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Archive for the 'Art News' Category

The Met Considering Lucio Fontana Exhibition at Former Whitney Site

Thursday, July 9th, 2015

The Met is currently working on plans for a 2017 exhibition focused on the work of Lucio Fontana, and initial reporting by the Art Newspaper indicates that the exhibition could be held at the Breuer building, formerly the home of the Whitney Museum.  “An exhibition at the Met will necessarily be all-encompassing,” an anonymous source close to the museum says. (more…)

The Economist Offers Look at Touring M+ Museum Collection

Thursday, July 9th, 2015

The Economist reviews the touring exhibition of the M+ Museum collection, before the Hong Kong museum opens its doors in 2019, and profiles some of the most important contributors to the emergence of Chinese contemporary art worldwide, including businessman and diplomat Uli Sigg, and Guy Ullens, founder of the Ullens Centre for Contemporary Art.  “The view was that art and culture were enshrined in the past—that Chinese art was ‘something ancient’,” says Edmund Capon, who served as head of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. (more…)

As Auction Records Continue to Fall, Christie’s Steps Up its Focus on Third-Party Investors

Thursday, July 9th, 2015

The Art Newspaper notes the increasingly complex internal workings of the guarantor system at Christie’s this week, including a growing number of behind the scenes deals and third-party guarantees or investors that help push works to ever higher prices.  “It is becoming more complex and confusing, and that’s not what you want to have in an art market where prices are at this level,” says economist Olav Velthuis. “With the market expanding and prices rising so high, you want more transparency—but this is resulting in the opposite.” (more…)

LA Times Offers Look Inside Broad Museum Installation

Wednesday, July 8th, 2015

The LA Times looks at the immense efforts taken at the Broad Museum to ready the exhibition space, including the negotiations in installing and managing immense artworks like a recently purchased Takashi Murakami piece.  “Contemporary art is so varied in form, material and scale that you often need to devise new approaches for moving and installing certain pieces,” says the Broad’s director of collections management, Vicki Gambill.  “That’s what makes the work infinitely interesting and complex. Preparators love solving problems.” (more…)

White Cube Closes Shop in São Paulo

Wednesday, July 8th, 2015

White Cube Gallery will close its São Paulo exhibition space this August, when its three year lease ends, The Art Newspaper reports. The gallery told the paper that it will focus on “special projects” in Brazil,“as was the impetus when the gallery was first introduced to the region.”   (more…)

New York – Joan Miró: “Oiseaux dans L’Espace” at Nahmad Contemporary Through July 18th, 2015

Wednesday, July 8th, 2015

Joan Miró, Bird in the Night (1967), via Art Observed
Joan Miró, Bird in the Night (1967), via Art Observed

Joan Miró’s impact on the landscape of twentieth century art can hardly be ignored, an artist whose fluid, lithe figurations and adventurous approach to both color and line helped to pave an alternative to the dense cubism of his fellow countryman and friend Pablo Picasso.  Taking a reflective look at the artist’s contributions and continued artistic growth during his late Nahmad Contemporary is currently presenting Oiseaux dans L’Espace, a minimal, yet stunning show that reflects an impressive curatorial vision towards the artist’s later works.   (more…)

London – Roni Horn: “Butterfly Doubt” at Hauser and Wirth Saville Row Through July 25th, 2015

Tuesday, July 7th, 2015

Roni Horn, Hack Wit - chasing blue out (2014), via Hauser and Wirth
Roni Horn, Hack Wit – chasing blue out (2014), via Hauser and Wirth

Hauser and Wirth is currently devoting both its Saville Row Galleries to a collection of several recent series by Roni Horn, documenting the American artist’s ongoing investigations of language, repetition and meaning that stem from both the viewer and artist’s encounter with the work. (more…)

Ai Weiwei Shows in Beijing Signal Relaxed Stance of Government Towards Artist

Monday, July 6th, 2015

Ai Weiwei has opened a series of new exhibitions in Beijing, signaling a relaxation of the capital’s ban on the showing the artist, while foreign travel is still off limits.  “The decision-making process is opaque. I can only speculate that the authorities realize that they have created a situation that, sooner or later, has to be resolved,” says John Tancock, a longtime collaborator of Ai’s and an adviser to Chambers Fine Art. (more…)

Studio Museum Announces New Building Plans at 125th Street

Monday, July 6th, 2015

Harlem’s Studio Museum has announced plans for a new, $122 million building, designed by David Adjaye, on West 125th Street.  “We have outgrown the space,” says Director and Chief Curator Thelma Golden. “Our program and our audience require us to answer those demands.” (more…)

Nicolas Bourriaud Fired from École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts

Monday, July 6th, 2015

Critic and Educator Nicolas Bourriaud has been dismissed from his post as the director of the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts by Fleur Pellerin, French minister of culture, following a lengthy exchange over the direction of the school.  “Dear friends, the Minister [of Culture] has just fired me ‘for reasons related to a change of direction’ of her politics,” Bourriaud wrote on Facebook.  “Not a single factual argument in the course of a forty-five-minute discussion.” (more…)

Jeff Koons Interviewed in The Guardian

Monday, July 6th, 2015

Jeff Koons is interviewed in The Guardian this week, as the artist prepares to open his traveling retrospective at the Guggenheim Bilbao this month, and his views on critiques of his work as trophies for multi-millionaires.  “It happens to everybody – the work is held by someone who doesn’t even particularly enjoy the work, and just has it stored in some warehouse and will sit there for 20 years,” he says.  “Or someone doesn’t understand it physically, and their motivations are just to show that they have the power to purchase. There’s not much you can do; that’s about educating people, and the way you can educate them is through your art. And I try to educate people about materialism through my work. I try to show them real visual luxury.” (more…)

Sean Scully’s Paintings Installed at Spanish Monastery

Monday, July 6th, 2015

Santa Cecilia de Montserrat monastery received Irish-American painter, Sean Scully’s generous donation of 22 of his artworks for permanent installation. His brightly colored paintings of block and bands, along with red, ocher, and blue stained glass and frescos, will complete the restoration of this 1,000 years old monastery. “ This is the most significant exhibition probably I’ve ever done” said the internationally established artist; “ This is going to be there for 1,000 years”. Scully’s intention of “adding a little joy to the chapel” grew incrementally as the importance of this exhibition grew with each piece he adds to the installation.

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Tania Bruguera Arrested Again During Opening Days of Havana Biennial

Monday, July 6th, 2015

The New York Times travels to the Havana Biennial this week, and notes the arrest of artist Tania Bruguera during the event, following the artist’s live reading of Hannah Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism, an event that cast something of a pall over the first Biennial legally accessible to American visitors. (more…)

Damien Hirst Installs Large-Scale Sculpture Outside London’s Gherkin Tower

Monday, July 6th, 2015

Damien Hirst has installed his large-scale work, Charity, outside of the Gherkin tower in London this week, a nearly 25-foot high statue of a young girl in a leg brace, holding a vandalized collection tin.  “Charity is an iconic piece of art. It is also a symbol of changing attitudes to disability over the past 50 years, since collection boxes like the one depicted in this sculpture were seen on high streets across the country,” says Alan Gosschalk, fundraising director at Scope, the British disability charity that once used the collection tins depicted in Hirst’s work. (more…)

Marina Abramovic Interviewed in The Guardian

Monday, July 6th, 2015

Marina Abramovic is in The Guardian this week, reviewing her plans for her own funeral, to take place in the three cities she lived longest: New York, Amsterdam and Belgrade.  “I want to have three Marinas,” she says. “Of course, one is real and two fake because you can’t have three bodies.” (more…)

Manchester’s Whitworth Named Museum of the Year

Monday, July 6th, 2015

Manchester’s Whitworth Museum has been awarded the UK’s annual “Museum of the Year” award, recognizing the institution’s impressive new expansion project, unveiled this past February. (more…)

Sotheby’s Suspends Workers for Demonstration During Evening Auction

Monday, July 6th, 2015

A group of cleaners protesting Sotheby’s low sick pay rates have been suspended from their posts, following their public demonstration during the auction house’s London sales last week.  “[A service rep] stopped them at the entrance and said ‘give me your passes, you’re no longer welcome at Sotheby’s – we’ve been instructed by Sotheby’s to not allow you on site’” says Petros Elia, the cleaner’s union general secretary. “Our argument is that Sotheby’s is massively, extremely wealthy company. Contractual sick-pay is not a crazy thing.” (more…)

New York: Philippe Parreno: “H {N)Y P N(Y} OSIS” At Park Avenue Armory Through August 2nd, 2015

Sunday, July 5th, 2015

Philippe Parreno- H {N)Y P N(Y} OSIS-Park Avenue Armory (3)
Philippe Parreno, Danny La Rue,  H {N)Y P N(Y} OSIS

The Park Avenue Armory has opened its doors this summer to Paris-based artist Philippe Parreno’s largest U.S. installation to date, H {N)Y P N(Y} OSIS, a symphony of events unfolding in scripted and random sequences that constantly blend and transform in shape and context, tuning the entire space as a series of interlocking events.  Sharing authorship, Parreno avidly collaborates with performance artist Tino Sehgal, artist Pierre Hughye and pianist Mikhail Ruby, giving Parreno the role of both artist and director.  (more…)

Paris — Chris Burden at Gagosian through September 19, 2015

Saturday, July 4th, 2015

chrisburden_gagosianlebourget_sk4
Chris Burden, Porsche with Meteorite (2013), via Sophie Kitching for Art Observed

Through September 19, 2015, Gagosian Gallery in Le Bourget, Paris is presenting work by the late American artist Chris Burden.  Over the course of his life, Burden became known for his controversial performances and installations, in which he put himself in intense personal danger or subjected himself to mass amounts of physical stress, often toeing the line of gruesome self-mutilation.  Mechanical and technological intervention, scale and weight, and the physically or imagined limits of the human body frequently reappear as themes in Burden’s work. (more…)

Versailles – Anish Kapoor at Versailles Palace Through November 1st, 2015

Friday, July 3rd, 2015

Anish Kapoor, Dirty Corner (2011-2015), courtesy of Lisson Gallery, Galleria Massimo Minini, Galleria Continua, Galerie Kamel Mennour and Kapoor Studio
Anish Kapoor, Dirty Corner (2011-2015), courtesy of Lisson Gallery, Galleria Massimo Minini, Galleria Continua, Galerie Kamel Mennour and Kapoor Studio

Continuing its series of summer commissions meant to encourage contemporary arts in engagement with the history of its vaunted grounds, the Palace at Versailles has opened its new summer show featuring the work of Anish Kapoor, spread across the lawns and gardens of the iconic French landmark.  Kapoor, often lauded for his ability to blend both historical and physical contexts into its final execution, has taken the challenge in stride, executing a number of powerfully dissonant sculptural works and installations that keep French history at a short arm’s length, while never shying away from his own brand of phenomenological playfulness. (more…)

LAX Launches New Artist Commissions in Tom Bradley Terminal

Thursday, July 2nd, 2015

The Tom Bradley terminal at LAX has launched a series of new arts commissions this week, including works by Mark Bradford, Pae White and Ball-Nogues Studio.  “We imagined this space as a kind of reprieve or garden where people could rest their minds as they moved through the building,” says Benjamin Ball of Ball-Nogues. “The project is meant to be seen from a variety of angles.” (more…)

John Waters Profiled in The Guardian

Thursday, July 2nd, 2015

John Waters is the subject of a profile in The Guardian this week, as the filmmaker-turned-artist prepares to open a show of his work in London, and discussing his aims towards his most recent body of work.  “I wanted to be the most despised person imaginable, like I was when I started.  I built a career out of it. I wasn’t hated by the people I wanted to like my work – I was hated by the people it was bait for,” he says.    (more…)

Menil Collection Director Josef Helfenstein Leaving for Kunstmuseum Basel

Thursday, July 2nd, 2015

Josef Helfenstein, the Director of Houston’s Menil Collection for the past 12 years, is leaving his position to head the Kunstmuseum Basel, the New York Times reports.  “It’s a very hard decision for me to leave the Menil – I love this institution enormously,” Helfenstein says. “I think we have accomplished a lot, so it was kind of a natural moment.” (more…)

Art on the Underground Announces New Commissions

Thursday, July 2nd, 2015

The London Underground has announced a year-long series of artist commissions in the newest iteration of its ongoing arts patronage, including video work from Liam Gillick, and new design commissions from Giles Round and Design Work.  “Gillick has taken his camera, picking out features of the Victoria Line in an unfolding narrative,” says Eleanor Pinfield, the head of Art on the Underground. (more…)