Thursday, June 6th, 2013
The Hirshhorn Museum’s proposed “Seasonal Inflatable Sculpture Project,” informally referred to as “the Bubble,” has been officially decided against, after years of debate and wrangling over its installation on the museum’s property on the National Mall. The news comes shortly after Hirshhorn director Richard Koshalek announced his decision to resign after a split vote on the Bubble several weeks ago. “If the board were more together and if we were seeing more results of that, then we might have made a different decision,” Smithsonian Undersecretary Richard Kurin said. “Because it’s divided, it makes it hard to move forward.” (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Smithsonian Officially Deflates “Bubble” Project
Thursday, June 6th, 2013
The William Morris Gallery in Walthamstow, London has been awarded the UK’s prestigious Art Fund Museum of the Year, entitling it to a £100,000 prize. The award comes after an ambitious renovation and restoration project, which put £3 million into upgrades and new curatorial standards to make the museum a jewel of the city’s already burgeoning cultural offering. Says Art Fund Director Stephen Deuchar: “The collections are not only important but they are very beautifully presented, in terms of the physical fabric of the showcases and also the interpretation – the labels are erudite and accessible. There is a great curatorial coherence to the collections and that comes across in every square foot of the museum.” (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on William Morris Gallery Wins Art Fund Museum of the Year
Thursday, June 6th, 2013
To commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Tube, Art on the Underground has invited 15 innovative contemporary artists from across the globe to produce limited-edition posters. Each image will present a different perspective on the London Tube, and hence create a vibrant narrative of the world’s first underground network. Artists involved include Gillian Wearing, Sarah Lucas and Wolfgang Tillmans. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on 15 for 150: Art on the Underground’s New Series
Thursday, June 6th, 2013
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on San Francisco – SFMoMA Closing Celebration and Screening of “The Clock” by Christian Marclay, June 2nd, 2013
Thursday, June 6th, 2013
David Pappaceno, Psychic Birth (Installation view,2013), at English Kills Gallery.
This past weekend, locals, gallerists, collectors and other art enthusiasts flocked to Bushwick, Brooklyn for the seventh-annual Bushwick Open Studios, organized by nonprofit community group Arts in Bushwick. With over 550 spaces participating, many with more artists than one, it was impossible to see everything, even for the most dogged observer. Art turned out at every corner—in galleries, art studios, apartments, bars/restaurants, shops and event spaces— in this rapidly-developing district with a concentration of studios and gallery spaces that rivals Chelsea.
M. Henry Jones, Jim Jarmusch (2013) at Microscope Gallery
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on AO On-Site: Bushwick Open Studios 2013 in Brooklyn, New York, Friday, May 31st – June 2nd.
Wednesday, June 5th, 2013
With the announcement of Sotheby’s and Christie’s summer Impressionist and Modernist sales this month, analysts are noting that both auction houses have featured top lots from the collection of the Nahmad family, showing the family’s trademark approach of purchasing art in great quantity and reselling when the time is right. “It was once said that the Nahmads propped up this market with their buying when times were tough; now they appear to be propping it up with their selling.” Writes The Telegraph’s Colin Gleadell. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on The Nahmad’s Collection Featured Prominently in this Summer’s Auctions
Tuesday, June 4th, 2013
Damien Hirst, Death or Glory (2001)
In conjunction with the events and exhibitions of the 55th Venice Biennale this summer, Le Stanze del Vetro (“Rooms for Glass”), the joint project by La Fondazione Giorgio Cini and Pentagram Siftung, is currently presenting Fragile?, an exhibition dedicated to the presence and use of glass in contemporary art. Perhaps one of the more interesting conceits for a Biennale exhibition, the show on the Venetian island of San Giorgio Maggiore looks at glass as an aesthetic and and figurative medium in current practice, featuring works by Ai Weiwei, Marcel Duchamp, Pipliotti Rist, Joseph Beuys, and many more.
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on AO On Site – Venice: “Fragile?” at Le Stanze del Vetro Through July 28th, 2013
Monday, June 3rd, 2013
101 Spring Street, the New York Residence of artist Donald Judd, opened its schedule today for small public tours, offering visitors a firsthand look at the artist’s distinct views on design, lifestyle, and creativity, through his meticulous and elegantly simple renovation of the former industrial space. “I’ve never built anything on new land,” Judd once wrote. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Donald Judd’s Renovated New York Home Opens Today
Monday, June 3rd, 2013
Richard Serra’s Shift, a series of zigzagging wall structures built along the changing elevations of the field it moves through, has been designated as a cultural heritage site in North Toronto. Voted through by the township council of King City, Ontario, the work was the subject of fierce and ongoing debate, finally pushed through by a group of concerned citizens called “Friends of Shift.” “It is especially gratifying that it was the result of the initiative of a group of private citizens who care about art.” Mr. Serra commented. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Serra’s “Shift” Gains Protected Status in Ontario
Saturday, June 1st, 2013
Tino Sehgal with his Golden Lion for best artist at the Venice Biennale, via The Guardian
At a press conference this morning, the officials for the 55th Venice Biennale announced the winners of this year’s event’s Golden Lion awards. British artist Tino Seghal took home the Best Artist in the International Exhibition award for his bizarre, kinetic performance piece at The Encyclopedic Palace, while first-time Biennale attendee Angola was given the award for best national participation. A full account of awards is listed below:
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Venice Biennale Announces the Winners of this Year’s Golden Lions
Saturday, June 1st, 2013
Ai Weiwei, S.A.C.R.E.D. (Installation View inside steel diorama) (2013)
Since his 2011 detention for alleged tax evasion by the Chinese government, artist and political dissident Ai Weiwei has taken the world by storm, with exhibitions and retrospectives around the world, alongside documentary profiles, constant press coverage, and a notably enigmatic heavy metal album. His ubiquity in the artworld, set in contrast to his physical restriction from leaving China, is clear, and consistent at the 55th Venice Biennale, where the artist is holding two separate solo installations.
Ai Weiwei, S.A.C.R.E.D. (Installation View) (2013)
Ai Weiwei, Straight (Installation View) (2008-2012) (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on AO On Site – Venice, Ai Weiwei dual exhibition: “S.A.C.R.E.D.” at The Church of Saint Antonin and “Straight” at Zuecca Project Space on the island of Giudecca
Friday, May 31st, 2013
Mika Rottenberg, Still from Sneeze (2008), via Magasin 3
Sneeze to Squeeze is the first solo exhibition of work by New York-based video artist Mika Rottenberg in Sweden. Exploring the themes of labor, production and contemporary body-image, this major exhibition captures the spirit of the artist’s broad range of filmic work, while also offering a thorough, studied look at her work in installation and photography.
Mika Rottenberg, Still from Squeeze (2010), via Magasin 3 (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Stockholm – Mika Rottenberg: “Sneeze To Squeeze” at Magasin 3 Kunsthalle through June 2, 2013
Friday, May 31st, 2013
Marc Quinn, Breath (2013)
Time and again, Artist Marc Quinn has defined himself as an artist of grand statements. Utilizing imagery and materials from his surroundings, often cast on symbolically enormous scale, the artist has created a body of work that digs at the complex interrelations of art and science, life and meaning, process and creation. The act of viewing seems central to Quinn’s body of work, collected for a major solo exhibition in Venice this summer, and running concurrently with the Venice Biennale at the Fondazione Giorgio Cini. Scale and image converge to create a striking and powerful impression of the human condition for viewers who find themselves in front of his work.
Marc Quinn, Self (2011)
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on AO On Site, Venice – Marc Quinn at Fondazione Giorgio Cini, May 29th – September 29th, 2013
Thursday, May 30th, 2013
Outside the 55th Venice Biennale
The press preview for the 55th edition of the Venice Biennale, the international art world’s largest stage, kicked off this week, sprawling across the narrow alleyways and watery causeways of the Italian city. Art Observed was on site to cover the opening ceremonies, and has this selection of pictures documenting the first day of the fair.
The Opening Reception, with Paolo Barata and Massimo Gioni (more…)
Posted in Art News | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, May 29th, 2013
Ellsworth Kelly, Singular Forms (Installation View), courtesy of Mnuchin Gallery
From Sculpture on the Wall at the Barnes Foundation to the Museum of Modern Art’s Chatham Series, the work of artist Ellsworth Kelly is being celebrated across the East Coast this spring. Until June 1, the Mnuchin Gallery in New York will join in on the event, hosting Kelly’s ongoing Singular Forms series, which has spanned most of hist career, from 1966-2009. A retrospective of Kelly’s emblematic abstract paintings, the show is curated by the artist himself, presenting his personal take on this broad body of work.
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on New York- Ellsworth Kelly: “Singular Forms 1966-2009” at Mnuchin Gallery through June 1st, 2013
Wednesday, May 29th, 2013
The late Chinese artist Zhang Daiqian saw impressive auction results this week during both Christie’s and Sotheby’s auctions of contemporary Asian art in Hong Kong. Daiqian’s Lotus work, consisting of four painted scrolls more than five feet high, sold for five times its estimate at $10.4 million during Christie’s auction yesterday. In addition, an auction dedicated solely to works by Daiqian reached $42 Million in sales at Sotheby’s on Monday. Zhang currently stands as one of the top-selling artists at auction worldwide. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Zhang Daiqian Auctions Achieve Impressive Results
Wednesday, May 29th, 2013
Noted Max Ernst scholar Werner Spies has been ordered to pay half of the €652,883 owed to collector Louis Reijtenbagh for the purchase of a falsely attributed work. This is not the first time Spies has had issues over his authentication; he was fooled by noted forger Wolfgang Beltracchi in 2011 over several works he authenticated as Ernsts. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Werner Spies to Pay Half of Max Ernst Fraud Lawsuit
Wednesday, May 29th, 2013
Uriel Landeros, the University of Houston student who spray-painted over Picasso’s Woman in a Red Armchair at Houston’s Menil Collection, has been sentenced to two years behind bars for vandalism. Landeros was facing up to 10 years in prison for felony vandalism, but pleaded guilty for a reduced sentence. “We are heartened and grateful that the judicial process has come to completion,” said Menil spokesperson Gretchen Bock Sammons. “As for the Picasso, the restoration is complete and successful and the painting will eventually go on view — as works from the collection do, in rotation.” (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Houston Picasso Vandal Sentenced to Two Years in Prison
Wednesday, May 29th, 2013
In an effort to increase public engagement with their collections, a number of museums are now offering free, high-quality images of their works for download and open use. In one such example, Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum has begun allowing visitors to reproduce images of its collection anywhere.“We’re a public institution, and so the art and objects we have are, in a way, everyone’s property.” Says collections director Taco Dibbets. (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on To Increase Visitorship, Museums Turn to Digital Distribution
Wednesday, May 29th, 2013
Capitalizing on the platform of the Venice Biennale, artist Ai Weiwei has created six dioramas depicting the events of his 81 day detention under the Chinese communist state, which will be on view at Zuecca Project Space, running concurrently with the festival. The half-scale works were created in Beijing, and secretly transported to Venice, showing the psychological torment of confinement and constant surveillance. “Can political art still be good art?” Ai says. “Those questions have been around for too long. People are not used to connecting art to daily struggle, but rather use high aesthetics, or so-called high aesthetics, to try to separate or purify humans’ emotions from the real world.” (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Ai Weiwei’s Diorama Project Prepares to Open in Venice
Monday, May 27th, 2013
“Francis Bacon in Raincoat,” 1967, photo by John Deakin, (c) The Estate of Francis Bacon, all images courtesy the National Museum of Art Tokyo and The Estate of Francis Bacon
Recently concluded at the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo is a solo exhibition of works by Francis Bacon. Marking the first viewing of Bacon’s work in Japan in 30 years the exhibit is a retrospective focusing on the theme of the body, as well as the first exhibition of the artist’s work since his death in 1983.
(more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Tokyo – Francis Bacon: “BACON” at the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Through May 26th 2013
Sunday, May 26th, 2013
Renowned art historian Sir John Richardson is profiled in a long interview with the Financial Times this week, speaking about his life, his career, and his expansive biography of Pablo Picasso. “I used to bounce out of bed to write. In the old days I shinned up a ladder, got a book down, looked in the index – I can’t do that now. But the chance is that I won’t be able to get to the end of the Life [of Picasso], not because of my health or my eyes but because, well, I know too much. I know where the bodies are buried. I think I’ll stop in 1962, when Picasso and Jacqueline got married.” (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Sir John Richardson Profiled in The Financial Times
Saturday, May 25th, 2013
In the run-up to this year’s Venice Biennale, curator Massimiliano Gioni spoke with the New York Times, discussing the event, his approach to curating, and his perspective on the event’s long history. “Klimt showed there in 1905,” he says. “That is mind-blowing to me. Since then there has been Morandi and Picasso, Rauschenberg, Johns and so on. Maybe I’m romanticizing, but the past is still very present.” (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on Massimo Gioni Profiled in New York Times
Saturday, May 25th, 2013
A new article in the Guardian is questioning the lack of gender parity in the contemporary art world, noting the lack of any females on the list of top 100 auction sales, and a small percentage of female artists in public collections. “People are saying: ‘I find I can’t even have this conversation about equality in the art world’,” says curator Gemma Rolls-Bentley, “because so many people think it’s already been achieved. Because figures like Tracey Emin have defied the statistics, their rare success misleads people into thinking women get an equal shot.” (more…)
Posted in Art News | Comments Off on The Guardian Asks: “Where are all the ‘Great’ Women Artists?