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Archive for the 'Art News' Category

Cory Arcangel’s “Surfware” Line Gets a Release Date

Wednesday, March 26th, 2014

Arcangel Surfware, the line of internet inspired clothing and accessories by Cory Arcangel will see release at a one-day pop-up shop at the SoHo Holiday Inn, the artist has announced.  “I’ve always looked to disperse my artwork in as many different arenas as possible. I’ve been surfing the world wide web nearly since its inception, and I just haven’t seen a fully integrated and consistently designed line of products aimed at making the experience more comfortable, more personal, and ultimately more relaxing,” Arcangel says. (more…)

Manifesta 10 Announces Artist List

Wednesday, March 26th, 2014

The list of artists participating in this summer’s Manifesta biennial has been released, including Guy Ben-Ner, Maria Lassnig, and Francis Alÿs, among others.  The 10th edition of the event will begin on June 28th in St. Petersburg. (more…)

ArtNews Profiles Rauschenberg Foundation’s Commitment to Ambitious Works

Wednesday, March 26th, 2014

The Rauschenberg Foundation is profiled in ArtNews this week, following the institution’s ambitious Marfa Dialogues event last fall, and its ongoing commitment to ambitious commissions and artist projects.  ““We look at our grant making through the lens of the values that defined Bob,” says Executive Director  Christy MacLear.  “So you don’t only say, ‘What would Bob do?’ Instead, you set up a framework so that a hundred years from now you can ask: Is it collaborative? Is it boundary-breaking? Is it risk-taking?”  (more…)

New York – Kiki Smith: “Wonder” at Pace Gallery Through March 29th, 2014

Wednesday, March 26th, 2014


Kiki Smith, Rogue Stars (2012), all images courtesy Pace Gallery

On view at New York’s Pace Gallery is artist Kiki Smith’s first major New York exhibition in four years, presenting new works made from aluminium, bronze, fine silver, textile, stained and hand-blown antique glass, and paint.


Kiki Smith, Crescent Bird (2011), (more…)

Opening Ceremony Launches Magritte Capsule Line

Tuesday, March 25th, 2014

Opening Ceremony has unveiled its collection of designs influenced by Rene Magritte, featuring a full line of apparel and footwear branded with the artist’s signature surrealist exercises.  The capsule collection was launched during London Fashion Week, and will be available starting in May 2014. (more…)

W Magazine Spotlights Maxwell Graham and his Essex Street Gallery

Tuesday, March 25th, 2014

W Magazine has published a profile on dealer Maxwell Graham and his Essex Street Gallery space.  Having worked previously with Greene Naftali, Graham has run Essex Street for the past several years, and discusses his approach to running his space.  “It’s good to not do things properly sometimes,” he says. “I don’t always like the shows that happen here—but sometimes it’s not about me. It’s okay if something fails, as long as it’s taking a risk. I don’t want my artists to rely on art to make a living. I almost wish my younger artists would take after the older ones and disappear for 30 years. And, hopefully, I’ll be here for them to come back to.”  (more…)

Martin Creed Interviewed in the Guardian

Tuesday, March 25th, 2014

Martin Creed is interviewed in The Guardian this week, giving a typically elusive, cheeky interview covering his greatest fears, his most embarrassing moment, and his thoughts on dinner parties: “I hate dinner parties,” he says. “I don’t even like dinners particularly. I hate eating because I am scared of most food a lot of the time. I am disgusted by meat and fish.” (more…)

Shigeru Ban Wins 2014 Pritzker Prize

Tuesday, March 25th, 2014

Toyko-born architect Shigeru Ban has been awarded with the 2014 Pritzker Prize, recognizing his work with low-cost emergency shelters and temporary structures at natural and man-made disaster sites around the world.   “Receiving this prize is a great honor,” Ban says, “and with it, I must be careful. I must continue to listen to the people I work for, in my private residential commissions and in my disaster relief work. I see this prize as encouragement for me to keep doing what I am doing — not to change what I am doing, but to grow.” (more…)

Gagosian Gallery To Open Two More Spaces in New York

Tuesday, March 25th, 2014

Larry Gagosian is preparing to add another pair of New York exhibition spaces to his already impressive set of spaces, including a new space at Park Avenue and 75th, and a temporary exhibition space on Delancey Street in the Lower East Side, both of which will open next month with shows of new sculpture by Urs Fischer.   (more…)

Hans Ulrich Obrist Writes on Being a Curator

Monday, March 24th, 2014

Hans Ulrich Obrist has published an essay in The Guardian this week, discussing the current state of curatorial practice, and the importance he sees for curators in contemporary arts.  “When I became a curator,” he writes, “I wanted to be helpful to artists. I think of my work as that of a catalyst – and sparring partner.” (more…)

Sarah Lucas Selected for 2015 British Pavilion Exhibition in Venice

Monday, March 24th, 2014

The British Pavilion at next year’s Venice Biennale will spotlight the work of Sarah Lucas, the BBC reports.  “Having consistently pushed the limits of her practice, there’s a sense that Lucas – seemingly more active than ever – is coming into her own,” says Gregor Muir, executive director of the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London, and a member of the selection committee. (more…)

Auction Houses Gear Up to Fight Proposed Artist Royalty Act

Monday, March 24th, 2014

The upcoming vote on an artist resale royalty in the United States has major auction houses sending high-powered lobbyists to Washington, in an attempt to prevent the bill from passing.  The bill, which would pay artists a percentage of any auction sale, has many resellers nervous over the ostensible impact the additional charges would have on growing sale prices, while advocates are pushing the bill’s inclusion of artists in the creation of new wealth.  “To me, the bill is a question of fundamental fairness,” says Representative Jerrold Nadler (D-NY), who introduced the bill. (more…)

Nan Goldin Profiled in The Guardian

Monday, March 24th, 2014

Photographer Nan Goldin is profiled in The Guardian this week, as the artist prepares for the release of her new book, Eden and After.  Reviewing the impact of her early series The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, Goldin discusses ties between her work and the ubiquitous nightlife photography present on Instagram today.   “Most of that stuff is so easy and lacking in any kind of emotional depth or context,” she says. “Nowadays, people forget how radical my work was when it first appeared. Nobody else was doing what I did.” (more…)

Jackson Pollock Painting with Dark Past Goes on Sale

Monday, March 24th, 2014

One of two paintings exchanged by artist Jackson Pollock for the convertible he ultimately crashed and died in will be on sale at Christie’s later this year, the Wall Street Journal reports.  Pollock reportedly exchanged his work Number 5 (Elegant Lady) for art dealer Martha Jackson’s Green Oldsmobile, which he crashed two years later.  The work is valued between $15 million and $20 million.   (more…)

Sentencing Postponed in Knoedler Gallery Fraud Case

Monday, March 24th, 2014

Sentencing for the convicted Knoedler Gallery defrauder Glafira Rosales has been postponed until September, following the March 14th filing of a secret court document with Manhattan federal court.  Analysts speculate that Rosales, who has already agreed to forfeit $33.2 million, which includes her Sands Point home and $81m in restitution, is negotiating with federal officials in building a larger criminal case for her co-conspirators. (more…)

Rembrandt Painting Recovered After 15 Year Search

Monday, March 24th, 2014

A Rembrandt stolen over 15 years ago from a French museum has been recovered, the Art Newspaper reports.  L’enfant à la bulle de savon was stolen from the Musée d’art et d’histoire in Draguignan in 1999, during the Bastille Day parade.  The work is believed to be valued at â‚¬4m today. (more…)

New York – “Sculpture” at Matthew Marks Gallery Through April 19th, 2014

Monday, March 24th, 2014


Katharina Fritsch, St. Michael (2008), via Matthew Marks

Simple yet explanatory, Sculpture is Matthew Marks Gallery’s current exhibition, bringing together the most recent three dimensional works by artists Katharina Fritsch, Robert Gober, Jasper Johns, Charles Ray, Ellsworth Kelly and Martin Puryear. Adopting the newest in the medium as its main concept, this group exhibition presents an opportunity for gallery goers to view and compare current modalities in the art of sculpture. (more…)

New York – Brendan Fowler: “New Camera” at Half Gallery Through April 1st, 2014

Sunday, March 23rd, 2014


Brendan Fowler, (That) hat on bedspread (countries of origin:my deposition was postponed and Matt’s took all day) (2014), via Half Gallery

Brendan Fowler’s new works, currently on view at Half Gallery uptown, are nothing if not elusive.  The show, on view last month at Los Angeles’s LAXArt, to New York as a follow-up of sorts to the last showing of photographic works by the artist at MoMA’s survey of new photography late last year (a series of Fowler’s highly-popular crash works).  Here, Fowler seems more interested in the image itself, rather than the potentials for combination and assemblage of the modern image.  The works are created entirely using a commercial grade embroidery machine and thread, leaving layered, textured works that offer a striking commentary on the photographic image. (more…)

Dustin Yellin Featured in New York Times

Saturday, March 22nd, 2014

Dustin Yellin is profiled in the New York Times this week, focusing on the artist’s close ties among the expansive New York arts scene, and his work founding the Pioneer Works exhibition space in Red Hook.  “Dustin does amazing things for the community,” says Red Hook resident and friend Billy Durney. “The amount of charity he does would set a record.” (more…)

Collector Adam Sender to Sell Off $70 Million in Works from Personal Collection

Saturday, March 22nd, 2014

Long-time collector and founder of Exis Capital Management Adam Sender is selling off his monumental art collection over the next year and a half through Sotheby’s, the New York Times reports.  The collection of works, including pieces by Dan Flavin, Martin Kippenberger and Cindy Sherman, is valued at $70 to $80 million.  “I grew up Jewish, but more and more I find myself embracing a Buddhist philosophy,” Sender says. “I will still be lucky enough to live with a lot of art.”  (more…)

London – “New Order II: British Art Now” at Saatchi Gallery Through March 23rd, 2014

Saturday, March 22nd, 2014


Tom Gidley, Everything Is Permitted Within the Circle (2012), all images courtesy Saatchi Gallery

Following up on Saatchi Gallery’s look at the contemporary landscape of British artists practicing today, New Order II marks a continuation of the institution’s 25-year-long investment in and support of new faces to the British contemporary art scene. The exhibition will run through March 23, 2014.

(more…)

Pace Gallery Plans Silicon Valley Pop-Up Gallery

Friday, March 21st, 2014

Next month, Pace Gallery will open a temporary space in the Menlo Park area of Silicon Vallery, part of a new attempt by the art world to cater to the growing wealth of the tech-sector.  Pace President Marc Glimcher has been quoted as saying that the pop-up space represents a growing interest from clients for space to sell: “not necessarily a gallery, but we need a moment.” (more…)

Frank Stella Now Co-Represented by Marianne Boesky and Dominique Lévy

Friday, March 21st, 2014

Marianne Boesky and Dominique Lévy have announced their official co-representation of artist Frank Stella.  The two galleries will take over for the artist’s somewhat scattered representation of the past few years, representing him jointly worldwide. (more…)

Skarstedt Gallery Prepares to Open Chelsea Space

Friday, March 21st, 2014

Skarstedt Gallery will open its new Chelsea space on May 8th, the gallery reports.  Designed by Selldorf Architects, the exhibition space will take over the previous home of Haunch of Venison on 21st Street.  “We have an ongoing commitment to mounting key historical exhibitions,” founder Per Skarstedt said in a statement. “I’m delighted to open this new gallery space in Chelsea with an exhibition of incredible works by these quintessential modern masters. This approach suits the collaborative way we have always worked with artists and their estates.” (more…)