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Archive for the 'Art News' Category

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Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012

Grayson Perry, Turner prize-winner, plans to build an art-encrusted holiday residence resembling a shrine in Essex, which will be devoted to a mythical Essex woman named Julie. The elaborate house will be rented out from 2014 onward as part of Alain de Botton’s effort to introduce a type of avant-garde experience into travel. (more…)

New York – Mickalene Thomas: “Origin of the Universe” at The Brooklyn Museum Through January 20th, 2013

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012


Image: Mickalene Thomas – Din, une très belle négresse #2, 2012, Via Brooklyn Museum

Currently on view at The Brooklyn Museum is a selection of recent work by Mickalene Thomas.  Her first solo museum exhibition, Origin of the Universe, features a selection of the artist’s most recent works, examining imagery of the female form, African-American identity and her childhood in 1970’s New York City. (more…)

AO Newslink

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2012

Four Turner Prize shortlisted artists showcased their work last night at the show’s inauguration.  For the first time a performance artist has been nominated, Londoner Spartacus Chetwynd.  When asked about if her art is contemporary, the artist, who lives and works in a nudist colony, and who arrived in a beard, stated, “We’re all alive at the moment so that would make it contemporary.” Once again on display at Tate Britain, the show also presents the work of Glaswegian Luke Fowler, Londoner Elizabeth Price and Londoner Paul Noble and runs through Jan 6th. (more…)

AO Newslink

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2012

Christie’s will dedicate a full day of sales to work from the Andy Warhol Foundation on Nov 12th. Around 350 works, with estimates ranging from $2,500 to $1,500,000, will be offered in 3 separate sales. The foundation is de-accessing 20,000 artworks to pay for grants through multiple auctions at Christie’s.
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AO Newslink

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2012

Fake Cultural Development, Ai Weiwei’s company which handles his affairs, is being dissolved by the Chinese government. This may prevent him from having to pay the remaining balance of a 15m yuan (£1.5m) tax fine. The authorities stated that they were closing down the business because it had not met annual registration requirements. Ai represents that they could not do so because police had confiscated all its materials and its stamp when they detained him last year. (more…)

London – “Bronze” at The Royal Academy of Arts Through December 9th, 2012

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2012


Image: Jasper Johns, Ballantine Ale Cans, 1960 via Artinfo

The Royal Academy of Arts is currently exhibiting over 150 sculptures around the theme of bronze. The selection of works spans the medium’s five-millennial lifespan, which spread from the Near East to Europe and China. Illustrating the complex and nuanced history of bronze as a medium, intertwining historical relevance with artistic production, the exhibition sheds light on the evolution of civilization in the context of these two undercurrents.


Image: Giovanfrancesco Rustici, The Pharisee, St. John the Baptist and The Levite from The Sermon of St. John the Baptist, 1511, Royal Academy of Arts

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AO Newslink

Monday, October 1st, 2012

David Alfaro Siqueiros’ America Tropical mural on Olvera Street near downtown L.A. has been covered up for decades and is due to be unveiled again on October 9th. Close to $10 million spent in a public-private partnership, the mural has been conserved to the degree it was possible, as there are no existing photographs of the original. Whitewashed and completely painted over in the 30s, the incendiary 18 x 80-foot fresco was executed in 1932 with imagery of an indigenous Mexican man tied to a cross with an American eagle perched above. (more…)

AO Newslink

Monday, October 1st, 2012

Shanghai is opening two state-run museums today, celebrating China’s National Holiday. It will inaugurate the China Art Palace in the former China Pavilion of the 2010 Expo, as well as The Power Station of Art in a converted factory, formerly The Expo’s Urban Best Practices Area. The Power Station of Art will be China’s first national contemporary art museum. The 2012 Shanghai Biennial opens there tomorrow and runs through March 2013. The museum is also planning an Andy Warhol retrospective. (more…)

AO Newslink

Monday, October 1st, 2012

Frieze Projects promises to showcase the more colorful side of the fair’s various components this year, with the chef of Moro cooking Canada Goose and hairy bittercress. DIS, billed as a “post-internet lifestyle magazine”, will host nighttime photo shoots including 20 breast-feeding women, African street sellers selling real Chanel bags and a faked scene in which a gallery owner has a heart attack. (more…)

AO Newslink

Monday, October 1st, 2012

Blum & Poe Gallery is expanding, and is set to open in Tokyo in the coming months. Tim Blum, a co-founder, says that it is a “major moment for post-war Japanese art. There seems to be a real dialogue going on right now.” The gallery plans to strengthen relationships with artists and present secondary-market material from both Japanese and Western historical art movements. (more…)

New York – Richard Phillips: Gagosian Gallery – 24th Street, through October 20th, 2012

Monday, October 1st, 2012


Image: Richard Phillips, Black Water, 2012 via Gagosian

Currently on view at Gagosian’s 24th Street location is a solo show of the work of Richard Phillips.  The imagery mostly revolves around three internationally-renowned female celebrities: Lindsay Lohan, Sasha Grey and Adriana Lima, with the inclusion of one painting of the ocean at night. Through three videos and ten large-scale paintings, Phillips examines the superstar beauties and posits our fascination with them against one simple yet punctuating image.


Image: Richard Phillips, Installation View, via Gagosian

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AO Newslink

Sunday, September 30th, 2012

Turkey has asked for the return of what it calls cultural patrimony, sparking international debate about who owns antiquities after centuries of shifting borders. Major museums such as The Met, The Getty, The Louvre and The Pergamon in Berlin are being asked to return works from their collections to Turkey under a 1906 Ottoman law that banned the export of artifacts, even though Turkey ratified the Unesco convention in 1981, which allows museums to acquire objects that were outside their countries of origin before 1970. (more…)

AO Newslink

Sunday, September 30th, 2012

The Royal Academy of Arts plans to mount the first major British exhibition of the portraits of Edouard Manet. It will include over 50 works, many of them not generally known as part of the artist’s oeuvre. The show will run from January 26th – April 14th, 2013. (more…)

AO Newslink

Sunday, September 30th, 2012

Klaus Biesenbach, the chief curator at large of MoMA P.S.1, is profiled in The Wall Street Journal, discussing his approach to art. “In America, art is free, but it’s not understood as a viable, necessary function in society. Art is still thought of as something luxurious or elitist, but it’s not.”

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New York – Jean-Michel Othoniel: “My Way” at The Brooklyn Museum Through October 6th, 2012

Sunday, September 30th, 2012


Image: Jean-Michel Othoniel, My Bed, 2003, via Brooklyn Museum

In a collaboration with the Centre Pompidou, The Brooklyn Museum is currently showing a large-scale retrospective of the work of French artist Jean-Michel Othoniel, whose colorful glassworks and sculptures stand between tangible reality and a reconstituted dream world.  Entitled “My Way,” the show provides an in-depth look at Othoniel’s 25 year career. (more…)

AO Newslink

Saturday, September 29th, 2012

David Zwirner talks to the Financial Times about educating his clients and his new gallery in London’s Mayfair district. On October 5th, Zwirner will open his five-story exhibition space in a townhouse with an exhibition entitled “Luc Tuymans, Allo!”.  The gallery sees the expansion as a way to reach collectors from Europe, Asia and the Middle East.
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AO Newslink

Saturday, September 29th, 2012

The Wall Street Journal reports on the union of art and food, with the boundaries of the gallery and dining experiences becoming “increasingly blurred”.  From members’ only dining clubs to casual restaurants featuring street art, the WSJ explores the trend by highlighting Mark Hix’s Tramshed, Colombe d’Or, Sketch and others. (more…)

AO Newslink

Saturday, September 29th, 2012

Michael McGinnis has taken on the role of CEO at auction house Phillips de Pury & Co. McGinnis will replace Bernd Runge, who will function as a special advisor to the shareholders. McGinnis has been head of the contemporary department since 1999.
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AO Newslink

Saturday, September 29th, 2012

Christie’s will offer a seminal Yves Klein Sponge Relief from 1958, unseen on the market since 1960. The work is consigned by The Brooklyn Museum for the November 14th New York sale and will be used to fund the purchase of work by contemporary artists. Accord Bleu (Sponge Relief) is one of the first of the artist’s reliefs using sponges, a metaphorical medium in his work. The presale estimate is $7,000,000-10,000,000.  (more…)

AO On Site – New York: Elad Lassry – “Untitled (Presence)” at The Kitchen through October 20th, 2012

Saturday, September 29th, 2012


Image: Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence), 2012

Elad Lassry‘s new show, Untitled (Presence), is on view at The Kitchen through October 20th. The solo exhibition includes 20 new photographs, a short run of performances featuring members of The American Ballet Theatre and The New York City Ballet, as well as a short 16 mm abstract film projected onto the wall. The exhibition was preceded by Lassry’s billboard, Women (065, 055), which appeared along the Highline Park as part of its ongoing series of work by various artists. The 25 x 75 foot-work at 18th street and 10th avenue was on view for a month until the show’s opening at the Kitchen on September 7th.
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AO Newslink

Friday, September 28th, 2012

Christine Macel will curate the Anri Sala exhibition at the 2013 Venice Biennale French pavillion. Macel has been chief curator at the Musee National d’Art Moderne at the Centre Pompidou for the last 12 years. The artist and the curator have been discussing a collaboration between France and Germany and a decision will be reached in the next couple of weeks. (more…)

AO Newslink

Friday, September 28th, 2012

The residential Museum Tower building in Dallas issues a formal letter stating that it is working to resolve issues that its highly reflective surface has created for the Nasher Sculpture Center, an outdoor “roofless” museum. The New York times reports that due to the glare, the reflection from Museum Tower is burning the plants in the center’s garden and virtually blinding museum goers. (more…)

AO Newslink

Friday, September 28th, 2012

The auction of the “flea-market Renoir“, which was purchased by a woman in West Virginia for $7, is cancelled after reporters discover records indicating that it had allegedly been stolen from The Baltimore Museum of Art prior to winding up at a flea market in West Virginia. The original owner of “Paysage Bords de Seine”, Saidie May, had written records showing that she had lent the painting to the museum in 1937. Until title is cleared, the painting’s sale is pending. The value is estimated to be about $75,000-$100,000. (more…)

AO On Site – New York: Opening Preview of The New York Art Book Fair (and new M.Wells eatery) at MoMA/P.S.1, Thursday, September 27th, 2012

Friday, September 28th, 2012


Image: Matthew Higgs introducing performers Malcolm Mooney and Sun Foot. All images by Heather Hannig for ArtObserved.

The Seventh Annual NY Art Book Fair opened last night at Moma/P.S. 1., presented by Printed Matter, Inc., with a performance by Malcolm Mooney and Sun Foot. The fair presents artists’ books, catalogs, monographs, periodicals, and zines presented by 283 international presses, booksellers, antiquarians, artists, and independent publishers from twenty-six countries. Lucy Lippard and Paul Chan are the keynote speakers for this year’s Contemporary Artists’ Books Conference. (more…)