Archive for the 'Art News' Category
Sunday, February 3rd, 2013
Fred Sandback, Untitled, (1977-2008), via David Zwirner
Currently on display at David Zwirner’s London Gallery is a matrix of acrylic yarn evoking an eerie experience that heightens the spectator’s spatial awareness. Across the gallery, colored and blackened fibre is stretched into 3D geometrical forms that carry an uncanny resemblance to a two-dimensional line drawing in mid air. The viewer is literally immersed into the surreal world of Fred Sandback as he challenges our perceptions of dimension and reality.
Fred Sandback, Untitled (four part vertical construction) (1988), via David Zwirner
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Saturday, February 2nd, 2013
The Christie’s-owned Haunch of Venison Gallery has announced that it will close both its Chelsea and London galleries, and will focus exclusively on the secondary market. While Christie’s owner Francois Pinault has not commented, some speculate that the galleries were never intended to be permanent in the first place. (more…)
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Saturday, February 2nd, 2013
The Tate Modern has announced that it will screen Roy Lichtenstein’s only film work, titled Three Landscapes, as part of the artist’s upcoming retrospective, opening next month. Filmed at Universal Studios in Los Angeles, the film was part of an ambitious project for Lichtenstein in the early 1970’s, but was quickly abandoned after the completion of one film. “When he finished the project, in a way he lost interest. What fascinated him was his painting. It was the first time and the last time he used film.” Says co-curator Iria Candela. (more…)
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Saturday, February 2nd, 2013
Collector David L. Bryant has spoken out against accusations that he is reneging on an agreement to donate Jasper Johns’s Tantric Detail triptych to the Museum of Modern Art. The dispute was made public after billionaire Henry Kravis, who purchased the works jointly with Bryant, filed a lawsuit alleging that Bryant was attempting to back out of an agreement to donate the works after a set period of time. “I have always planned to give my half of the paintings to MoMA.” Bryant said. “I have never said nor do I have any intention of reneging on my agreement with the artist to do so.” (more…)
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Saturday, February 2nd, 2013
Sol LeWitt, Cut Torn Folded Ripped (Installation View), via James Cohan
A pioneering force in post-war American art, Sol LeWitt’s geometric explorations of space, image and meaning was foundational in the development of both the conceptual and minimalist schools of artistic practice. Perhaps most famous for his “wall drawings,” the artist also explored a range of paper and sculptural techniques over the course of his career.
Sol LeWitt, A Square of Chicago without a Circle and Triangle (1979), via James Cohan
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Saturday, February 2nd, 2013
The National Museum of China has opened a new exhibition, featuring a large collection of works from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Earth, Sea and Sky: Nature in Western Art is the first large-scale collaboration between the two major arts institutions, and pulls from the American museum’s vast collection. “Never before has an exhibition of this scope and theme, drawn entirely from the Met’s holdings, traveled to China.” Says Met director Thomas Campbell. (more…)
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Friday, February 1st, 2013
Street-artist JR spoke with Nowness Magazine this week, elaborating on his ongoing, collaborative street art project. The artist has been printing large-scale photographs for contributors around the world, and empowering them to paste these images in their communities. “It’s true art. That’s why people want to participate.” says photographer Matt Black. (more…)
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Friday, February 1st, 2013
The Wynn Hotel in Las Vegas has installed Tulips, a large-scale stainless steel sculpture by Jeff Koons, in its ground floor rotunda. Acquired at auction in November for $33,682,500, the work is one of the largest and most complex of Koons’s Celebration series, and will sit near the hotel’s showroom lobby. “Many people believe that Jeff Koons is one of the most important living artists on canvas and in sculpture in the world today,” said CEO Steve Wynn. “I’m happy to be one of those people and particularly delighted to share with our guests his magnificent creation of the Tulips sculpture.” (more…)
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Friday, February 1st, 2013
Air de Pied-Ã -terre (Installation View), via Lisa Cooley
Walking into Air de Pied-Ã -terre, the newest show on display at artist Lisa Cooley’s gallery, one is reminded of an otherworldly hotel lobby. With the help of fellow artist and curator Alan Reid, Cooley has created an “Air de-Pied-Ã -Terre” (an alternative living space, located away from one’s home). The gallery has numerous articles that evoke a nostalgic atmosphere within the show – mobiles that dance around the room, paintings that mimic children’s creations, and homely looking text juxtaposed against more classical looking portraiture. The entirety of the show is punctuated by stereotypically domestic constituents such as chairs and potted plants that engulf the viewer and invite them to make themselves at home. (more…)
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Thursday, January 31st, 2013
New York’s now-closed Knoedler Gallery is being sued by a family trust for allegedly selling them a forged painting by Mark Rothko for $5.5 million. The gallery has faced similar lawsuits in the past, and is accused of withholding information that may have discouraged the sale, including telling the buyers that the work came from the secret collection of a “Mr. X.” “At all relevant times, defendants knew that the Mr. X story was untrue,” lawyers for the trust stated. “Indeed, defendants privately equated Mr. X to the fictional ‘goose that laid the golden egg.’” (more…)
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Thursday, January 31st, 2013
A small statuette stolen in 1901 from the Musée de la Chartreuse in Douai, France has been discovered and returned by the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. The statue’s origins were uncovered during a routine history check, and was promptly handed back to the French institution. “We don’t want to hold onto, nor do we have any business holding onto, stolen objects,” says the MFA’s full-time provenance researcher, Victoria Reed. (more…)
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Thursday, January 31st, 2013
The Art Dubai fair has announced its commissioned projects for 2013, including works by Mary Evans, Mohammed Kazem and Fatima Al-Qadiri. The works range in scope and size, from a festival wide radio project to a video gallery installed within a narrow stairwell, and reflect the blend of Arabic and global artworks on view at the fair. (more…)
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Wednesday, January 30th, 2013
The Office for Contemporary Art Norway has announced that it will send a special exhibition to Venice this year, titled Beware of the Holy Whore: Edvard Munch and the Dilemma of Emancipation. Featuring several rare works by Edvard Munch and a newly commissioned film by Lene Berg, the exhibition will explore the dichotomy of freedom and isolation found in the state of emancipation, and will take place from 31 May to 22 September 2013 at Galleria di Piazza San Marco of Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa. (more…)
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Wednesday, January 30th, 2013
Lost in LA (Installation View) All photos by Art Observed unless otherwise noted
Los Angeles’ Municipal Art Gallery recently exhibited Lost in LA, a group show featuring artists of both American and French origin working in a collaborative dialogue. The immensely popular television show “LOST,” which throughout the last decade acted as both a source of inspiration and speculation for these artists, serves as the backdrop to the themes presented in the exhibition. (more…)
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Wednesday, January 30th, 2013
British artist Tracey Emin will exhibit her first American public art installation next month, taking over the enormous LCD billboards of Times Square with a selection of the artist’s handwritten text pieces on love. The six works will be on view each night from 11:57PM to Midnight in February, coinciding with Valentine’s Day, and presented by the Times Square Alliance. (more…)
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Wednesday, January 30th, 2013
This Sunday, the Tate Modern will host an ambitious performance work, organized by artist Suzanne Lacy, in its new performance space, The Tanks. Welcoming 400 women over 60 who were active in mass political actions of the past 40 years, Silver Action will provide the platform for open, unscripted discussions on aging and political activism. Visitors will be able to listen into the many conversations concurrently running, and dialogues will also be transcribed online. “I’m trying to shift the discourse away from one of isolation and increasing frailty: we should see older women as an amazing resource – not just talk about them taking resources.” The artist says. (more…)
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Wednesday, January 30th, 2013
German Renaissance artist Albrecht Dürer’s 1515 woodcut “The Rhinoceros” has sold at Christie’s in New York City for $866,500, setting a new record for the artist’s works. Originally estimated at $100,000 to $150,000, the price of the piece quickly exceeded its estimate. While some highly valued works, including Knight, Death and The Devil failed to attract bidders, Dürer’s record price for a single work was broken three consecutive times over the one-hour auction. (more…)
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Wednesday, January 30th, 2013
Christie’s has announced its first online only auction of works by Andy Warhol, with all proceeds going to benefit the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. The auction includes a selection of highly recognizable works, as well as a number of Warhol’s photographs, and will open for bidding on February 26th.
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Wednesday, January 30th, 2013
Mere weeks after the announcement that Christopher D’Amelio would be joining David Zwirner Gallery, the gallery has announced that it will be opening a new, five-story location in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan. The gallery will be christened with a dual show by Dan Flavin and Donald Judd on February 15th, and plans to host major exhibitions that rival the those of much larger art institutions. “The first show is a marriage between the space and the work,” Zwirner said last week. (more…)
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Wednesday, January 30th, 2013
In an effort to encourage visitors to enter the Milton Keynes Gallery in Milton Keynes, England; artist Tomas Georgeson has hidden a blank check for £8,000 somewhere inside. While Georgeson stands by the check as art, he also considers it an investment in the gallery and its visitors. “It almost doesn’t matter what happens, it’s the fact that it’s there. If somebody chooses to spend it on mortgage payments, then those mortgage payments would become art, which is quite miraculous to me.” He says. (more…)
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Wednesday, January 30th, 2013
Maxwell Snow, Shroud V (2012), via Colette
Paris’s iconic Colette concept store is currently exhibiting new photographic works from artist Maxwell Snow, brother of the late Dash Snow. Monochromatic images feature French actress Rebecca Dayan and model Arizona Muse in a homage to 19th century Romanticism, fittingly titled after Lord Alfred Tennyson’s poem “The Lady of Shalott”. (more…)
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Tuesday, January 29th, 2013
Billionaire Roman Abramovich has purchased a collection of works by Ilya Kabakov, Russia’s most expensive living artist. The collection of over 40 works ranges from early installations and albums to paintings, and is estimated to have totaled over $60 million. “It’s one of the largest Kabakov collections in the world,” said Emilia Kabakov, the artist’s wife and collaborator since 1989. (more…)
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Tuesday, January 29th, 2013
Frank Cohen, the Mancunian billionaire and art lover, has announced plans to open a free art gallery in the Bloomsbury area of London. The new space, situated in the former depot for Express Dairies, has already drawn comparisons to Charles Saatchi’s Chelsea location, and has been purchased in partnership with fellow collector Nicolai Frahm. “We’re trying to give London another space which has a completely different feel.” Says Cohen. (more…)
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Tuesday, January 29th, 2013
The heir to Jewish art dealer Alfred Flechtheim is pushing the German government for a decision on a pair of paintings by Paul Klee and Juan Gris that he claims were sold to Nazi collectors under duress. Flechtheim’s great-nephew, Mike Hulton, claims that there is sufficient evidence to prove his claims, but he is currently being challenged by the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen. “We are asking for late justice. My aged stepmother Penny and I are very disappointed and somewhat puzzled — we hope this emotionally stressful and difficult situation will come to an end soon.” Hulton says.
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