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Archive for the 'Art News' Category

Margate: Tracey Emin “She Lay Down Deep Beneath the Sea” at Turner Contemporary through September 23, 2012

Tuesday, August 7th, 2012


Tracey Emin – She Lay down Deep Beneath The Sea (2012) – Turner Contemporary

A few hours drive from London, on the Southeastern tip of the British mainland is the small seaside town of Margate.  It was here where Tracey Emin was born and where she spent her difficult early years, so often documented in the works that first made her a major force of the British art world of the mid to late 90’s.  Now, Emin has returned to her hometown, for an exhibition of new works at the newly opened Turner Contemporary.  “She Lay Down Deep Beneath the Sea” showcases a diverse range of sculpture, drawing neons, and painting.


Tracey Emin – Installation View – Turner Contemporary

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Monday, August 6th, 2012

Marina Abramovic is featured in Antony And The Johnson’s “Cut the World” video. The previously unreleased song was originally composed for the artist’s biographical play “The Life and Death of Marina Abramovic.” Willem Dafoe appropriately co-stars in the beautiful, but violent and gory video, as he performed in Abramovic’s play as well.

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Monday, August 6th, 2012

Robert Hughes, fabled critic, artist, and documentarian dies at the age of 74 in New York.  The Australian writer was described as an “eloquent, combative art critic and historian who lived with an operatic flair and wrote with a sense of authority that owed more to Zola or Ruskin than to his own century”.

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Monday, August 6th, 2012

Through the band Sigur Rós’s recent Mystery Film Experiment, artists have been able to use songs from their album and make their own music videos. The most recent was created for “Varúö” by Ryan McGinley, featuring the streets of New York City through McGinley’s vision.  McGinley says of the video, “This piece is my poem to New York City.  I wanted to bring a childhood innocence to the streets, through a character whose own light and wonder effects the world around her.  I’m always interested in an atmosphere where dreams and reality mingle on equal terms.”

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Monday, August 6th, 2012

M+, the Museum of Visual Culture, set to open in Hong Kong in 2017, will aim to serve as Asia’s counterpoint to institutions such as the Centre Pompidou or the Guggenheim Bilbao.  Tapping Lars Nittve, formerly of the Tate Modern, as executive director, M+ will be the cornerstone of a $2.8 billion government-backed undertaking that hopes to “raise the bar for Asian museums” and cement Hong Kong’s position on the international art map.

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Monday, August 6th, 2012

The New York Times describes how, as the price of art continues to increase, more art collectors seek to have the courts rule on cases of authenticity, as witnessed through the three recent cases involving Knoedler & Company; though often the arbiters decide based on their experience in contract law versus any knowledge of the arts.

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Monday, August 6th, 2012

Forbes Magazine names the top corporate art collections, exploring the intentions and purposes behind these corporate acquisitions. With the criteria that “the best collections use art to improve lives and to educate,” UBS, Deutsche Bank, Bank of America, and JPMorgan Chase are among the top corporations of Forbes’ list.

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Monday, August 6th, 2012

Jeffrey Deitch defends the art-historical significance of the exhibitions he’s staged as director of Los Angeles MOCA amid recent criticism that he caters too strongly to a commercial audience.  “What we’re doing here now, it’s on the most serious level,” says Deitch, “It’s as good as any museum in the country.”

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Monday, August 6th, 2012

NPR takes a trip to a humble Pennsylvania cemetery to visit the grave of Andy Warhol on what would have been his 84th birthday.

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Monday, August 6th, 2012

An image of Gerhard Richter‘s “Ema”, part of an exhibition currently at the Pompidou Center, was censored by Facebook, sparking a debate on art and internet filters.  The image has since been re-posted.

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“Turner Monet Twombly: Later Paintings” at Tate Liverpool Through October 28, 2012

Monday, August 6th, 2012


Turner Monet Twombly – Gallery View

The lives of Joseph Mallord Turner (1775-1851), Claude Monet (1840-1926) and Cy Twombly (1928-2011) almost perfectly overlap each other, pulling a thread through 200 years of art history.  Drawing on the lineage of these three artists, the Tate Gallery of Liverpool and the Moderna Museet of Stockholm have partnered to exhibit Turner Monet Twombly: Later Paintings, an exhibition that explores the stylistic conversation between the three great artists, removed from the linear timeline in which their work has traditionally been viewed.


Cy Twombly, Untitled I (1967)

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Sunday, August 5th, 2012

Along with other British notables interviewed in The Guardian, Grayson Perry discusses what the various names for the ‘evening meal’ indicate about an individual’s social class. The artist, who often centerpieces the discussion of social class divides in his art, claims that “the word supper implies a subtle rebuke to the aspirational classes who are gauche enough to hold dinner parties at home.”

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Sunday, August 5th, 2012

Raphael‘s ‘Portrait of a Young Man,’ one of Poland’s most important pieces, which disappeared in 1945, was found in a bank vault in an undisclosed location.

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Sunday, August 5th, 2012

Yayoi Kusama to cover condo construction site in the Meatpacking District with ‘Yellow Trees,’ a familiar black and yellow design that was prominently featured in an advertising campaign for her current exhibition at the Whitney. Part of the Urban Canvas project, the costly installation opens this week and will remain on the West 14th Street building facade until September 30th of this year.

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New York – Frank Stella: New Work at Freedman Art Through September 27, 2012

Friday, August 3rd, 2012


Frank Stella, New Work  (Gallery View)

Open since May, Freedman Art is in New York is currently showing a collection of new work by acclaimed painter, sculptor and printmaker Frank Stella that explores the artist’s long-standing interest in the work of composer Dominico Scarlatti and his approach to musical composition.


Frank Stella, k.162 (2011)

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AO On Site – The Watermill Center, The Big Bang, 19th Annual Summer Benefit, Saturday July 28, 2012

Thursday, August 2nd, 2012


Desi Santiago’s mass 2 (2012), image: Aniko Berman for Art Observed

On Saturday, July 28th, the Watermill Center hosted The Big Bang, its 19th Annual Summer Benefit. Held on the performance art center’s expansive Southampton grounds, the event commenced with cocktails for over 1,200 guests, all of whom were invited to explore over twenty site-specific performances and installations scattered throughout the center’s indoor and outdoor spaces, as well as to bid in a silent auction featuring works by Marina Abramovic, Sandro Chia, Shirin Neshat, Dennis Oppenheim, Terry Richardson, Will Ryman, Spencer Tunick, and Aaron Young, among others. A tented dinner for over 650 guests followed, including a live auction led by Simon de Pury, where works by artists such Michelangelo Pistoletto, Anselm Reyle, and Willem de Kooning were offered. Inclement weather threatened the evening, with unwelcome downpours impeding the guests’ ability to view the outdoor works. Nonetheless, the event raised more than $1.5 million for the center, which has actively promoted the creation and dissemination of performance art since its founding by leading “theater artist” Robert Wilson in 1992.


Guests in front of Paul McCarthy‘s Butt Plug (2012)

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Wednesday, August 1st, 2012

Stephen Colbert interviewed Jeff Koons on the ‘Colbert Report.’ Introduced as the “world’s most expensive birthday clown,” Koons discussed the importance of an arts education, while explaining some of his own art to the late-night host.

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Wednesday, August 1st, 2012

A missing Roy Lichtenstein painting, estimated at $4 million, was discovered in a Manhattan warehouse. ‘Electric Cord’ was last seen 42 years ago when its owner, Leo Castelli, sent the piece out to be professionally cleaned.

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New York: Rineke Dijkstra at The Guggenheim through October 8, 2012

Tuesday, July 31st, 2012

Rineke Dijkstra, Coney Island, NY, 1993. All images courtesy of the artist and the Guggenheim collection, NYC.

Since the early 1990s, Rineke Dijkstra has been creating photographic and cinematic portraits that expose, examine, and celebrate humanity. It is a rare occurrence when one bears witness to the complexities and nuances of life epitomized in a fleeting gesture or facial expression. It is even more rare to capture these gestures or expressions on camera. Dijkstra’s work is devoted to a fascination with these possibilities found within the miracle of physical embodiment.

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Tuesday, July 31st, 2012

Senior HSBC bank manager Michael Foreman was identified as the man who fell to his death from a Tate Modern balcony last week.

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Tuesday, July 31st, 2012

ArtInfo released the second part of its “The 50 Most Exciting Art Collectors Under 50.”

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Saturday, July 28th, 2012

Courtesy of Pace Gallery, Alexander Calder’s Tripes (1974), a 19 foot tall steel sculpture, will be on display at the St. Pancreas Renaissance Hotel in London. This sculpture coordinates with both the London Olympics and Pace’s expansion to London.

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East Hampton, New York: Terence Koh, “yes pleased,” at the Fireplace Project through August 12, 2012

Friday, July 27th, 2012

Terence Koh, my mother destroyed me and still the tea that is the hope of my ship (2012)

 
This summer, Chinese-Canadian artist Terence Koh brings his unique brand of sculptural performance to The Fireplace Project in the high-society woodlands of Easthampton. Koh’s “yes pleased” will run through August 12 and features the eerie and erotic minimalism that has shaped his career from its beginnings, when the artist moonlighted under the monicker asianpunkboy.

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Friday, July 27th, 2012

Former MOCA Chief Executive Charles E. Young has called for the removal of museum director Jeffrey Deitch following a tumultuous month that included the resignation of long-time curator Paul Schimmel and artists John Baldessari, Catherine Opie, Barbara Kruger and Ed Ruscha. In an email to donor and influential board member Eli Broad, Young concluded that “I will do anything I can to try to right the MOCA ship, but nothing will work, in my mind, without a new Captain/Director.”

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