Archive for the 'Art News' Category
Tuesday, December 20th, 2016
Jeff Koons has designed a limited edition snowboard for Burton, a $5,000 board comes from an edition of 50, and draws on Plato’s allegory of the cave for its graphical layout. The image uses large-scale foil inlays to echo this allegory. “When you’re on a snowboard, there is a sense of oneness, and I’m just mesmerized by it, Koons says. “So I created an idea for a board that reflects the philosophy of this feeling, starting with Plato’s Cave – the idea of transcendence, freeing oneself and walking out of that cave in a higher state of consciousness. That’s what the act of snowboarding does for me.” (more…)
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Monday, December 19th, 2016
Ai Weiwei has expressed a desire to travel to Syria in his ongoing engagement with human rights issues around the globe. “When I fight (for) human rights in China, I never think that’s human rights in China. I think that’s human rights everywhere,’’ the artist says. “Human rights is the value which I believe is universal.” (more…)
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Monday, December 19th, 2016
A gunman has assassinated Andrey Karlov, the Russian ambassador to Turkey during a press conference at the CerModern in Ankara. The shooting took place during the opening of “Russia Through Turks’ Eyes,” a new exhibition at the museum. The gunman, who was also shot and killed at the museum, reportedly shouted “don’t forget Aleppo, don’t forget Syria!” after opening fire.
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Monday, December 19th, 2016

Salvatore Scarpitta, Untitled (1958), via Art Observed
The life and work of Salvatore Scarpitta is defined by the artist’s meandering relationships with his dual homelands. Originally born in the United States, the artist would gain his education in Italy before fleeing the country’s fascist uprising during World War II, later returning after serving in the U.S. Navy’s “monuments men” project, which labored to capture and return looted art and artifacts to their rightful owners. Remaining in Italy for several years after the war, he would pioneer his own brand of abstraction and conceptually-charged minimalism before returning to the States in 1958. (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
Marian Goodman is profiled in the New York Times this week, as she reflects on her career, and the current state of the art market. “I think money speaks more than it ever has before,” she says. “The auctions have been good for business, but I’m not sure it’s been so good for the art world.” (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
Despite the UK’s exit from the EU, several British cities are pushing to become the next “European Capital of Culture” for 2023. Leeds, Dundee and Milton Keynes are all pushing to host the event, which is seen as a benefit to local economies. “The United Kingdom is leaving the European Union, but we are not leaving Europe. We want that relationship to reflect the kind of mature, co-operative relationship that close friends and allies enjoy,” says Culture Secretary Karen Bradley. (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
The site of the Lascaux cave paintings will open a brand new visitor center, with a monumental replica of the paintings, courtesy of international design firm Snøhetta. Final preparations are underway to open the space in the spring. (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
Donald Trump is reportedly eyeing Sylvester Stallone to chair the National Endowment for the Arts. “It’s been widely and wrongly assumed that a Trump presidency will be hostile to the arts,” a source told the NY Post. “But Mr. Trump feels this sort of A-list appointment is precisely the shot in the arm that the industry needs.” (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016

Marta Riniker-Radich, The Cartridge Box (2016), all photos via Osman Can Yerebakan for Art Observed
Marta Riniker-Radich’s U.S. solo debut at Swiss Institute opened a few days prior to presidential elections, a note that gives the show an increasingly ominous note in the wake of Donald Trump’s ascendancy on the back of a conservative, militaristic worldview. Drawing on this culture of perceived oppression and the systems of resistance that stem from their, her works dismantle the safety and innocence of the American home, while problematizing notions of escapism, and the notions of artificiality attached to middle-class domesticity. Featuring notes from American militia members documenting their testimonials about emergency supply goods, and combining these with a series of artifacts and objects playing on dual uses and pluralities of violence and utilitarianism, Every Home A Fortress Every Heart A Blossom brings the political separatism of these American subcultures to the fore. “When I opened the box I was like a kid on Christmas morning. I looked over each and every piece checking for defects,” says an anonymous member about a uniform they received. “I found none.” (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
A Manhattan federal court judge has dismissed the lawsuit over Cady Noland’s disavowal of a work after unapproved restoration work. The dismissal stems in part from plaintiff Scott Mueller’s delay in filing claims against the artist and her gallery, Michael Janssen Gallery. (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
Bern’s Kunstmuseum has been named the recipient of the Cornelius Gurlitt art trove, after a Munich court dismissed a challenge to his will by his cousin Uta Werner. “It is good that we now all have clarity,” says German Culture Minister Monika Grütters. (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
Sotheby’s is continuing its series of acquisitions and hires in the last weeks of 2016, bringing on Rauschenberg Foundation CEO Christy MacLear to advise on artist estates and foundations. “We are extremely pleased with the development of our advisory services business both in terms of impact with new and existing clients as well as for Sotheby’s shareholders,” CEO Tad Smith said in a statement. “Expanding into advisory services for artists and artist endowed foundations is an exciting new frontier and we are thrilled that Christy is here to lead such an important initiative for us.” (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
Joyce Pensato is profiled in the New York Times this week, as the artist gives a tour of her new studio, and discusses her continued interest in cartoons and figurines. “I got into Mickey Mouse early on, really, because of his shape. The ears, the eyes, the circles, how simple he was but also how great those shapes looked in a painting. And I think I’ve made him a Mickey who is not just a happy Mickey; he’s got a lot more substance than that, more character.” (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
A French court of appeals has upheld the two-year suspended sentence for Pierre Le Guennec, the electrician convicted of stealing a trove of works from Pablo Picasso. The discovery of the works was one of the largest finds of Picasso works since the artist’s death in 1973. (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
A recent report has found an increase in arts education funding in New York schools under the de Blasio administration, marking some of the widest arts education the city has seen in a decade. “Most importantly for me, is that many of these programs are now serving English Language Learners and students with special needs,” says Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña. “There has never been a time in New York City where these students have been as well served through the arts.” (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016

Gina Malek, Transfer (2016), via Magic Beans
Painter Gina Malek’s new show, Underlinings, on view at Magic Beans Gallery in Berlin, is an exercise in essentialism. The artist’s works, which draw on the fading mechanics of the human body, memory and movement, here take on a range of scenes and figures, each time drawing on juxtapositions of the body and space, and the points of conversation, transition or intermingling that stem from her approach to the canvas.

Gina Malek, Underlinings (Installation View), via Magic Beans (more…)
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Sunday, December 18th, 2016
The Prado has received a royal portrait recently attributed to Velázquez from an American art historian. “I lived with this painting for almost 30 years and I acquired it thinking that it was what it is, although with the thought that eventually I would donate it somewhere,” says William B. Jordan, who donated the painting. (more…)
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Saturday, December 17th, 2016

Josef Albers, Grey Steps, Grey Scales, Grey Ladders (Exhibition View), via Art Observed
On view at the David Zwirner Gallery, Grey Steps, Grey Scales, Grey Ladders delves into Josef Albers’s life-long exploration of color, form and space, focusing in particular on his works in white, grey and black, and featuring a range of his most acclaimed square paintings, as well as other abstract works from the course of his career. A highly influential artist in the abstract movements of the early 20th Century, his works, shown in an open conversation, demonstrate the process of creating through rhythm and gradation. (more…)
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Friday, December 16th, 2016
High-profile departures continue at Christie’s as CEO Patricia Barbizet announced she would be leaving the auction house. Her replacement is Guillaume Cerutti. “I came to do a number of things,” Barbizet said. “They are now done.” (more…)
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Friday, December 16th, 2016

Thomas Schütte, Bronzefrau I (2000), via Art Observed
Profiling an enigmatic and often irreverent approach to both the human body and sculpture as a medium, Skarstedt has brought a series of works by Thomas Schütte to its Chelsea location. A continuation of his Frauen series, the show combines a thorough selection of etchings with a small series of sculptures, exploring his craft as both a skilled draughtsman and studied artist in both the exploration and critique of the practice of sculpture, joining together works from the past two decades to draw new historical comparisons and conceptual linkages in the artist’s practice.

Thomas Schütte, Stahlfrau Nr. 4, (1999), via Art Observed
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Friday, December 16th, 2016

Troy Brauntuch, Untitled (2016), via Petzel
Currently on view at Petzel Gallery’s Chelsea exhibition space, Texas-based painter Troy Brauntuch has executed a new series of paintings drawing on familiar themes and techniques in the exploration and elaboration of the image itself. Continuing an interest in the modes of image production, and the networks of meaning these images ultimately engage with, the artist’s ghostly, ephemeral images draw on their own histories, and the shadowy modes of visualization that the artist has long embraced. (more…)
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Thursday, December 15th, 2016

Sean Scully, Landline Bloom (2016), via Art Observed
Timothy Taylor Gallery’s Mayfair exhibition space has compiled a series of Sean Scully’s monumental abstract paintings, recent works that tower above the viewer while engaging them with deep, meditative arrangements of color. Shown in conjunction with a collection of sketches, notes, letters and diary entries, the show’s expansive focus offers a rare look into the Irish painter’s psychological and conceptual investment in his works. The series, Landline, has been ongoing since 2013, and continues to offer the artist an opportunity to refine and reshape his approach to the canvas through a narrow, yet endlessly inventive engagement with the power of mark-making, and the purity of delineation between linear planes, both explored through the expressive capacity of color. (more…)
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Wednesday, December 14th, 2016
The Art Market Monitor analyzes the deal that allowed Brett Gorvy to leave Christie’s for a partnership with Dominique Lévy, speculating on Gorvy’s consignments and value to the auction house. Gorvy will “act as a consultant on some specific consignments and projects in 2017 working with the client and Christie’s – predominantly the ones he/we have already secured,” according to the auction house. (more…)
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Wednesday, December 14th, 2016
Dallas auction house Heritage Auctions is suing Christie’s over alleged theft of listings from its website, Artnet reports. The suit accuses Christie’s recently acquired Collectrium database of stealing data on artworks and other objects currently listed on its site. (more…)
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