Global contemporary art events and news observed from New York City. Suggestion? Email us.

Archive for the 'Art News' Category

Royal Academy Plans Show of Works by Bill Viola and Michelangelo

Friday, July 20th, 2018

The Royal Academy in London will mount a show of works by Bill Viola alongside works by Michelangelo, The Guardian reports. “I got out the Michelangelos for him, thinking they had much more connection with the themes that Bill had been exploring throughout his career,” Martin Clayton, the head of prints and drawings at the Royal Collection, says of a meeting years ago between Viola and himself, “and he was blown away by them.” (more…)

Pace Appoints Whitney Ferrare Director of Hong Kong Space

Friday, July 20th, 2018

Pace Gallery has appointed Whitney Ferrare senior director of its Hong Kong location, bringing her over from Gagosian’s Hong Kong space. “Pace is distinct for its long-held and dedicated engagement with the artists and collectors across Asia—having partnered with legendary dealer Leng Lin to be the first major Western gallery to open a space in Asia, launching Pace in Beijing in 2008,” Ferrare says. “It feels particularly momentous to join Pace as the gallery celebrates its 10th anniversary in Asia, now with galleries in Hong Kong and Seoul, as well as Beijing.” (more…)

Andy Warhol Foundation Announces Recipients of Spring 2018 Curatorial Research Fellowships

Friday, July 20th, 2018

The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts has announced the recipients of its Spring 2018 Curatorial Research Fellowships, with $295,000 split between six recipients. “These six curators are engaging with urgent cultural issues including income inequality, how we represent resistance, and how dominant narratives are shaped, and most importantly, by whom,” says Joel Wachs, the Warhol Foundation’s president. (more…)

House Votes Down Proposal to Cut Funding for NEA

Friday, July 20th, 2018

The House of Representatives has voted down a proposal to cut funding for the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities by 15%, Variety reports. “One of the largest vote margins in support of the NEA and NEH ever, this bipartisan showing and resounding vote is a testament to the good work of the federal agencies and the power of the arts in our communities, schools, lives, and work,” says Robert Lynch, the president and CEO of Americans for the Arts. (more…)

Art Newspaper Reports on Legacy of Robert Indiana

Friday, July 20th, 2018

The Art Newspaper reports on the legacy of Robert Indiana, and the current lawsuits that could determine the fate of the late artist’s estate. A filing in Maine has sought to discover if some parties working with Indiana “may have been conveyed away or otherwise misappropriated or sold without due compensation.” (more…)

New Entrance Drives Attendance at V&A Museum

Thursday, July 19th, 2018

A new entrance at the V&A Museum in London has led to a spike in attendance, moving against wider trends in the UK. “All the data we have shows that it is much more attractive to non-traditional museum-goers,” says museum director Tristram Hunt. “It is less, frankly, scary.” (more…)

Creative Time Announces Lineup for Eleventh Annual Creative Time Summit

Tuesday, July 17th, 2018

Creative Time has announced the lineup for the eleventh edition of the Creative Time Summit, which will set up shop in Miami this year from November 1-3.  “Fifty years after the upheavals of 1968, we continue to grapple with a host of pressing issues, from the ongoing legacies of colonialism to climate change and xenophobia,” says Creative Time executive director Justine Ludwig.  “There’s no better place for this conversation than Miami, a home to so many incredible artists, activists, and thinkers. We couldn’t be prouder to host the summit here, or of the participants and the invaluable insights they’ll be bringing to bear on some of the most critical issues of our time.” (more…)

New York Museums to Grant Free Admission for Library Card Holders

Tuesday, July 17th, 2018

A new initiative by New York’s library systems will grant free access to a range of NYC institutions with a library card, the New York Times reports. “Some people are intimidated by museums,” says Linda Johnson, president of the Brooklyn Public Library, said in a phone interview. “They shouldn’t be shut out of all the wonderful cultural offerings that are available to New York City dwellers.” (more…)

Liberté Nuti Joins Hauser & Wirth as Senior Director of Impressionist & Modern Art

Tuesday, July 17th, 2018

Liberté Nuti has joined Hauser & Wirth as International Senior Director of Impressionist & Modern Art, leaving her former post as International Director of Impressionist & Modern at Christie’s. “We are thrilled to welcome Liberté Nuti as a Senior Director in London,” Iwan Wirth says. “We look forward to this next chapter in Hauser & Wirth’s evolution as the gallery’s secondary market activity comes into sharper focus.” (more…)

Robert Motherwell Painting Stolen 40 Years Ago Found Upstate

Tuesday, July 17th, 2018

A Robert Motherwell painting that disappeared from a New York warehouse in 1978 has been found, the New York Times reports. The painting was found in a garage upstate by the son of a mover who had worked for Motherwell. (more…)

New York – Adrian Piper: “A Synthesis of Intuitions, 1965–2016” at MoMA Through July 20th, 2018

Tuesday, July 17th, 2018

Adrian Piper, A Synthesis of Intuitions (Installation View), via Art Observed
Adrian Piper, A Synthesis of Intuitions (Installation View), via Art Observed

Considering the canon of the conceptual movement over the course of the 20th Century, the work of artist Adrian Piper figures in a particularly resonant and explosive way.  Working at the forefront of the conceptual project from the late 1960’s onwards, Piper’s work has long confronted and framed questions of race, identity and discrimination in ways that push the viewer into a deep, lasting engagement with concepts and structures of institutionalized racism. This mode of practice, and the artist’s gradual movements towards it over the course of her career sits at the core of her current career retrospective at MoMA, an exhibition that manages to frame the artist’s work historically and socially, while using its conceptual payload to push the viewer into that same sense of identification.

Adrian Piper, A Synthesis of Intuitions (Installation View), via Art Observed
Adrian Piper, A Synthesis of Intuitions (Installation View), via Art Observed

(more…)

Sotheby’s Eric Shiner to Join White Cube

Tuesday, July 17th, 2018

Eric Shiner is leaving his place as senior vice president of contemporary art at Sotheby’s to serve as artistic director of White Cube gallery in New York. “This new role allows me to return to making sure the most relevant voices of our age are heard and celebrated,” he said in a statement. (more…)

Venice Biennale Announces 2019 Edition

Monday, July 16th, 2018

The Venice Biennale has announced its opening dates for its 2019 edition, with the title May You Live in Interesting Times, an allusion to periods of uncertainty, crisis, and turmoil.  “At a moment when the digital dissemination of fake news and ‘alternative facts’ is corroding political discourse and the trust on which it depends, it is worth pausing whenever possible to reassess our terms of reference,” says curator Ralph Rugoff. (more…)

Documenta Announces Selection Committee for 2022 Artistic Director

Monday, July 16th, 2018

The next iteration of Documenta will be held in 2022, with a selection committee for the next edition’s artistic director just announced. “Documenta is an essential forum for contemporary art and, as the legacy of Arnold Bode, a treasure that enhances the image of the city of Kassel,” says Kassel’s mayor, Christian Geselle. “I am very pleased to note that an international finding commission composed of outstanding experts has been chosen to find an artistic director for Documenta 15. And we are right on schedule.” (more…)

LA Times Spotlights the Paper’s Impressive Former Collectoin

Monday, July 16th, 2018

The LA Times has a piece on the Pablo Picasso pieces that once hung in a special room at the paper, alongside a range of other works from the newspaper’s collection. “They gave us this gift of thinking highly enough of us to surround us with beautiful things,” says former bureau chief Geraldine Baum. (more…)

New York – Math Bass: “My Dear Dear Letter” at Mary Boone Through July 27th, 2018

Saturday, July 14th, 2018

Math Bass, Newz! (2018), via Mary Boone
Math Bass, Newz! (2018), via Mary Boone

Currently on view at Mary Boone Gallery’s 745 Fifth Ave space, artist Math Bass has brought together a range of new sculptures and paintings that continue her equally meticulous and playful interpretations of the art object, twisting vaguely familiar forms and figures into foreign landscapes and minimalistic constructions. (more…)

Berlin-“Rose Painting” by Yngve Holen at Galerie Neu through July 14, 2018

Friday, July 13th, 2018

Screen Shot 2018-07-12 at 12.12.29 PM
Installation view. All images via Galerie Neu.

Rose Painting, the second solo show of Norwegian-German artist Yngve Holen, was recently on view at Galerie Neu in Berlin through July 14. This exhibition presented a series of rims, ‘gutted’ from five different sports utility vehicles and then 3D-scanned, scaled to a diameter of two meters, and optimized to be milled in CLT (cross-laminated timber). The resulting objects are flower-like wooden constructions that feature symmetrical lines organized around a center point. Rose Painting addresses the formal design languages of a utility object, questioning the fetish object and psychosocial design that punctuate the objects that clutter wealth distribution.
Screen Shot 2018-07-13 at 10.27.35 AM

The role of ornamentation in the above questions is central to this exhibition, which emphasized the process of creating the art object as much as the art object itself. The press release states, “Rims are typically made of aluminum, a material whose ambivalent value bears, on the one hand, the symbolic aura of modernity, while on the other, the ‘stain’ of a cheap substitute.” The artist’s choice to reproduce these rims in cross-laminated timber, this form is exaggerated in a form that is typically understood to be more valuable, traditional, and environmentally sustainable. In this way, these forms point to the symbolic and economic conditions of their proliferation, since the crisis of functionalism in the 1960s, and seek to “ride out the increasing aerodynamics of the contemporary chassis.”

 

 

Screen Shot 2018-07-12 at 12.12.14 PM

 

The reimagined rims are products of technical woodcarving, a process that expose the milling traces, tears, and cracks of an industrially prefabricated resource sculpted by a machine. With their rescaled form, the rims present these blemishes as a ‘natural’ byproduct, pointing to the current schizophrenic relationship to automobiles that strives for optimized car use and reduced emissions, while continuing to fetishize and covet the SUV. In a sense, the SUV epitomizes the frenzied materialistic collecting of ornaments and materials behind car culture. The large-scale vehicles are extremely popular despite their high consumption of gas and the danger they pose to other drives and pedestrians, as well as their inutility in the suburban or residential contexts in which they are frequently found.

 

Screen Shot 2018-07-13 at 10.27.26 AM

The design and possession of the SUV, like that of rims, illustrates the complex mechanisms of ornamentation, style, and economics motivating the circulation and production of automotive accessories. The title of this exhibition points to the function of the ornament to embellish an object, as well as invest it with value and suggestions of worth. The craftmanship implied in the title and objects of the exhibition stand in interesting and not entirely opposing relationship to the industrial processes of mechanical production implied by the rim.

-A. Corrigan

 

Related Links:

Exhibition Page [Galerie Neu]

Jacolby Satterwhite Joins Mitchell-Innes and Nash

Friday, July 13th, 2018

Jacolby Satterwhite is joining Mitchell-Innes and Nash, Art News reports. “I was first introduced to the work at the Studio Museum in 2012 and was drawn to the rigorous and subversive nature of his practice, both aesthetically and conceptually,”says Lucy Mitchell-Innes.  (more…)

Small Fire Breaks Out at Paula Cooper Gallery

Friday, July 13th, 2018

A fire at Paula Cooper Gallery’s Chelsea space has led to an inspection to make sure works in storage were not damaged by smoke, Art News reports. “The fire marshall is here trying to determine what caused the fire,” Cooper said. “It started this morning and it was contained. No one got hurt, fortunately, and it didn’t spread. It was contained in our storage room.” (more…)

Landmark Blinky Palermo Work to Return to New York

Friday, July 13th, 2018

Blinky Palermo’s To the People of New York City (1976) will return to New York City after thirty years, going on view this fall at Dia.  “To the People of New York City has often been described as the most influential work of Palermo’s short but remarkable career—representing a complex investigation into the formal language of Minimalism and the legacy of abstraction, while foreshadowing the paradigms of Conceptual practice. In the context of Dia’s rich collection of work by both Palermo and his peers, this presentation will foster important and in-depth engagement with this artist’s rarely exhibited work,” said Jessica Morgan, Dia’s Nathalie de Gunzburg Director. (more…)

Curator Nikki Columbus Accuses MoMA PS1 of Discrimination Over Her Pregnancy

Friday, July 13th, 2018

Curator Nikki Columbus is accusing MoMA PS1 of rescinding a job offer once the museum learned she had had a baby, the New York Times reports. “I was told by every woman I spoke with, don’t discuss your pregnancy until you get the job,” Columbus says. “I just went forward thinking that this is not their business, it’s not relevant to the job and to my abilities.” (more…)

Berlin – “We Don’t Need Another Hero”: The 2018 Berlin Biennale Through September 9th, 2018

Thursday, July 12th, 2018

Ozem Altin at Berlin Biennale, via Art Observed
Ozem Altin at Berlin Biennale, via Art Observed

With summer in full swing, the Berlin Biennale has opened in the German capital, bearing the title We Don’t Need Another Hero.  Referencing Tina Turner’s song from 1985, the show points to a moment before the major geopolitical shifts still rippling across the globe. (more…)

Kathy Noble Joins Performa as Curator

Wednesday, July 11th, 2018

Kathy Noble has joined the Performa as curator and manager of curatorial affairs, Art News reports. “Kathy will be somebody who looks at the total picture with me,” Performa founder and chief curator RoseLee Goldberg says. (more…)

Glasgow School of Art to Rebuild Mackintosh Building

Wednesday, July 11th, 2018

Glasgow School of Art’s Mackintosh building will be rebuilt after a fire last month, the institution announced. “We’re going to rebuild the Mackintosh building,” director Tom Inns says. “There’s been a huge amount of speculation about what should happen with the site and quite rightly so, but from our point of view and that of the city of Glasgow, it is critically important that the building comes back as the Mackintosh building.” (more…)