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Archive for the 'Art News' Category

Casey Kaplan to Represent Matthew Ronay

Thursday, September 7th, 2017

Casey Kaplan Gallery is now representing artist Matthew Ronay, who moves from the closing Andrea Rosen Gallery. The artist’s work in ceramics and wood draw on an abstract formal language recalling West Coast sculpture in the 1960’s and 70’s.  (more…)

Louvre Abu Dhabi to Open November 11th

Thursday, September 7th, 2017

The Louvre Abu Dhabi will open its doors on November 11th, with President Emmanuel Macron expected to visit for the institution’s opening ceremony. “We are finally going to leave the realms of the imaginary and discover not only the architectural design of Jean Nouvel, but the content of a new museum, conceived under a bilateral agreement that makes it an absolutely unique creation”, says Louvre director Jean-Luc Martinez. (more…)

Ruberta Gallery Project Profiled in Art News

Wednesday, September 6th, 2017

Ruberta, the collaborative Los Angeles gallery project undertaken by a quintet of Latin American dealers, is profiled in Art News this week, before it opens next week. “We joke now that Ruberta is the Wu-Tang Clan of galleries,” the Mexico City-based dealer and gallery founder Brett W. Schultz says in a statement. (more…)

Wood from Sam Durant’s ‘Scaffold’ to Be Buried According to Dakota Elders

Wednesday, September 6th, 2017

Wood from artist Sam Durant’s controversial piece Scaffold will be buried, according to the ruling of Dakota elders committee. “The wood has a spiritual nature that is inherent to itself in Lakota Dakota tradition,” says Ronald P. Leith, a member of the Dakota elders committee. “Of the four elements — fire, water, air, earth — you cannot use any of the elements in a disparaging fashion without putting yourself in a position of being disrespectful. To use fire to burn this wood that has a negative stigma attached to it — that is not allowed.” (more…)

New York Times Speculates on Future of Met

Wednesday, September 6th, 2017

The New York Times has a piece this week on the continued efforts of The Met to rebuild following the ouster of Thomas P. Campbell.  The piece speculates on potential new Directors for the museum, including the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s Anne d’Harnoncourt. “It would come as no surprise that Anne d’Harnoncourt might have been considered for this position,” Norman Keyes, a Philadelphia Museum spokesman said of this potentiality. “However, we have had no knowledge that such an offer was actually made and would be surprised in any case if she would have taken it. She was deeply committed to Philadelphia, and proved this time and again over a period of many years.” (more…)

Stolen Georg Baselitz Recovered in Germany

Tuesday, September 5th, 2017

Fifteen stolen paintings and drawings by Georg Baselitz, valued at around $2.9 million, have been recovered by German authorities. An unnamed suspect in the shipping industry was apprehended this week, resulting in the return of the works. (more…)

Constantin Brancusi Profiled in WSJ

Tuesday, September 5th, 2017

Constantin Brancusi gets a lengthy spotlight in the Wall Street Journal this week, documenting the artist’s enduring influence on the landscape of contemporary art, and the impact of the United States on the artist’s work. “If it hadn’t been for the Americans, I would have starved,” Brancusi once wrote. (more…)

Robert Longo to Erect Large-Scale Public Work at Hunter College

Tuesday, September 5th, 2017

Artist Robert Longo is preparing a monumental public work, American Bridge Project, which will cover a pair of walkways at Hunter College uptown with the artist’s vivid drawings of the American flag. “It was really difficult to figure out what would work from a distance,” he says of the project. “It’s like these slivers of images; they slice the sky. And bridges are metaphorically something we need politically more than ever.” (more…)

Gilbert & George Interviewed in Financial Times

Tuesday, September 5th, 2017

Artist duo Gilbert & George get a profile in the Financial Times this week, with the pair looking back on their career, and their approach to their work. “We believe in making money and industry,” says Gilbert at one point. “I’m interested in being a normal person who wants to make money and [sell] our stuff.” (more…)

Francis Bacon Pope Painting to Star at Christie’s in London

Tuesday, September 5th, 2017

A rediscovered Francis Bacon painting from the artist’s series of “pope” paintings will feature as a star lot at Christie’s fall sale in London, the Telegraph reports. The painting is considered quite rare, and expected to sell for upwards of £10 million. (more…)

Jean-Michel Basquiat Profiled in The Guardian

Tuesday, September 5th, 2017

As the Barbican prepares a major exhibition of the work of Jean-Michel Basquiat, the Guardian looks back at the artist, his career, and his early death. “I knew when I met him that he was beyond the normal,” says musician and film-maker Michael Holman. “Jean-Michel had his faults, he was mischievous, he had certain things about him that could be called amoral, but setting that aside, he had something that I’m sure he had from the moment he was born. It was like he was born fully realized, a realized being.” (more…)

New York – “Past Skin” at MoMA PS1 Through September 10th, 2017

Saturday, September 2nd, 2017

Hannah Levy, Untitled (2016), via Art Observed
Hannah Levy, Untitled (2016), via Art Observed

Currently on view at MoMA PS1 for the museum’s spring and summer season, Past Skin draws on a nuanced understanding of modern man, dwelling on both changing conceptions of the body and body politics in conjunction with the modes of information dissemination, networked culture and physical architecture that have created a more nuanced assemblage of forms and functions in modernity.  Drawing heavily on the work of French philosopher Gilles Deleuze, the show, organized by Jocelyn Miller, pulls the human form into the swarms of data modern life is embedded within, and explores how this position has subtly changed the human relationship to the world around us. (more…)

Italy Relaxes Art Export Laws

Saturday, September 2nd, 2017

Following several years of fierce debate, Italy is relaxing its strict export laws on art, particularly on post-war work.  Some have stated that the move will vastly charge the market, as “works made in the 1950s and early 1960s were not easily exportable,” according to dealer Luigi Mazzoleni. (more…)

NADA Miami Beach Awards International Gallery Prize

Saturday, September 2nd, 2017

The second annual NADA Miami Beach International Gallery Prize has been awarded to Bogotá’s Carne Gallery and  Warsaw’s Dawid Radziszewski, resulting both galleries’ participation in the December fair.  “NADA is a global alliance, and we’re proud that NADA Miami Beach has become an opportunity for galleries from around the world to forge new relationships and reach new audiences,” Heather Hubbs, NADA’s executive director, said in a statement. (more…)

Miranda July Opens Interfaith Charity Store in London

Saturday, September 2nd, 2017

Artist Miranda July has opened a charity store project inside Selfridges department store on Oxford Street in London, contrasting the luxury goods nearby with inexpensive garments sold to benefit various interfaith groups.  “Every faith, every disability, every cause has a charity shop and that just doesn’t exist anywhere else in the world,” she says of the city. “There’s something that feels very hopeful about them.” (more…)

Houston Museums, Led by Menil Collection, Begin to Re-Open As Hurricane Harvey Recedes

Saturday, September 2nd, 2017

Houston museums are starting to re-open, with The Menil Collection opening its doors today for the first time since Hurricane Harvey’s massive rainfall forced it to shutter last week. The museum’s collection was fortunately unaffected by the storm. (more…)

Alex Da Corte Directs Video for St. Vincent

Friday, September 1st, 2017

Artist Alex Da Corte has directed the new video for musician St. Vincent’s “New York,” contributing his signature visual aesthetic to the song’s ornate pop stylings. The song is taken from St. Vincent’s upcoming record, a release date for which has yet to be announced. (more…)

Gavin Brown and Rikrit Tiravanija’s Restaurant Profiled in NYT

Friday, September 1st, 2017

Rikrit Tiravanija and Gavin Brown’s restaurant project Unclebrother gets a profile in the New York Times this week, as the group’s renovated car dealership-turned-gallery and restaurant caps another season in the Catskills. “It was purely the ‘for sale’ sign,” Brown says of the idea for opening the space. “We were scared that no one would come.” (more…)

Skulptur Projekte Münster to Stay Open Late This Weekend

Wednesday, August 30th, 2017

The city of Münster’s popular “Night of the Museums and Galleries” will see the Skulptur Projekte Münster join its list of institutions staying open late this weekend, with many works on view until 10PM or later. (more…)

Artist Trevor Paglen Profiled in NYT

Wednesday, August 30th, 2017

Artist Trevor Paglen is profiled in the New York Times this week, as the artist prepares new work and looks back on several years spent observing and challenging the structures of modern surveillance. ‘‘People like to say that my work is about making the invisible visible, but that’s a misunderstanding,’’ he says. ‘‘It’s about showing what invisibility looks like.’’ (more…)

Crystal Bridges Museum Announces Plans for Satellite Space

Wednesday, August 30th, 2017

Crystal Bridges Museum has unveiled its plans for a converted Kraft Foods cheese plant, which will become a satellite space called the Momentary. “We’re definitely in a growth mode, and I think we’ll develop an innovative interplay between these projects and those in the new industrial facility,” says curator Lauren Haynes. (more…)

Paris to Get New Art Fair Dedicated to Drawings and Sculpture

Wednesday, August 30th, 2017

The Palais Brongniart in Paris will play home to a new art fair focused on drawing and sculpture this November, the Art Newspaper reports, aiming to fill a space in the city’s offerings for Old Masters works.  “I believe this fair is a reboot of Paris Tableau but that it will have a broader outlook,” says dealer Jill Newhouse, recalling Paris’s last fair dedicated to that category of works. “I have always sold well in Paris and to European collections so when this opportunity arose, I jumped!” (more…)

Athens – Divine Dialogues: Cy Twombly and Greek Antiquity at the Museum Of Cycladic Art Through September 3, 2017

Wednesday, August 30th, 2017

 

DIVINE DIALOGUES: Cy Twombly and Greek Antiquity, exhibition view. All images courtesy of the Museum of Cycladic Art.
DIVINE DIALOGUES: Cy Twombly and Greek Antiquity, exhibition view. All images courtesy of the Museum of Cycladic Art.

On the occasion of Documenta 14 in Athens, the Museum of Cycladic Art presents “Divine Dialogues: Cy Twombly and Greek Antiquity,” an exhibition that juxtaposes twenty-seven works by the American artist Cy Twombly with twelve ancient Greek artworks and objects from the Archaic and Classical periods. As the press release concedes, the impact of Greece’s geography and mythos on Twombly’s artistic production is widely known; “Divine Dialogues” seeks not just to reaffirm the scope and depth of this influence, but to make a firm case for Greek antiquity’s continuing relevance to modern and contemporary art at large. (more…)

Dread Scott Flag Work Goes into Collections of Several Major Museums

Wednesday, August 30th, 2017

Artist Dread Scott’s flag work, A Man Was Lynched by Police Yesterday, is being added to the collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego and the Whitney, Art News reports. “You’re approximately six times more likely to be killed by the police if you’re black than if you’re white,” Scott said. “That is the terror that is perpetuated among people today, and that is the legacy of lynching. I want this flag to be a phantasm of the past: both as a means to mark this horror from the past that exists in the present, but also as the resistance from the past that persists in the present. The flag was flown because the NAACP organized people to stop lynching.” (more…)