Global contemporary art events and news observed from New York City. Suggestion? Email us.

Archive for the 'Art News' Category

Gallery openings this weekend

Thursday, October 18th, 2007

–>
via Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, Uta Barth, “Untitled (07.5)”, 2007

Tonight, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery opens a new solo show for photographer Uta Barth entitled “Sundial.”

Friday, Rivington Arms opens a group sculpture show entitled “Agro Bongo“.

Saturday, Sikkema Jenkins & Co. opens a show of new work by Kara Walker, coinciding with her retrospective at the Whitney. (more…)

Newslinks for 10.18.07

Thursday, October 18th, 2007

Calls for Ronald Lauder to provide provenance of works [NYT]
–>
Salander hearing tomorrow, gallery still locked [Bloomberg]
–>
Kanye vs. Jay-Z : Who got Murakami first?
[Supertouch]
–>
Reserved bidding at London auctions [Bloomberg]

COLLEGE FUNDING IDEA DESERVES A LOOK.(EDITORIAL)(PLAIN TALK)(Column) see here great lakes higher education

The Capital Times March 3, 2003 Byline: Dave Zweifel The disparity has become eye-popping.

Back in the 1970s, college graduates could expect to make about 25 percent more in their paychecks than those who settled for a high school diploma.

Today, the difference is closer to 100 percent. The average high school grad makes $19,000, according to some comparative studies, the college grad about $38,000 annually.

Further, the unemployment rate for those who stop after high school is roughly 16 percent these days, for college grads about 3 percent.

In other words, a college education — whether at a university or at one of the tech colleges — has become more financially important than ever.

Unfortunately, all too many young people who have the grades and the ambition to get post-secondary education can’t. The costs are beyond their and their families’ means. Now, state government is proposing to cut several more millions from the University of Wisconsin System, for example, which means that students will have to come up with even more money. Getting a college education is going to become tougher, especially for families of modest means, rather than easier, as it should.

That’s why I was intrigued with a proposal made on these pages recently by James Jung, the retired head of the Great Lakes Higher Education Corp. Jung’s plan would guarantee every Wisconsin boy and girl a post-secondary education — at one of the UW campuses or at the vo-tech colleges — at no cost until they graduate and get a job. It makes no difference who they are, what ethnic background, what economic class, they would all be on an equal footing. site great lakes higher education

Once in a job, they would pay a percentage based on their income back into a special state fund that would finance the young students who come after them. Those in high-paying jobs, like a doctor, would pay more. Those in lower paying jobs, a teacher, for example, would pay less.

A big hurdle for the plan, of course, would be a huge start-up cost until the money from the post-graduation tax started to come in. Jung, though, would finance that either through revenue bonds or with the state retirement fund (with a guaranteed return). And if the plan were implemented during this biennium, those start-up funds would replace perhaps $200 million in instructional costs now earmarked for the UW under the regular (general purpose) state budget.

That could further help solve the state’s troubling deficit.

* Sound too simple? Too good to be true? Might it create other problems?

Perhaps, but no one will know for sure if the state doesn’t at least take a look at the possibilities.

There’s no better time than now, as students are facing higher costs and the state needs to bolster its commitment to higher education, to take that look.

Salander forced to cancel last exhibit

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

via Bloomberg

Bloomberg reports that New York-based dealer Larry Salander had to cancel the opening of his last exhibit yesterday when his London partner removed almost half the works planned for view. (more…)

Newslinks for 10.16.07

Tuesday, October 16th, 2007

The rise and fall of Scottish painter Peter Doig’s pricing [Portfolio]
Art:Review’s Power 100 is a close call between London & NY [Guardian]
Dia:Beacon loses major financial backing after director’s departure [NYT]
Several seemingly positive gallery reports from Frieze [Portfolio]
Met gives NYT Hirst/Cohen shark exclusive, snubs Lee Rosenbaum [CultureGrrl]

Chinese contemporary outsells western artists at auction this weekend

Monday, October 15th, 2007

Yue Minjun’s “Execution” sold for £2.93 million (almost $6 million).  Trevor Simon, the previous owner of the painting, paid $52,000 Hong Kong dollars for the piece, or $32,200 in the late 1990’s.  After the purchase, no had seen the painting for nearly 10 years.  Simon spent two-thirds of his junior banker salary on the painting back then because he felt such an emotional connection to the scene. (more…)

Newslinks for 10.15.07

Monday, October 15th, 2007

Christie’s new exhibition space at King Street, London now open [ArtDaily]
Banksy auctioned at Sotheby’s Oct. 12 [World’s Best Ever]
Chinese contemporary “is not a bubble” at Christie’s [Portfolio]
Frieze more commercial, less avant-garde [NYT]
de Pury has difficulty with Russian lots, Chinese exceed highs [Portfolio]

Kara Walker now open at Whitney

Friday, October 12th, 2007
via NYTimes, Ruth Fremson

“Starting this work was a an important aspect to stamping my foot in the ground and saying, ‘For crying out loud, I am a human being.'”
–>

Kara Walker’s retrospective opened yesterday at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Starting with a silhouette-figure mural she made in 1994, the exhibit features notebook-size drawings, films, and other large scale cutouts. Holland Cotter writes in the New York Times, “The consistency of the imagery — hapless masters, uppity slaves, tragicomic violence, uncensored sex — is one reason the show feels so concentrated and absorbing. Once you’re in it, you’re really in it. You can’t just stroll through.” (more…)

update – Whitney Altria branch not seeking a new space

Friday, October 12th, 2007

It was announced last week that the Altria group will be leaving New York and the Park Avenue space that houses the Whitney branch museum was put up for rent.  According to an article in the New York Times today, Carol Vogel writes that the Altria branch of the Whitney will not be seeking another location.  Adam D. Weinberg, director of the museum said, “It has been fabulous, but the branch museums are a thing of the past.  They’ve pretty much run their course.” (more…)

Update – Aaron Young “Greeting Card” video exclusive

Friday, October 12th, 2007

AO has an rare look at the Aaron Young-choreographed motorcycle performance at the Park Avenue Armory on September 17th.

Friezelinks for 10.12.07

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

Charles Saatchi buys at Zoo before fair opens [Bloomberg]
–>
Guardian’s top 10 booths at Frieze [Guardian unlimited]
–>
London auction houses prep for $300m+ weekend [Bloomberg]
–>
Russian collectors stroll through Frieze [Bloomberg]
–>
Frieze the glamour and parties [Independent]
–>
London art scene ramps up to compete with Frieze [Bloomberg]
–>
How Erskine resdesigned Frieze’s site and mag [Flickr]

City leverages CDBG funds to improve neighborhoods.(Community Development Block Grant)(Grand Junction, Colorado)

Nation’s Cities Weekly April 4, 2005 | Davis, Lance Grand Junction, Colo. Mayor Bruce Hill likes to use his city as an example of what a small town can accomplish with Community Development Block Grant funds.

Between 1996 and 2004, the city used just over $3 million in Community Development Block Grant funds to leverage more than $24 million in private sector and other funding for programs vital to the city–affordable housing, health care, infrastructure, senior citizens programs and more.

In March, Hill, Grand Junction Councilman Harry Butler and City Manager Kelly Arnold attended the National League of Cities Congressional City Conference in Washington, D.C.

As part of the conference, they attended a City Lobby Day meeting with members of their Congressional delegation to discuss the importance of CDBG and how it benefits their city.

“I think they (Congress) are getting the message,” Hill said of the meeting he, Butler and Arnold attended with Colorado Rep. John Salazar (D) and Sen. Wayne Allard (R). “I did feel like Congress is working to help preserve CDBG, but the fight isn’t over yet. We have to continually be in front of them and give them good examples of how these funds are used by cities.” Like many city officials, Grand Junction’s leaders are wondering what will happen to the community development initiatives they have championed for years if Congress decides to follow President Bush’s budget proposal, which would combine CDBG with 17 other grant programs, slash its funding and move it to the Department of Commerce. go to site grand junction colorado

Since 1974, CDBG has been administered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Local officials across the nation hail it as a model in reviving decaying urban centers, renovating suburban and rural housing and providing services for low and moderate income people that can’t be replicated solely at the local level.

During the Congressional City Conference, hundreds of local elected officials took NLC’s message, “No cuts and no move,” to their House and Senate members. The effort scored a victory in the Senate with the passage on March 17 of an amendment introduced by Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.) to restore $1.9 billion to CDBG and keep it a separate program in HUD.

In Grand Junction, CDBG is helping alleviate a shortage of affordable housing, most notably with two projects currently under development–the Linden Pointe and Garden Village apartment complexes.

According to the 2002 Housing Needs Assessment, Grand Junction is short 1,080 rental housing units and 589 home ownership units. This year, the housing shortage is expected to increase another 1,009 units.

Linden Pointe will add 92 multi-family rental units by May 1. Linden Pointe is located near schools, retail stores, a city park and public transportation. Land in Linden Pointe has been set aside for the addition of a child-care facility.

The $11.4 million project is being built with $377,170 in CDBG funds and $1.4 million in public funding. The rest comes from the private sector.

Housing Resources of Western Colorado is helping preserve existing rental housing in Grand Junction with the acquisition and renovation of Garden Village Apartments. The target population for the apartments is families that qualify for Section 8 vouchers. go to website grand junction colorado

The total cost of the Garden Village project, including acquisition, was $5.3 million. A $200,000 CDBG grant and $1.3 million in public funds leveraged the remaining balance.

Other programs funded by Grand Junction’s CDBG allotment include:

* Meals on Wheels * Catholic outreach services * Infrastructure upgrades * Health clinics * School repairs and upgrades * Homeless shelters In total, since 1996 Grand Junction has used just more than $3.2 million in CDBG funding to leverage more than $24 million in funding from the private sector.

If Grand Junction lost its CDBG funding, Hill said the city would continue to try to provide similar services, but it would be difficult.

“The reality is that CDBG dollars are focused on these programs, and we make sure the money goes to them,” said Hill. “We could continue to provide some of these programs without CDBG, but not all of them. CDBG dollars are an enhancement to what we can do, and they allow us to leverage other dollars into programs that do good for our community, and we couldn’t do that without them.” Davis, Lance

Yue Minjun’s first U.S. museum show to open October 14th

Thursday, October 11th, 2007
–>
Chang W. Lee for The New York Times

Contemporary Chinese painter Yue Minjun has already found success in galleries and auctions, but has yet to have a museum show in the United States.  His first one will open at the Queens Museum of Art on Sunday, October 14th and run through January 6, 2008.  Yue’s work is characterized by cartoonish smiling figures (somewhat self-portraitlike) who seem to exude optimism despite the grim circumstances of the painting’s setting.  The exhibit, entitled “Yue Minjun and the Symbolic Smile”, will feature sculptures of polychrome and bronze as well as drawings and paintings.

Frieze opens to kickoff an arts-packed London weekend

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

via Frieze

The highly anticipated Frieze art fair opened in London this morning, featuring 151 international galleries with several New York notables such as Marianne Boesky, Marion Goodman, Gagosian, Metro Pictures, Rivington Arms, and Salon 94, among others.  And it’s only the beginning of the arts events the upcoming week.  The prestigious fair coincides with several other art fairs as well as Phillips de Pury’s contemporary sale in their Victoria new location. (more…)

Newslinks for 10.10.07

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

Monet vandals were young drunk revelers [AFP]
Abu Dhabi Louvre branch approved by French Gov’t [NYPost]
Visitors falling into $600k large crack in Tate [Daily Mail]
A closer look at Dennison’s Guggenheim departure [NYMag]

Chuck Close at White Cube Mason’s Yard

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

via The World’s Best Ever

Chuck Close‘s exhibit at White Cube Mason’s Yard opened yesterday. The show includes a 7 x 9′ painting of former US President Bill Clinton, pictured above. According Men’s Vogue, the portrait is Close’s first work of a political figure and will eventually be shown at the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C.

(more…)

Richard Prince’s Nurses take over Louis Vuitton Runway

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

left to right: Naomi Campbell at Louis Vuitton S/S 2008;
Richard Prince’s “Debutante Nurse“, 2004

Richard Prince, the American appropriation artist, collaborated with Louis Vuitton design head Marc Jacobs for LV’s Spring/Summer 2008 handbag line. The show opened with 12 models, including Naomi Campbell and Stephanie Seymour, dressed in identical nurse uniforms holding the bags. (more…)

Andres Serrano photos destroyed in Sweden

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

On Friday afternoon, four vandals ran through the Kulturen Gallery in Lund, Sweden and destroyed seven 50 x 60″ photographs by New York-based artist Andres Serrano. The reason? The vandals were members of the Nationalist Socialist Front, Sweden’s largest neo-Nazi political party and the exhibit was Serrano’s “History of Sex”, which featured photographs of various sex acts. A video was posted on YouTube and a description was detailed on their website. (more…)

“Learning to love you more” at the Journal Gallery

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

Assignment #9: Draw a constellation from someone’s freckles.

Assignment #18: Re-create a poster you had as a teenager.

Assignment #58: Record the sound that’s keeping you awake.

These are just some of the 65 assignments that artists Harrell Fletcher and Miranda July put up on their website learningtoloveyoumore.com.
(more…)

Mike Nelson’s “Psychic Vacuum”

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

CREATIVE TIME PRESENTS: MIKE NELSON/A PSYCHIC VACUUM,” the sign so boldly read above the information table. The crumbly-looking alcove of the building served as Creative Time’s makeshift office, where each entrant was required to sign a piece of paper. This paper ended up being a waiver, freeing the city from any lawsuits I may want to file in case something happened to me inside the exhibit or as a result of being there, I started to panic and wonder if it was really worth risking my uninsured body to write this story. My (insured) cousin convinced me it was, and by “convinced” I mean pushed my dragging feet to the Creative Time employee collecting our tickets. (more…)

Altria Group leaves New York, as will its arts funding

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

via NYMag

The New York Times reports that the Altria Group, formerly named Phillip Morris Companies Inc., will be cutting the funding that they provide to various arts organizations in New York City as a result of a decision to move their non-U.S. cigarette production to Europe. For the 200+ organizations in the city, the loss of almost $7 million in support that they receive annually is a hard blow. (more…)

Pawnshop project opens on Ludlow Street

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

On October 1st, PAWNSHOP, a project organized by artists Julieta Aranda, Liz Linden and Anton Vidokle took over e-Flux’s storefront on Ludlow Street to host a different kind of art exhibition – a literal pawnshop where artworks are submitted by artists for cash, and if not reclaimed after 30 days, placed for sale exclusively by the shop. Questioning both the value of a work of art and the worth of money, PAWNSHOP poses an alternative venue to the traditional gallery setting.

(more…)

Hirst’s Diamond Skull to show at Hermitage Museum

Monday, October 8th, 2007

Damien Hirst‘s diamond-studded skull, “For the Love of God”, which sold to a private investment group earlier this year, will make an appearance at Russia’s State Hermitage Museum as part of a contemporary arts exhibit which will open later this month. According to an article in Bloomberg, this is not part of the planned museum tour, but it is a possibility that they may start in Russia. (more…)

Newslinks for 10.08.07

Monday, October 8th, 2007

Hole punched in Monet painting at Musee d’Orsay [NYTimes]
Louise Bourgeois’ “Maman” spider in London [NYTimes]
“Basquiat” writer/director Schnabel’s new film opens [ReverseShot]

T.J. Wilcox at Metro Pictures

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

Wilcox’s solo show at Metro Pictures features large photographs and collages, that are derived from subject matter conveyed in two powerful films, “A Fair Tale” and another that features Jackie Onassis. Wilcox takes specific, often overlooked, moments of historical significance and weaves them into a story. His poignant, poetic narratives are conveyed via subtitles at the bottom of the screen. While each story describes a loss of innocence, they are also connected by their “idea of beauty in a variety of guises confronting adversity and becoming greater for the challenge” (artist’s statement). The films and photographs, are in fact, extremely beautiful in their dreamy representation of forgotten moments in history. (more…)

Marlborough Chelsea opens Thursday Oct. 4th

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007

The 10,000 square foot, two-floor space with an outdoor sculpture terrace will open tomorrow, Thursday October 4th. Their 19th Street Chelsea closed in June of 2006 to prepare for their new location in the Chelsea Arts Tower, on 545 West 25th Street. They’ll be joining PaceWildenstein, Yossi Milo, Cheim & Read, and Moti Hasson, among many, many others.

(more…)