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Archive for the 'Art News' Category

Paris – Marcel Duchamp: “Painting, Even” at The Centre Pompidou Through January 5th, 2015

Monday, January 5th, 2015

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Marcel Duchamp, 3-Mending Standard (1913-1914 / 1964), via Sophie Kitching for Art Observed

Few artists have left such a mark on the history and direction of 2oth and 21st Century art in the same manner as Marcel Duchamp, the French artist who was at the forefront of revolutions both on and off the canvas in the first half of the century.  Taking this impact as a starting point, the Centre Pompidou is currently presenting Marcel Duchamp: La Peinture, Même, an exhibition exploring the artist’s early roots in painting and drawing, and how these stylistic leanings contributed to his later work in the development of the readymade, installation based work, and other conceptual pursuits. (more…)

Christo Project Closer to Realization After Federal Court Win

Monday, January 5th, 2015

Christo, via the Washington PostA Federal court ruled in favor of Christo’s currently delayed Arkansas project this week, defeating a group of activists claiming that the work was an environmental threat.  “We have one lawsuit in state court still outstanding, but today we took a very significant and important step forward in realizing Over the River,” Christo said. (more…)

New York – Martin Puryear Is On View at Matthew Marks Gallery Through January 10th, 2015

Sunday, January 4th, 2015

Martin Puryear, Big Phrygian (2010-2014)
Martin Puryear, Big Phrygian (2010-2014)

One of the foremost American sculptors from the second half of the 20th century, Martin Puryear has established himself as one of the canonic names of Modernist sculpture, merging Minimalism with labor intensive craftsmanship throughout his forty-year long career. The artist is currently presenting a new exhibition at Matthew Marks in New York, featuring ten new works reflecting the artist’s interest in political history, while remaining loyal to his abstraction-driven practice and his approach towards materiality, not only as means of production but also as a specific method of artistic expression. (more…)

Inside China’s Growing Market for Emerging Artists

Saturday, January 3rd, 2015

Shi Zhongyin at the Red Gate gallery, via NYTThe New York Times takes a look at the changing atmosphere of China’s contemporary art market, and interviews some of the players driving the market’s new focus on emerging artists.  “Buying a work of contemporary Chinese art is buying a little piece of history and a window into how society is changing,” says Tom Pattinson, Director of Surge Art. (more…)

Rare Caravaggio to Hit Auction Block Later This Month at Christie’s

Saturday, January 3rd, 2015

Caravaggio's Boy Peeling a Fruit (1591), via ArtnetChristie’s Old Masters Week sale later this month will feature a rare early Caravaggio, titled Boy Peeling a Fruit.  The work is valued at $3 million to $5 million. (more…)

Art Market Saw $16 Billion in Sales Last Year

Saturday, January 3rd, 2015

Andy Warhol, Triple Elvis [Ferus Type] (1963), via Christie'sGlobal art sales topped $16 Billion in 2014, according to the new figures released this week by Artnet, with Andy Warhol at the top of the list of top-selling artists for his $653.2 million in sales.  “The headline number is not so much a comment on the art market as it is on global wealth,” says Jeff Rabin of advisory firm Artvest Partners. “We haven’t seen a considerable increase in the number of objects sold. We have seen price appreciation at the top end.” (more…)

Luc Tuymans Interviewed in Financial Times

Saturday, January 3rd, 2015

Luc Tuymans, via Financial TimesLuc Tuymans is profiled in the Financial Times this week, as the artist prepares to open a new show of works at David Zwirner London.  “Realism, modernism, postmodernism, post-postmodernism: that is a discourse for people who have no visual sense,” Tuymans says. “I mean, these people have to get by. I still indulge in the perversity of painting, which remains interesting.” (more…)

Los Angeles Makes a Play in Global Market

Saturday, January 3rd, 2015

Los Angeles Art Contemporary, via WSjWith two art fairs this January, Los Angeles is making a play as one a global city for fine art, preparing to open Art LA in two weeks, and Art Los Angeles Contemporary  later this month.  “In the short span of six years, Art Los Angeles Contemporary has managed to turn an otherwise anti-art-fair town into a place where both emerging and established galleries from around the world can connect with an important West Coast audience,” says art attorney Joshua Roth. (more…)

Google Unveils New Museum Exhibition App

Saturday, January 3rd, 2015

Google's new museum app, via TechCrunchGoogle is rolling out a new tech platform designed to make museum exhibitions around the world easily available to users, using a combination of technologies including Street View and YouTube.  “Users can use the app to experience virtual tours at home, or they can use it to enhance at the museum,” says Product Manager Robert Tansley. (more…)

ADAA Art Show Releases Its Exhibitor List

Saturday, January 3rd, 2015

Outside the Park Ave Armory for the ADAA Art ShowArt News previews the selection of solo shows and specially focused exhibitions that will be on view at March’s ADAA Art Show at the Park Avenue Armory, including Haim Steinbach at Tanya BonakdarMichelangelo Pistoletto at Luhring Augustine, and a show of Arte Povera works at Marian Goodman. (more…)

London – Hiroshi Sugimoto: “Still Life” at Pace London Through January 24th, 2015

Saturday, January 3rd, 2015

Hiroshi Sugimoto, Birds of the Alps (2012), via Pace London
Hiroshi Sugimoto, Birds of the Alps (2012), via Pace London

Hiroshi Sugimoto returns to Pace London this month, presenting a new body of work from his long-running Dioramas series, and exploring notions of the fossil as both an artifact and a contemporary object through his cunningly arranged photographs. (more…)

New York – “The Thing and Thing-In-Itself” at Andrea Rosen Through January 24th, 2015

Friday, January 2nd, 2015

Marcel Duchamp, Comb (1916), via Andrea Rosen
Marcel Duchamp, Comb (1916), via Andrea Rosen

Taking its title from Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, Andrea Rosen Gallery is currently presenting a small exhibition of works incorporating readymade materials, minimalist techniques and surrealist tropes to explore notions of form and execution as only a medium for the transmission of deeper understandings of the work at hand. (more…)

Converse Previews its Andy Warhol Chuck Taylor Line

Thursday, January 1st, 2015

Andy Warhol Chuck Taylors, via ConverseConverse has offfered the first images from its upcoming series of Andy Warhol-inspired Chuck Taylors, featuring iconic imagery from the artist’s career.  The collection, which features a number of recognizable Warhol screenprints, will be released in January.   (more…)

New York – Juan Muñoz at Marian Goodman Gallery Through January 31st, 2015

Thursday, January 1st, 2015

Juan Muñoz, Thirteen Laughing at Each Other (2001), all photos via Osman Can Yerebakan for Art Observed
Juan Muñoz, Thirteen Laughing at Each Other (2001), all photos via Osman Can Yerebakan for Art Observed

Marian Goodman Gallery is currently presenting a selection of Juan Muñoz’s expansive body of work, with a particular focus on the late artist’s works between 1984 and 2001. Curated by Russell Ferguson, the exhibition encapsulates the influential sculptor’s visceral, vibrant sculptural technique in which a peculiar buoyancy is transferred through narratively mute representations. (more…)

Stefan Simchowitz Profiled in New York Times

Thursday, January 1st, 2015

Stefan Simchowitz, via New York TimesThe New York Times profiles movie producer and collector Stefan Simchowitz, who has drawn sharp criticism from many market insiders for his approach to patronage and collecting emerging artists.  “I’m looking for the big fish,” Simchowitz tells the New York Times. (more…)

W Magazine Tours Ugo Rondinone’s Harlem Home and Studio

Wednesday, December 31st, 2014

W Magazine takes an inside look at the design and architecture of artist Ugo Rondinone’s New York studio and loft, built in an abandoned church in Harlem Rondinone gut renovated for $4 million.  “Somehow I thought it was a bargain,” the artist says.  “I love the church. I can stay here for weeks without going out.”  (more…)

Adeline Ooi Named Art Basel’s Director for Asia

Wednesday, December 31st, 2014

Malaysian curator and art adviser Adeline Ooi has been named Art Basel’s new Director for Asia, the New York Times reports, replacing former Director Magnus Renfrew.  ‘‘We wanted someone who we thought could catalyze the growth of the art market across Asia,’’ says Marc Spiegler, the director of Art Basel. (more…)

Artist Tania Bruguera Arrested Over Protest Performance in Cuba

Wednesday, December 31st, 2014

Artist Tania Bruguera has been detained in Cuba, following the performance of an art piece designed to test the U.S.’s resolve to renew diplomatic ties with a country known for censoring free speech.  Bruguera was arrested as she walked towards Havana’s Revolution Square, and is currently being held by the government. (more…)

New York – Douglas Gordon: “tears become…streams become….” at the Park Avenue Armory Through January 4th, 2015

Wednesday, December 31st, 2014


Douglas Gordon, tears become…streams become… (2014), via Art Observed

Douglas Gordon’s work often takes its strength from its simplicity.  Using minimal alterations and contextual wrinkles in the selections of his exhibition spaces, works and collaborations, Gordon seems to draw a certain pleasure from bringing out deeper recognitions of the space and structure of art as presentation, as experiential and institutional meditation. (more…)

Shanghai’s Power Station of Art Steps into Chinese Contemporary Spotlight

Tuesday, December 30th, 2014

Since opening in 2012, Shanghai’s Power Station of Art has become a central player in the rapidly expanding Chinese contemporary arts scene, as evidenced by the success of its recently opened 10th Shanghai Biennale.  “We want the Shanghai Biennale to be more international,” says Li Xu, deputy director of the Power Station. “This is a new kind of cultural confidence.” (more…)

Lifted Embargo Has Collectors Rushing to Cuba

Tuesday, December 30th, 2014

The New York Times notes the rush of interest by art buyers towards Cuba since President Obama lifted the economic embargo on the country earlier this month, with collectors fighting for first access to the country’s long-praised arts culture. “They’re saying, ‘I want to go before everyone else does,’ ” says dealer Alberto Magnan, who specializes in Cuban art. (more…)

Freeman and Lowe Plan Installation for Ace Hotel in NYC

Tuesday, December 30th, 2014

The Ace Hotel, in collaboration with the opening of Paul Thomas Anderson’s newest film Inherent Vice, is presenting a trio of exhibitions in Los Angeles, London and New York, including an immersive installation by Jonah Freeman and Justin Lowe in NYC.  The exhibitions run from January 5th – 11th. (more…)

Smithsonian Institution Receives $14.5 Million in Additional Government Funding

Tuesday, December 30th, 2014

The Smithsonian is reportedly receiving an additional $14.5 million in government funding next year, bringing the total funding received for 2015 to $819.5 million.  Most of the funding will go to maintenance and salaries for the Institution’s various outposts and services, while some has been set aside for an ambitious renovation project for the Smithsonian’s South Mall. (more…)

Broad Museum Curator Joanne Heyeler Discusses Soon to Open Museum with LA Times

Tuesday, December 30th, 2014

The LA Times sits down with Broad Museum Curator Joanne Heyeler to discuss the completion of city’s new art museum, set to open in late 2015.  “I have to say, living and breathing with these renderings and plans for almost five years now,” Heyeler says, “I am absolutely thrilled to see it finally revealed as a whole exterior.” (more…)