last few years since I left the Met about how I could use some of my academic and other experience with the gallery.” (more…)
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Thursday, July 27th, 2017
Russian collective Pussy Riot is fundraising to create a play based on its experience of Russian political oppression, recreating the “epic ordeal when the members were arrested, forced through a flawed judicial system and finally transported to a Russian jail,” according to a press release. “The audience will actually get the chance to re-live each one of these experiences themselves in London, learning what it means to be a political opponent in Russia today,” front woman Nadya Tolokonnikova said of the work. “We’ll take you on a journey from the cathedral altar deep into the vaults of the Kremlin itself. Hopefully, this is a journey that you’ll only have to make once in your life.” (more…)
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Thursday, July 27th, 2017

Meschac Gaba, Reflection Room Tent (2017), via Tanya Bonakdar
Working between Benin and the Netherlands during the course of the past 20 years, artist Meschac Gaba has forged a unique language for addressing and visualizing the varied effects and themes both driving and stemming from the rapid pace of globalization. Utilizing a playful approach to environmental installation and sculpture, Gaba’s work frequently presents spaces and scenes drawing from the marketplace and the museum, the refugee camp or the modern office. For his current solo exhibition at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery in New York, Gaba has installed his Reflection Room Tent piece, opening a space for dialogue and engagement between visitors inside the gallery space.

Meschac Gaba, Memoriale aux Refugies Noyees (Memorial for Drowned Refugees) (2016), via Tanya Bonakdar (more…)
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Wednesday, July 26th, 2017
The 2017 Istanbul Biennial, curated by artist duo Elmgreen and Dragset, has announced its artist list for the exhibition, which opens September 16 and runs through November 12. The list of artists, each exploring what it means to be “a good neighbor,” includes Mark Dion, Jonah Freeman and Justin Lowe, and Njideka Akunyili Crosby. (more…)
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Wednesday, July 26th, 2017
The Condo art fair project, which is currently wrapping a first run in New York, will launch editions in Mexico City and Shanghai, Artforum reports. “It had the same communal atmosphere as the London edition, which was important to me,” says organizer Vanessa Carlos of Carlos/Ishikawa, “and it definitely achieved the aim I have for Condo of demonstrating an alternate way of exhibiting abroad, of focusing of collaboration and of proposing a good way for audience members to encounter international artists and galleries.” (more…)
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Wednesday, July 26th, 2017

Shannon Ebner, Will And Be Going To (2017), via Art Observed
Los Angeles-based artist Shannon Ebner has marked her first solo exhibition with Eva Presenhuber this month, taking over the gallery’s exhibition space at 39 Great Jones in New York with a series of photographs on aluminum that mark the artist’s continued engagement with temporality and space. Spread across the gallery’s two floor layout, Ebner’s photographs confront the viewer with a series of reinterpreted engagements with the act of photographic production, pushing for meditations into the creative act and exhibition of her images.

Shannon Ebner, Signal Escapes (2017), via Art Observed
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Wednesday, July 26th, 2017

Shimabuku, The Snow Monkeys of Texas – Do Snow Monkeys Remember Snow Monkeys? (detail) (2016), via Artforum
Freedman Fitzpatrick, while hosting a fairly international roster, is one of the most representative galleries of the current Los Angeles landscape. Located in a strip mall off Hollywood Boulevard, its neighboring businesses are a Domino’s Pizza and a 7-Eleven. With that in mind, it may seem that in pairing with Off Vendome for CONDO, Freedman Fitzpatrick has foregone their penchant for non-traditional gallery locales. In a four-person exhibition comprising the first and second floor of Off Vendome’s more conventional space, only one artist is represented by Freedman Fitzpatrick. Shimabuku, an Okinawan video artist, exhibits his 2016 video, The Snow Monkeys of Texas: Do snow monkeys remember snow mountains? which is also currently on view at the Venice Biennale.

Shimabuku at Off Vendome, hosted by Freedman Fitzpatrick (Installation View), via Off Vendome
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Tuesday, July 25th, 2017

Cerith Wyn Evans, S=U=T=R=A2 (2017), via Sophie Kitching for Art Observed
Mixing together sonic and visual systems of perception, artist Cerith Wyn Evans has opened an exhibition of new works at Marian Goodman’s Paris exhibition space, marking an expansion of the artist’s long-running interest in the gray area between speech and written text, sound and image. Spread out across multiple floors in the gallery, the artist’s pieces delve into the functions behind cognition and spatial awareness, using familiar imagery and the written word to shape and disrupt the acts of reading, seeing and hearing. (more…)
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Tuesday, July 25th, 2017
Rock and Roll superstar Alice Cooper has reportedly discovered a lost Andy Warhol Electric Chair painting in his collection, a piece that could be worth several million dollars, The Guardian reports. “Truthfully, at the time no one thought it had any real value,” Cooper’s manager, Shep Gordon says. “Andy Warhol was not ‘Andy Warhol’ back then. And it was all a swirl of drugs and drinking. But you should have seen Alice’s face when Richard Polsky’s estimate came in.” (more…)
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