Archive for the 'Art News' Category
Wednesday, April 12th, 2017
Jeffrey Deitch is returning to Los Angeles this fall, opening a new exhibition space in Hollywood at 925 North Orange Drive. “The idea in New York is to do three large shows a year, and it will probably be the same here,” he say. “When you do shows that are museum-level, you don’t want to take them down after a month.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Jeffrey Deitch Opening New Exhibition Space in Hollywood
Wednesday, April 12th, 2017
Test runs of artist Daniel Knorr’s Documenta 14 work Expiration Movement in Kassel, which sees plumes of smoke spiraling out of the Fridericianum museum, has garnered several calls to the local fire department. “We find it good that the citizens care about it at all,” says Norbert Schmitz, head of the Kassel fire department. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Dry Run of Documenta Installation Earns Calls to Kassel Fire Department
Wednesday, April 12th, 2017
The Art Cologne and Art Berlin Contemporary art fairs are in “advanced negotiations” to create a new fair this September, Art Berlin. “We are still in a phase of negotiating the exact structure, however we have at this point established the basics, that Koelnmesse will own this new fair and take all financial liability,” says Art Cologne director Daniel Hug. “Artistic direction will be determined by Maike Cruse [abc’s director] and myself. We have also decided that this fair in 2017 should be an international fair, with the idea of creating a more experimental platform in the coming years.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Art Cologne and Art Berlin Contemporary in “Advanced” Merger Negotiations
Wednesday, April 12th, 2017
Bruce Nauman’s 2004 commission for the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall will return to the museum, the Art Newspaper reports, setting the stage for the artist’s upcoming retrospective set to open in 2020. Nauman will also take part in the museum’s Artist Rooms series in its new Switch House building. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Bruce Nauman to Open Series of Shows at Tate Modern
Wednesday, April 12th, 2017

Al Taylor, Breakman (1978), via Art Observed
Artist Al Taylor’s body of works is recognized in particular for its swirling accumulations of material, assemblages of plexiglass, hula hoops, broomsticks, drips of paint and other contents built into self-contained systems. Yet the artist’s work in this mode emerged from a prior decade dedicated almost exclusively to painting, where many of Taylor’s formal interests and approaches to space first began to develop. Explored through a range of early canvases dated from 1971 to 1980, David Zwirner’s current exhibition at 537 West 20th Street in New York offers an intriguing entry into the artist’s early canon. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Featured Post, Show | Comments Off on New York – Al Taylor: “Early Paintings” at David Zwirner Through April 15th, 2017
Tuesday, April 11th, 2017
Cuban artist Tania Bruguera is making her directorial debut with a theatrical performance of Samuel Beckett’s Endgame. “I’m interested in how Endgame brings power dynamics into our everyday lives,” Bruguera says. “It feels relevant to see this piece today, when the world is seduced by so-called strong political figures and when democracy is abused instead of enacted. It feels like the end of a chapter.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Tania Bruguera to Direct Rendition of Beckett’s “Endgame”
Tuesday, April 11th, 2017
Jeff Koons has unveiled a new collaboration with Luis Vuitton, releasing a series of handbags emblazoned with famous art works and drawing on his Gazing Ball series. “My primary motivation for this project was for making the work that I wanted to,” he says. “There’s kind of a reflective process about the person being interlinked with the bag. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Louis Vuitton Unveils Line of Jeff Koons-designed Bags Featuring Famed Artworks by Van Gogh, da Vinci
Tuesday, April 11th, 2017

Sue Williams, Chicken Leg in Yellow (2017), via 303 Gallery
Currently on view at 303 Gallery, Sue Williams has brought a new body of paintings continuing her exploration of history and memory through the abstraction of both form and the painterly canon. The exhibition, devoted to a handful of paintings and collages that trace the artist’s precise, and often humorously incisive approach to the American past, in conjunction with an incisive look at its impact on the female body. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Featured Post, Show | Comments Off on New York – Sue Williams at 303 Gallery Through April 14th, 2017
Monday, April 10th, 2017
The Skate Room has produced a run of skateboards featuring the art of Jean-Michel Basquiat, featuring both single prints and series from some of the artist’s most iconic works. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on The Skate Room Produces Line of Jean-Michel Basquiat Skateboards
Monday, April 10th, 2017
The Wall Street Journal profiles Alex Katz, and the reception of his early work in a New York painting landscape dominated by abstract expressionism. “I really was out there,” Katz says. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Alex Katz’s Early Work Profiled in WSJ
Monday, April 10th, 2017
A Carl Andre exhibition at MOCA in Los Angeles was visited by protestors this week, aiming to bring attention to the death of the artist’s wife, Ana Mendieta. “I was at the protest to lend support to the group,” says former MOCA curator Alma Ruiz. “It was important for me to be there because as a [former] MOCA curator and a contemporary art curator with a particular interest in Latin American artists, I’ve always considered Ana Mendieta’s work relevant because of the emotional, intellectual and artistic heft it has had and continues to have on other artists.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Carl Andre Exhibition at MOCA Sees Protests Remembering Ana Mendieta
Monday, April 10th, 2017
Highlights from the Spring auction sales in New York continue to trickle out, as Sotheby’s announces a marquee Roy Lichtenstein canvas, Nude Sunbathing, set to sell for upwards of $20 million at the auction house’s Post-War and Contemporary sale. “Painted in 1995 and exemplary of Lichtenstein’s late, great genius, the work revisits one of his signature subject matters: the female form,” the company said in a statement. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Roy Lichtenstein’s ‘Nude Sunbather’ to Sell at Sotheby’s this Spring in New York
Monday, April 10th, 2017
A new version of the LACMA expansion project by architect Peter Zumthor has been unveiled, featuring a twisting museum wing that stretches over Wilshire Boulevard and onto museum-owned property across the street. “The moment I had to cross Wilshire I had to develop a different kind of urban energy,” he says of the new design. “I couldn’t cross Wilshire Boulevard with that organic, peaceful form.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Peter Zumthor Unveils New Plans for LACMA Expansion
Saturday, April 8th, 2017
Steven Cohen is allegedly the seller behind the sale of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s La Hara at Christie’s next month, a work anticipated to sell for upwards of $28 million. “It’s one of the few works of white men by Basquiat,” says Alex Rotter, Christie’s chairman of postwar and contemporary art in the Americas. “It also has a political aspect.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Steven Cohen Allegedly Behind $28 Million Basquiat Canvas Offered at Christie’s Next Month
Saturday, April 8th, 2017
The FBI has issued a warning regarding a series of faked lesser works by Willem de Kooning, Joan Mitchell, and Franz Kline. A short article on the organization’s website warns of a series of works released by Eric Ian Hornak Spoutz, small-scale works that he sold with false documents using storied names like Betty Parsons or Henry Hecht. “He was selling lower-level works by known artists,” says Special Agent Christopher McKeogh. “If it’s a direct copy of a real one, the real one is going to be out there and the fraud would be discovered.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on FBI Issues Warning on Series of Faked Art Works
Saturday, April 8th, 2017
Artists Leigh Ledare and Zinadu Saro-Wiwa are among the list of the new Guggenheim Fellows. “It’s exciting to name 173 new Guggenheim fellows,” says foundation president Edward Hirsch. “Each year since 1925, the Guggenheim Foundation has bet everything on the individual, and we’re thrilled to continue to do so with this wonderfully talented and diverse group. It’s an honor to be able to support these individuals to do the work they were meant to do.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Leigh Ledare Among New Group of Guggenheim Fellows
Saturday, April 8th, 2017

Glenn O’Brien, via NYT
Glenn O’Brien, writer, editor, creative director and founder of the famed downtown public-access television show TV Party, has passed away at the age of 70. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Featured Post | Comments Off on RIP: Glenn O’Brien, Writer and Downtown Icon, Aged 70
Friday, April 7th, 2017
An art gallery focused around the work of Andy Warhol is suing a pair of online dealers who the dealers claim sold them a pair of forged Warhol Shadows works. “Brian and Ana Walshe (the sellers) likely sold the authentic Warhols to a collector in South Korea and passed off the forgeries in the United States assuming that because the paintings are on different continents, the forgeries would not be detected,” the complaint states. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Gallery in Los Angeles Claims Dealers Sold them Forged Andy Warhol Works
Friday, April 7th, 2017
Grayson Perry is collaborating with the Apparata architecture firm in London to design a series of affordable housing for artists, complete with studios, in the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham. “By placing artists squarely within the community, the project aims to remove barriers to engagement, fostering inclusive and creative ways of using civic space,” says Create London, the commissioning organization on the project. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Grayson Perry Consulting on Affordable Artist Studios in Dagenham
Friday, April 7th, 2017
In a momentous decision, the Met will now show Native American art in the American wing of the museum, “to display art from the first Americans within its appropriate geographical context,” according to a museum statement. The decision comes as part of an agreement between the institution and collectors Charles and Valerie Diker, who stipulated the move as a condition of their donation of the collection to the museum. “We always felt that what we were collecting was American art,” says Mr. Diker. “And we always felt very strongly that it should be shown in that context.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Met Moves Native American Art to American Art Wing in Major Rehang
Friday, April 7th, 2017
David Zwirner will return uptown this year, opening a project space at 34 East 69th Street. The gallery will share the space with an advisory firm, Adler Beatty. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on David Zwirner Setting Up New Space on Upper East Side
Friday, April 7th, 2017
Arnold Lehman, former director of the Brooklyn Museum, is featured in the New York Times this week, as he gives the paper a tour of his Brooklyn Heights apartment, and showcases his collection of works. “Do you think I got to talk a lot about contemporary art as a museum director? No,” he says. “I was speaking to politicians, raising money, bringing on new trustees, repairing roofs. Once in a while, I got to talk about art.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Arnold Lehman’s Art Collection Profiled in NYT
Friday, April 7th, 2017
David Wildenstein has sold his townhouse on Manhattan’s Upper East Side for $79 million, making it the most expensive townhouse ever sold in the borough. The former home of the Wildenstein Gallery was sold to an affiliate of HNA Holdings Group. (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on David Wildenstein Sells Manhattan Townhouse for Record $79 Million
Friday, April 7th, 2017
Klaus Biesenbach gives the New York Times a tour of his sparsely appointed Manhattan apartment this week, which features little decoration or adornment, save a single jacaranda tree seedling. “I think art should be public,” he says. “That’s why I work with institutions. I have it so much in my life that for me my home is a retreat.” (more…)
Posted in Art News, Minipost, News | Comments Off on Klaus Biesenbach Gives NYT a Tour of His Minimalist Apartment