Wednesday, June 12th, 2013
Wolfgang Tillmans, young man, Jeddah, b, (2012), via Andrea Rosen
Continuing their ongoing relationship, Andrea Rosen Gallery is currently exhibiting its 11th solo exhibition of work by German photographer Wolfgang Tillmans, on view through June 22nd. From Neue Welt is the result of a four-year project that Tillmans began in 2008, and completed in 2012, a vigorous photographic cataloguing of the dawn of the 21st century. 25 works have been selected from the hundreds of photographs that were a part of the original work, which culminated at the Kunsthalle Zurich in the fall of 2012.
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Wolfgang Tillmans: “From Neue Welt” at Andrea Rosen Gallery, through June 22nd 2013
Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
Outside View, Art Basel 2013, Photograph Courtesy of Art Basel
The city of Basel, situated at the border between Switzerland, France and Germany, will be transformed into a contemporary arts hub this week for the 44th annual Art Basel. Anticipating record attendence, the fair will look to top its record of over 65,000 visitors at the marathon art event this year. With over 300 top galleries from all over the world flocking to the city to display over 4,000 artists’ work, the fair is commonly referred to as the “Olympics of the art world.” and features a similarly brimming schedule of events and claustrophobic crowds of eager spectators. Each day boasts its own full agenda, including film screenings, artist talks, and performances, and joined by the vast number of peripheral art exhibitions and events hosted by cultural institutions of Basel throughout the entire region, held in obscure and romantic venues amidst the Swiss lakes and mountains.
Olafur Eliasson, Untitled (2003), Courtesy of Art Basel
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Basel, Switzerland: Art Basel 2013 Preview, June 13th-16th, 2013
Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
Mike Kelley, Eternity is a Long Time (Installation View), Photo by Agostino Osio Courtesy Fondazione HangarBicocca, Milan All Mike Kelley works © Estate of Mike Kelley
Running in tandem with this summer’s Venice Biennale, Milan’s HangarBicocca is currently presenting a selection of works by the late American conceptual master Mike Kelley, culling together a series of sculptures, installations and video from the last few years of his life, alongside several of his earlier notable conceptual pieces.
Mike Kelley, Eternity is a Long Time (Installation View), Photo by Agostino Osio Courtesy Fondazione HangarBicocca, Milan All Mike Kelley works © Estate of Mike Kelley (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Milan – Mike Kelley: “Eternity is a Long Time” at HangarBicocca Through September 8th, 2013
Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
West Coast art dealer Blum and Poe has begun its search for a gallery space in New York City, which is intended to “focus on our artists who currently do not have representation in New York, in addition to very specific projects, both historical and otherwise,” says co-owner Tim Blum. The gallery is currently based in Los Angeles, and will look to open by August. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Blum and Poe Looks for Move to New York City
Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
When the Whitney Museum set out to restore artist Douglas Davis’s early collaborative, online art piece the World’s First Collaborative Sentence, few could foresee the challenges that digital and internet-based art posed for repair and maintenance. Based on constantly shifting programming languages and operating systems, digital art often offers complex restoration problems, forcing curators and experts to evaluate the degradation of web sites, coding and software updates against the original authenticity of the piece to properly exhibit it. “We’re working on constantly shifting grounds,” said Rudolf Frieling, of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. “Whatever hardware, platform or device we’re using is not going to be there tomorrow.” (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Whitney Museum Uncovers the Challenges of Digital Restoration
Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
Robert Mapplethorpe, Self Portrait (1983), courtesy Skarstedt Gallery
Playing with constructed images of self and cultural phenomena, Robert Mapplethorpe’s challenging self-portraits were an influential and essential part of the 1970’s New York arts scene. Now, the artist’s work in the medium is documented through eleven photographs at Skarstedt Gallery currently on view through June 15th. The photographs are extremely personal explorations that the artist took of himself periodically throughout his life, meant to explore different aspects of his own identity, as he captures himself in a variety of states and moods.
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on New York – Robert Mapplethorpe: “Self Portraits” at Skarstedt Gallery, through June 15th 2013
Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, The Englishman at the Moulin Rouge (1892), courtesy The Frick Collection
The Frick Collection is currently displaying a series of nineteenth-century French drawings and prints by a variety of Realist, Impressionist, and Post-impressionist masters, made possible by the Florence Gould Foundation. Exploring the varying approaches of figuration, depiction and ornamentation throughout 19th century drawing and prints, the exhibition is on view through June 16th.
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on New York – “The Impressionist Line from Degas to Toulouse-Lautrec: Drawings and Prints from the Clark” at The Frick Collection, Through June 16th 2013
Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
A video, released online yesterday and since removed, purportedly depicts artist Richard Prince burning one of the five still disputed Canal Zone pictures that were challenged in court by photographer Patrick Cariou. While Prince had won the case for the majority of the works in the series, Graduation, the work depicted in the film, was still under consideration for not being fully “transformative.” Cariou had originally sued to have the works destroyed. In the video, Prince is quoted as saying “to them this stands for money,” before having an assistant douse the work in gasoline and light it on fire. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Video Shows Richard Prince Burning Disputed Canal Zone Painting
Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
Gert&Uwe Tobias, Untitled (2012), © photo Alistair Overbruck, Cologne/Gert & Uwe Tobias/VG. Bildkunst, Bonn via Whitechapel Gallery
Whitechapel Gallery is currently hosting a major exhibition of work by Romanian-born twins Gert and Uwe Tobias, showcasing the brothers’ work and its abilities to challenge the distinctions between fine art and craft with their collaboratively created woodcuts, sculptures, collages and typewriter drawings. Their multi-genre works from 2008 to the present are organized into a site-specific installation for the gallery, and showcase their broad, nuanced skill set in a global context.
Gert & Uwe Tobias (Installation View), via Whitechapel Gallery
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on London – Gert & Uwe Tobias at Whitechapel Gallery through June 14th, 2013
Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
Sou Fujimoto’s Serpentine Pavilion, via The Serpentine
The Serpentine Gallery’s annual summer pavilion opened late last week in London’s Hyde Park, with a presentation by designer Sou Fujimoto and Serpentine Directors Julia Peyton-Jones and Hans Ulrich Obrist.
Fujimoto, Peyton-Jones, and Obrist, via Bloomberg (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Sou Fujimoto-designed Serpentine Pavilion Opens in London
Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
Sterling Ruby, SP Paintings (Installation View), courtesy Nahmad Contemporary
This past month, Nahmad Contemporary was home to its inaugural show, a body of new work by American artist Sterling Ruby, entitled “SP Paintings;” a series he has been developing for a number of years, but has never collectively displayed in an exhibition until now.
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on New York – “Sterling Ruby: SP Paintings” at Nahmad Contemporary, through June 10th 2013
Monday, June 10th, 2013
British Pavilion (Installation view) 2013
With the impressively well-stocked selection of pavilions at this year’s Biennale, the United Kingdom has turned to Turner Prize-winning artist Jeremy Deller to represent the country, presenting a complexly layered thematic exhibition titled English Magic. Best known for his restaging of the miners’ strike battle of Orgreave in 2001, his 2009 road trip though America with a car wrecked by a bomb in Iraq, and his 2012 touring bounce house version of Stonehenge, Deller has brought his controversial, political resumé to bear on the largest stage for his country’s creative reputation, creating a visually aggressive criticism of modern wealth.
Jeremy Deller, St. Helier on Fire 2017, British Pavilion 2013
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on AO On-Site – Venice: Jeremy Deller’s English Magic, The British Pavilion at The 2013 Venice Biennale
Monday, June 10th, 2013
Figment NYC, Governors Island
The ferry from lower Manhattan to Governors Island was filled with excited children and adults wearing feathers, sequins and other outlandish pieces of clothing this weekend, setting the tone for the playground of colors, sounds, and movement that marked Figment NYC. Running June 8th-June 9th, the festival grounds on Governors Island was transformed into a fantastical wonderland worthy of Seuss and Dali, a colorful and immaginative exhibition of arts, costumes, performances, and other sights, including a petting zoo and free clothing tent, which provided a helpful hand to those who arrived in less motley apparel.
Pop Dogs, Figment NYC, Governors Island
(more…)
Posted in Art News | 1 Comment »
Monday, June 10th, 2013
George Condo, Downtown New York (2012), Copyright George Condo / ARS (Artists Rights Society), New York, 2013 via Sprueth Magers
For the past thirty years, George Condo has created visceral, challenging works that blend art history and theory with an irreverent worldview that make his sculptures and canvases explode with life. Currently, the artist is exhibiting a selection of his Drawing Paintings and bronze sculptures, created in 2012, for his third solo show with Sprüth Magers, Berlin. Condo has a long standing relationship with the gallery that started almost 30 years ago, when Monika Sprüth hosted one of Condo’s first solo exhibitions in Cologne in 1984. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Berlin – George Condo: “Paintings and Sculpture” Sprüth Magers through June 22nd, 2013
Monday, June 10th, 2013
Artist Elizabeth Peyton and designer Dries Van Noten recently sat down with the Financial Times’s Style section to talk about their ongoing friendship, their mutual respect for each other’s work, and Peyton’s portraiture of Van Noten. “The faces people make when they are photographed, and the face they have when you draw them are very different. It’s a very special thing to share with someone, because it’s time spent together that is not about eating or the usual social things.” Peyton says. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Dries Van Noten and Elizabeth Peyton Interviewed in Financial Times
Monday, June 10th, 2013
The Financial Times has published a series of articles on collecting, gallery operations and the contemporary art world, running in its June 7th issue, as well as online. Taking a look at the global market for contemporary art, the special section of the paper includes interviews with Bill Viola and Maurizio Cattelan, a history of the upcoming Art Basel fair, a recap of the newly reopened Berggruen Museum in Berlin, a spotlight on the rising popularity of sculpture in the British market, and a feature on the high-profile Russian art dealer Stella Kesaeva. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Financial Times Publishes Collecting Section
Saturday, June 8th, 2013
Two of Russia’s most prominent museums, the Hermitage Museum and the Pushkin Museum, are currently embroiled in a dispute over the collections of Ivan Morozov and Sergei Shchukin, which had been distributed between two institutions when Stalin shut down the State Museum in 1948. The debate was brought to light this year, when the Pushkin’s director, Irina Antonova, appealed to President Vladimir Putin on live television, asking him to recreate the institution in Moscow, raising ire over the rightful home of the works, which include pieces by Picasso and Matisse. “The expert advice seems to be all on the Hermitage side—but you never know,” says Geraldine Norman, an advisor at The Hermitage. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Russian Museums Dispute Famed Art Collection
Saturday, June 8th, 2013
Prior to his death in February, American artist Richard Artschwager designed four elevators for the Whitney Museum’s new museum space in Chelsea, currently under construction. The four designs, titled Six in Four, are designed around the reoccurring motifs of doors, windows, tables, baskets, mirrors and rugs that appear in Artschwager’s work. “The idea was to have something that immediately gives you a sense of place, an identity, so that this isn’t just another generic museum,” Whitney Director Adam D. Weinberg said. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Whitney’s Chelsea Museum to Feature Elevators Designed by Richard Artschwager
Saturday, June 8th, 2013
Philip Taaffe, Recent Work (Installation view), courtesy Luhring Augustine Gallery
Recent work by Philip Taaffe is currently on view at Luhring Augustine gallery in Chelsea, New York, marking Taaffe’s first solo show of paintings in New York since 2007. Culling together a diverse set of influences and materials, the works on view unveil Taaffe’s explorations of imagery in art, architecture, and archeology, both in contemporary and historical contexts.
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on New York – Philip Taaffe: “Recent Work” at Luhring Augustine Through June 15th, 2013
Friday, June 7th, 2013
Troy Brauntuch, State Trooper (2013), via Petzel Gallery
Chelsea’s Petzel Gallery is currently presenting a pair of new exhibitions examining the process of art creation and photography, as explored in the works of artist’s Troy Brauntuch and John Stezaker. Taking notably distinct, attentive approaches to the photographed image, these two artists present new entries into well-established bodies of work, while adding new wrinkles and conceits to their practice. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on New York – Troy Brauntuch, John Stezaker at Petzel Gallery Through June 13th, 2013
Friday, June 7th, 2013
In the wake of the multiple lawsuits brought against the Knoedler Gallery for sales of counterfeit art since the space closed in 2011, Forbes Magazine has published an article detailing the lack of oversight and due diligence that often plagues collectors when art and antiques are being bought or sold. “Sophisticated businesspeople would never do a business deal without asking questions, but somehow when they are buying art or collectibles, their common sense flies out of their head,” says Patty Gerstenblith, a professor of Art and Cultural Law at DePaul University. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Forbes Magazine Explores Forgery and Fraud in the Current Art Market
Friday, June 7th, 2013
This week, art dealer Larry Gagosian asked New York State Supreme Court to throw out the lawsuit collector Ronald Perelman filed against him last fall. Gagosian and Perelman have been embroiled in a debate over the sale of a Jeff Koons sculpture, with Perelman claiming that Gagosian used his position to take advantage of Perelman in the sale. “I really think that these two gentlemen ought to get together at a cocktail party in the Hamptons this summer,” Justice Barbara Kapnick said. “This is a crazy case to have going on in this court and you ought to see if this can’t get resolved before I write a decision.” (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Gagosian Asks Judge to Throw Out Perelman Lawsuit
Thursday, June 6th, 2013
Alexander Calder, Calder After the War (Installation View), courtesy of Pace London
Currently on view at Pace Gallery London, from April 19th through June 7th, is an exhibition of over fifty works by Alexander Calder, created between 1945 and 1949, one of his most well-known periods during which he pioneered many of his sculptural abstractions through movement in three dimensions, particularly via his mobiles and stabiles.
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on London – Alexander Calder: “Calder After the War” at Pace Gallery, through June 7th 2013
Thursday, June 6th, 2013
Rudolf Stingel, Untitled (Franz West) 2011, (Installation View) (2013)
Rudolf Stingel, the Italian-born, New York-based artist, is currently presenting an installation covering the entire of the Palazzo Grassi, the regal Venetian estate of billionaire collector François Pinault. The exhibition is curated by the artist himself in partnership with Elena Geuna, the former director of Sotheby’s Europe. The project was designed specifically for the 3-story, 5,000 square meter building located on the Grand Canal in Venice. What’s more, the exhibition marks the first time the entire museum has been devoted to a single artist.
Rudolf Stingel, Rudolf Stingel (Installation View) (2013)
(more…)
Posted in AO On Site | Comments Off on AO On-Site – Venice: Rudolf Stingel at Palazzo Grassi Through December 31st, 2013