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Archive for the 'Art News' Category

New York – Judith Hopf: ‘Alifi” at Metro Pictures Through October 5th, 2019

Wednesday, September 18th, 2019

Judith Hopf, Tongue as a Wall Piece (2019), via Metro Pictures
Judith Hopf, Tongue as a Wall Piece (2019), via Metro Pictures

Taking over the ground floor of Metro Pictures Gallery for her first exhibition with the space, the Berlin-based artist Judith Hopf has orchestrated a range of works drawing on surreal juxtapositions of space and material, narrative and image that marks a strong opening to the fall season. Comprised of three different sculptural series–Walls, Tongues, and Pears–the works on view further Hopf’s practice of employing everyday construction materials and common manufacturing processes to investigate the social dynamics of the contemporary built environment and its influence on human behavior. (more…)

Jerry Saltz Triumphs Over TriBeCa’s Art World Ascendance

Wednesday, September 18th, 2019

Jerry Saltz pens a piece in NY Mag this week trumpeting the return of the TriBeCa art scene, as a range of galleries open in the neighborhood. “Against all odds, can New York have a good art neighborhood with a walkable density of galleries?” He asks.  “Galleries with wooden floors, flaws, and funny footprints, which are more like where artists actually make art than all those perfect, concrete-floored slick showrooms?” (more…)

Whitney Breaks Ground on Monumental David Hammons Sculpture

Wednesday, September 18th, 2019

The Whitney has broken ground on David Hammons’s Day’s End (2020), a permanent install across from the museum in the southern edge of Gansevoort Peninsula.  The piece is referred to by the artist as a “ghost monument” to Gordon Matta-Clark’s 1975 work of the same name in the same location. (more…)

Ragnar Kjartansson Interviewed on Making ‘The Visitors’

Wednesday, September 18th, 2019

The Guardian’s running series of highlights of 21st Century arts features Ragnar Kjartansson’s The Visitors, calling it the best artwork of the 21st Century so far.  “It has a special place in my heart, but it was such a feelgood piece that I had to make some really dark shit afterwards,” he says of his work. “No artist has a favorite piece. Maybe you can pick one when you’re really old – but it’s something I’m super proud of. It took on a life of its own.” (more…)

Arrests Made in Major Old Masters Forgery Scandal

Wednesday, September 18th, 2019

A major Old Master forgery scandal is boiling over after painter Lino Frongia, 61, was arrested by the Carabinieri in northern Italy. The scandal over allegedly forged works sold by dealer Giuliano Ruffini, has embroiled some of the world’s most prominent museums. (more…)

Niki de Saint Phalle Subject of MoMA PS1 Retrospective

Wednesday, September 18th, 2019

Artist Niki de Saint Phalle will be the subject of a major MoMA PS1 retrospective, Art News reports. “She’s one of the most famous female artists of the 20th-century, but she’s so misunderstood and, in some ways, under-recognized,” curator Ruba Katrib says. (more…)

New York – Elaine Cameron-Weir: “strings that show the wind” at JTT Through October 27th, 2019

Tuesday, September 17th, 2019

Elaine Cameron-Weir, it thought you were someone else it thought you were me bounded by strings in the distorted phases of a topological superfluid a mysterious density half-speed vortices and long walls  (2019), via JTT
Elaine Cameron-Weir, it thought you were someone else it thought you were me bounded by strings in the distorted phases of a topological superfluid a mysterious density half-speed vortices and long walls (2019), via JTT

On view this month at JTT Gallery in downtown Manhattan, artist Elaine Cameron-Weir has orchestrated a taut but conceptually nuanced exhibition, continuing her exploration of varied sculptural tropes, studied investigations of materiality and scale, and subtle, evolving narrative forms that hint at the artist’s rigorous process and abilities.

Elaine Cameron-Weir, it thought you were (detail) (2019), via JTT

Elaine Cameron-Weir, it thought you were someone else it thought you were me bounded by strings in the distorted phases of a topological superfluid a mysterious density half-speed vortices and long walls (detail) (2019), via JTT (more…)

Luhring Augustine to Open in Tribeca

Tuesday, September 17th, 2019

Luhring Augustine is the latest gallery to announce plans for an exhibition space in TriBeCa, opening a space at 17 White Street this fall. “We have long been looking for a space in Tribeca where we could join the growing community of notable galleries, both older and younger, in providing a fresh and exciting new context that is rejuvenating the contemporary art scene in New York City,” co-founders Lawrence Luhring and Roland Augustine said in a statement. (more…)

Phillips’s Edward Dolman Interviewed in Art News

Tuesday, September 17th, 2019

Phillips‘s Edward Dolman is interviewed in Art News this week, as the auction house gears up for the fall season. “Collectors have changed,” he says. “They want to be there at the beginning when an artist emerges. If it’s not working for them, they’ll sell. Their own tastes will change but they’ll take a profit if there’s a profit.” (more…)

Untitled Miami Publishes Exhibitor List

Tuesday, September 17th, 2019

Untitled Miami has unveiled its exhibitor list for its 2019 edition, with 126 exhibitors included for its eight edition. (more…)

Guardian Praises Tate Modern as “Great Building of 21st Century”

Tuesday, September 17th, 2019

The Guardian has tapped the Tate Modern as one of the great buildings of the early 21st Century, profiling how the conversion of the Bankside Power Station has changed the face of London. “It is totally unimaginable now,” says architect Jacques Herzog, “but this was a huge chunk of the city that was completely excluded from public life, overgrown and set back behind high walls. It felt like Sleeping Beauty’s castle.” (more…)

Roy DeCarava Profiled in New Yorker

Tuesday, September 17th, 2019

Hilton Als pens a piece on photographer Roy DeCarava this week in The New Yorker, reflecting on the development of his craft and his impact on the world of African-American art. “I’m not sure if the immediacy of photography—the ability to record one’s impressions of the world relatively quickly—contributed to DeCarava’s love of the medium,” he writes, “but as a young black man he knew something about how ephemeral life could be, and about the forces around him that didn’t want him to exist at all.” (more…)

Scientists Create Black Darker than Vantablack

Tuesday, September 17th, 2019

Scientists at MIT have developed a black even darker than Vantablack, previously thought to be the darkest color ever made. “Any object covered with this CNT material loses all its plasticity and appears entirely flat, abbreviated/reduced to a black silhouette,” says Diemut Strebe, the artist who collaborated on the project. (more…)

Art Newspaper Spotlights Evolution of Arts Education Non-Profit

Tuesday, September 17th, 2019

Art Newspaper profiles ProjectArt, as the Harlem-based arts education program looks to expand beyond New York. “In terms of less populated communities, we’ll get there too,” says director Diana Buckley Muchmore. “Eventually, we’ll be in all the cities that have libraries.” (more…)

Frieze London Installs Augmente Reality Work in Regent’s Park

Tuesday, September 17th, 2019

Frieze London will install its first augmented reality work this fall in Regent’s Park, The Guardian reports, a piece by Korean artist Koo Jong A. “No shipping, no installation costs,” says Frieze director, Victoria Siddall. “It is interesting for us to be able to test the boundaries of what sculpture can be.” (more…)

William Kentridge, Mona Hatoum Awarded Praemium Imperiale

Tuesday, September 17th, 2019

William Kentridge and Mona Hatoum have won this year’s Praemium Imperiale awards, among the largest cash prizes for art in the world. Other 2019 Praemium Imperiale laureates include architects Tod Williams and Billie Tsien, musician Anne-Sophie Mutter, and actor Bando Tamasaburo V. (more…)

Charles Ray to Show Work Alongside Renaissance and Baroque Bronze Works

Monday, September 16th, 2019

Artist Charles Ray will curate a show of  Renaissance and Baroque bronze sculptures alongside his own works at the Hill Art Foundation this fall.  “I’m interested in dialogues as a way to show the influence of work,” collector J. Tomilson Hill says. “I want to create these dialogues that use the art of today to look back but also use the art of the past to inform the art of today.” (more…)

Lari Pittman Profiled in LA Times

Monday, September 16th, 2019

Artist Lari Pittman gets a profile in the LA Times, as he prepares for his museum retrospective at the Hammer Museum.  “The language prompts the imagery,” he says of his work. “I’ve never separated language from visual culture.” (more…)

Kathleen Ryan Profiled in NYT

Monday, September 16th, 2019

Artist Kathleen Ryan gets a profile in NYT this week, as she prepares for a show of new works at Art Basel Miami Beach. “They’re not just opulent, there’s an inherent sense of decline built into them,” she says, “which is also something that’s happening in the world: The economy is inflating, but so is wealth inequality, all at the expense of the environment.”  (more…)

Daniel Buren Painting Damaged at Centre Pompidou After Knife Attack

Monday, September 16th, 2019

Daniel Buren painting has been damaged severely after a man slashed the work at Centre Pompidou. Experts are now considering how they should go about restoring the work. (more…)

Sandro Botticelli Work to Test Market at $30 Million this Fall

Monday, September 16th, 2019

Sandro Botticelli portrait will test the Old Masters market this fall at Frieze Masters, with an asking price around $30 million. “That’s an intelligent range,” says dealer Carlo Orsi. (more…)

Pushkin Museum to Take Over Russia’s 9 Contemporary Art Centers

Monday, September 16th, 2019

The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow will take over running Russia’s National Center for Contemporary Arts, which includes nine branches across the country. “We are in the process of understanding the opportunities, which are huge, of working across our country’s considerable expanse,” says director Marina Loshak. (more…)

New York – Roe Ethridge: “Sanctuary 2” at Andrew Kreps Through November 2nd, 2019

Monday, September 16th, 2019

Roe Ethridge, Nathalie with Hot Dog and Flag (2014), via Andrew Kreps
Roe Ethridge, Nathalie with Hot Dog and Flag (2014), via Andrew Kreps

Currently on view at Andrew Kreps’s new 22 Cortlandt Alley exhibition space in the thriving TriBeCa arts district, photographer Roe Ethridge has opened a show of new works continuing his unique approach to the construction of the portrait, winding together strange environmental elements, a broad range of characters, and cultural milieu that act to disrupt and reshape the understanding of any one framing.

Roe Ethridge, Sanctuary 2 (Installation View), via Andrew Kreps
Roe Ethridge, Sanctuary 2 (Installation View), via Andrew Kreps

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National Art Gallery of the Bahamas Spearheading Hurricane Recovery

Monday, September 16th, 2019

The National Art Gallery of the Bahamas in Nassau is spearheading recovery efforts in the country after last week’s brutal hurricane. “We’re dealing with people first,” says executive director Amanda Coulson. “The whole country is traumatized.” (more…)