Go See: Piplotti Rist ‘Pour Your Body Out (7354 Cubic Meters)’ at the Museum Of Mordern Art New York, through February 2, 2009

Friday, December 19th, 2008


Installation view of Pipilotti Rist’s ‘Pour Your Body Out (7354 Cubic Meters)’ via Artnet

The Museum of Modern Art in New York commissioned Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist to create a site-specific installation in the museum’s second-floor Marron Atrium. Rist filled the 7345 cubic meter atrium with  seven twenty-five-foot-high video projections with a large circular eye-shaped sofa in the center of the floor available for reposing visitors.  Rist is well-known for her video works that deal with issues of the body, gender, and sexuality.  Many of the images of ‘Pour Your Body Out (7354)’ present a lush amalgamation of femininity: gigantic pink tulips, glistening apples, a pool of menstrual blood seeping from a woman’s crotch.

Pipilotti Rist: Pour Your Body Out (7354 Cubic Meters) [MoMA]
Pipilotti Rist Turns MoMA Into a Gigantic Vagina Eye [NY Magazine]
Tiptoe by the Tulips (or Stretch by the Apples) [NY Times]
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Go See: Marlene Dumas at the Museum of Modern Art New York, through February 16, 2009

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

Marlene Dumas: Measuring Your Own Grave captures three decades of the South African artist’s expressionistic paintings and drawings at her first ever retrospective in the United States at the Museum of Modern Art. Featuring around 70 paintings and 35 drawings, the artist merges painterly aesthetics with political and social themes telling of the complexities of human existence. With often jarringly morbid colors, stained brush stroked canvases, Marlene Dumas depicts lurid yet melancholic scenes of pregnant women, murdered children, and victims of suicide and executions often with personal references.

Marlene Dumas: Measuring Your Own Grave
The Museum of Modern Art
December 14, 2008- February 16, 2003

Museum Website: The Museum of Modern Art
Exhibition Page: Marlene Dumas: Measuring Your Own GraveThe Body Politic: Gorgeous and Grotesque [New York Times]
Unpretty Pictures
[New Yorker]
Opening: Marlene Dumas Measuring Your Grave
[The Art Newspaper]
Mid-career Survey of Painter Marlene Dumas is the first to be Presented in the United States
[Artdaily]

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Newslinks for Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Stamford After Brunch, John Currin, 2000

After John Currin’s recent success, against the market, at the November auctions (as covered by AO here), an analysis of his work complete with slideshow [Slate via Artmarketmonitor]
NightTalk has an interview with gallerist Mary Boone [Clipsyndicate]
Some NYC galleries are expanding in a downturn [ArtInfo]

Murakami's Kaikai Kiki "High and Lo" sneakers

Murakami’s Kakai Kiki creates a signature sneaker [TheMoment]
Undeniably influential through his iconic images during the Obama campaign, street art legend Shepard Fairey named a GQ man of the year [Supertouch]
Damien Hirst soon to open his bed and breakfast in Devon, UK [FirstPost]
Tracey Emin states that despite the seeming art-recession, she is “pretty credit-crunch proof”
[TelegraphUK]
With prices lower at auction, MoMA acquires
[NYTimes]

Newslinks for Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

Javier Peres via the NYObserver

New York and Berlin gallerist Javier Peres, much a part of the success of Dan Colen, Assume Vivid Astro Focus, and Terrence Koh, opines on the “new, new school’ and the ways of the market [NYObserver]
The “serene mastery” of Italian painter Giorgio Morandi
[WallStreetJournal] now at showing at the Met [ArtObserved]
In art market layoffs: Damien Hirst cuts up to 17 of the 22 in his studio [GuardianUK] and Pace Wildenstein cuts as well [Blackbook]

Antony Gormley's Angel of the North on Antiques Roadshow via BBC

The highest priced “antique” on UK’s Antiques Roadshow is a £1m model of Antony Gormley’s Angel of the North [GuardianUK] more here [BBC]
The Museum of Modern Art is armed with a Twitter account
[ArtFagCity]
On the heels of his recent no-sale at Phillips,
[Art Observed] Damien Hirst is sanguine on the art market: “What goes up must come down” [ArtInfo]
Over 1/2 of the best selling artists of last year were Asian
[Independent]
Global art dealer Jan Krugier dies at the age of 80
[ArtForum]

Go See: Joan Miró, Painting and Anti-Painting, 1927-37 at MoMA, NYC through Jan. 12

Saturday, November 8th, 2008


–>
Still Life With Old Shoe
(1937), Joan Miró via NYTimes

Joan Miró: Painting and Anti-Painting 1927–1937 at MoMA is the first major museum exhibition to display the chronological process of Miró’s practices and ideologies used to attack conventions and disrupt market values in this vital decade. The exhibition uses Miró’s 1927 claim of “wanting to assassinate painting” as its launch point to explore his lineage in 12 groups, which includes 90 paintings, collages, objects, and drawings. The exhibition takes a step-by-step perspective of the reinvigoration and radicalization of Miró’s sustained series. Additionally the exhibition is symptomatic of the European reaction to the end of the roaring twenties and insemination of political tensions that would culminate in 1939. The exhibition begins with a group of works composed on unprimed canvas and concludes with a single painting from 1937: Still Life with Old Shoe and is culmination of works created in Paris, Montroig (a rural village on the coast of Catalonia), and Barcelona. The exhibition is organized by Anne Umland the Curator or the Department of Painting and Sculpture at the The Museum of Modern Art. It will be on view in The Joan and Preston Robert Tisch Gallery, sixth floor, from November 2, 2008, through January 12, 2009.

MoMA Opens Exhibition Focusing on the Transofrmative Dcade of Joan Miró’s Work [ArtDaily]
–>
Joan Miró: Painting and Anti-Painting, 1927-1937
[TheArtNewspaper]
–>
Angry Young Man
[TheNewYorker]
–>
Miró, Serial Murderer of Artistic Convensions
[NYTimes]
–>
Joan Miró: Painting and Anti-Painting 1927-1937
[Museum of Modern Art]
–>
Miró, Miró on the Wall [ArtNet]

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Newslinks for Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008


Damien Hirst via TheDailyMail

Science, Damien Hirst’s corporation, tops the ArtReview power 100, Gagosian follows, and MoMA’s Kathy Halbreich is first woman to make the top 10 [ArtInfo]
Designer Yohji Yamamoto uses museum curators in New York, Paris, London and Antwerp as models in latest campaign [TheMoment]
PaperMag’s latest issue interviews artworld figures such as Terence Koh, Cecily Brown, Tauba Auerbach, Shepard Fairey and James Fuentes [PaperMag]
Sotheby’s secures $250 million loan from Bank of America while cutting auction guarantees [Bloomberg}
A Liechtenstein billionare is on his second attempt to build 23,000 sf Las Vegas Museum of Contemporary Art [ArtForum]
What happens to the corporate artwork of failed companies? [WallStreetJournal]
Jake Chapman interviewed on, for example, his ideal home: with six or seven of his enemies hanging from trees in front of it [GuardianUK]
Fashion designer Stella McCartney and Artist Ed Ruscha together on Iconoclasts [SundanceChannel]

Newslinks for Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008


The Peaceable Kingdom, by Edward Hicks, the subject of a dispute between Halsey Minor and Sotheby’s, via Wikimedia

The founder of CNET sues Sotheby’s, citing non-disclosure of its economic interest in a painting sold to him, which he has withheld payment for [Bloomberg] more on this here [LATimes] and here [Wall Street Journal] and here [New York Times]
A prediction that the new leadership of the MoMA and Guggenheim will broaden and focus each institution respectively [NewYorkMag]
A profile of the emerging Zoo Fair artists at the National Academy in London [Guardian]
In a recent interview, Tracey Emin addresses her being raped at age 13 in Margate as well as her being a victim of child abuse [ThisisKent]
Artist builds a custom environment to work for 3 months at the Whitney for an upcoming exhibit of photographs of the happenings
[ArtInfo] more on this here [New York Times]

Go See: Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night, at the Museum of Modern Art, now through January 5

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008


‘The Night Cafe’ (1888) by Vincent Van Gogh, via New York Times

Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night features nocturnal themes in the artist’s body of work, product of many sleepless nights contemplating the people, cityscapes and countrysides of France and Holland. ‘The Starry Night,’ one of his best known pieces, and the aesthetically- and thematically- related ‘Starry Night over the Rhone’ are among the 23 paintings and 10 works of paper on display at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. Van Gogh‘s fascination with the colors, forms and inhabitants of the night is palpable in the paintings, which all feature his signature bold colors and lines.

Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night: Through January 5, 2009
Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY

Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night: MoMA site [MoMA]
MoMA Presents First Exhibition to Examine Van Gogh’s Nocturnal Landscapes and Interiors
[Artdaily]
Did Van Gogh Need More Sleep? Starlit Obsessions at MoMA Show [Bloomberg]
Van Gogh and the Colours of the Night, NY
[Financial Times]
Nocturnal Van Gogh, Illuminating the Darkness
[New York Times]

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Newslinks for Sunday, September 28th, 2008

Sunday, September 28th, 2008


Cellophane House at the MoMA site, for sale starting at $1.75 million

MoMA is selling homes from the pre-fab exhibit; separately, Warhol’s final home pulled off the market [Wall Street Journal]
Which exhibits to see while at Frieze, London October 16-19 [New York Sun]
British businessman/collector allocates $5.5 million for 40 sculptural works to coincide with the London Olympics in 2012 [Art Info]
Inside Dafen, China’s production of 3.75 million fake “replica” paintings [Bloomberg]
“Young British Artist” Sam Taylor Wood will cover The Passions’ ‘I’m in Love with a German Film Star’ in a single produced by the Pet Shop Boys [FactMag via ArtFagCity]

Embattled Lehman Brothers CEO and wife to auction $20 million of post-war and contemporary art through Christie’s

Saturday, September 27th, 2008


‘Study for Agony I’ (1946-7) by Arshile Gorky, part of a Christie’s auction which will include works from the Kathleen and Richard Fuld collection, via Art Market Monitor

“I’ve been selling things for the past few years, but nobody cared until now,” Kathleen Fuld was reported to have said to the New York Times in an interview with Carol Vogel. Kathleen Fuld, trustee of MoMA–and wife of beleaguered Lehman Brothers’ CEO Richard Fuld–recently announced that she will be auctioning 16 works of post-war and contemporary art through Christie’s on November 12th, following a related report  (covered by AO) that Lehman may sell some or all of its 3,500-work corporate collection. The Fulds make regular appearances on ARTNews list of Top 200 collectors, and have been collecting since the 1980s, focusing mostly on drawings and studies that yield insight into the artists’ creative process. The auction will include drawings from the likes of Barnett Newman, Arshile Gorky, Willem de Kooning and Agnes Martin, and is expected to raise $15 to $20 million.

Study in Financial Agony: Lehman Chief’s Wife Hires Christie’s to Auction $20 M. Collection [New York Observer]
Fallen Tycoon to Auction Prized Works [Wall Street Journal]
Kathy Fuld, Wife of Lehman CEO, to Auction Artworks [Bloomberg]
Lehman Brothers CEO is a top art collector. For a few more minutes. [C-MONSTER]
The Russians Aren’t Coming, They’re Already Here! Lehman Chair Looks to Moscow to Sell His Art Collection [New York Observer]
Fuld Folds Paper [Art Market Monitor]
Modern Drawings Head for Auction
[New York Times]

(more…)

Newslinks for Friday September 12, 2008

Friday, September 12th, 2008


–>
Lucian Freud’s rarely-seen, unfinished Portrait of Francis Bacon via Artdaily

Lucian Freud’s unfinished Francis Bacon portrait to be auctioned by Christie’s London in October [Art Daily]
–>
MoMA purchases Chinese contemporary art from private collection [Art Newspaper]
–>
Osaka museum pulls three Chagall’s after authenticity is questioned [Art Info]
–>
Jeff Koons “Man of Trust documentary” sold in
€2,500 limited edition kangaroo mirror boxes at Colette [World’s Best Ever]
–>
On the vulnerability of the global art market “which has risen so very high on little more than PR and salesmanship” [Financial Times]

Detroit Metro Airport Serves Fewer Fliers in 2002.

Detroit Free Press (Detroit, MI) September 21, 2002 Byline: Daniel G. Fricker Sep. 21–The number of passengers at Detroit Metro Airport was down 9.2 percent through the first seven months of this year, mirroring a nationwide trend that shows millions of passengers have not returned to flying since the Sept. 11 attacks.

International passengers at Metro were down a whopping 31.6 percent.

More than 18.7 million passengers used Metro through the end of July, or 1.9 million fewer than during the same period in 2001, according to airport statistics released this week.

The airport’s major carrier, Northwest Airlines, experienced an 8.9-percent decrease in passengers at Metro. Northwest and its Airlink commuter service carry 76.6 percent of the airport’s passengers.

The decreases are close to the 10.7-percent year-to-year drop in passengers on the nation’s top 15 airlines through August of this year, according to the Air Transport Association of America, an airline industry trade group based in Washington, D.C. see here detroit metro airport

The numbers of passengers on the nation’s airlines plunged 36 percent year-to-year in September 2001 as a result of the economic slowdown and the terrorist attacks.

Passenger numbers rebounded during the winter and spring, but the recovery stalled last spring, ATA officials say.

Nonetheless, Metro spokesman Len Singer said airport officials are optimistic about Metro’s passenger count. “We’re encouraged that the numbers are steadily increasing, but obviously we’d like to see that happen even faster,” he said Friday. web site detroit metro airport

Singer pointed to Metro’s passenger numbers for June and July. They were down 6.9 percent and 6.3 percent respectively compared to the same months in 2001.

But he declined to predict when Metro’s passenger traffic could rebound to numbers seen before the attacks.

“You can’t discount the factors of the economy,” Singer said. “Until the economy bounces back, I don’t think we’ll see a complete bounce back in the industry either.” Northwest Airlines declined to comment on when its passenger numbers at Metro could recover.

The number of passengers on the nation’s airlines is expected to dip again in 2003, by 1.5 percent compared to this year, said Mike Boyd, president of the Boyd Group, an aviation consulting company in Evergreen, Colo.

“The nation doesn’t pull out of the dive until the end of 2003,” he said. “There is no way it can. You have all the major airlines taking capacity out at the end of this year. What that means is we’re going to have less seats, less people.” But Detroit is expected to buck the national trend. In 2003, the number of passengers at Metro is expected to grow year-to-year by up to 2 percent, Boyd said. The reasons are the 97-gate midfield terminal, which opened Feb. 24, and the growth of Spirit Airlines, a discount carrier that is Metro’s second-largest airline.

But Metro is not expected to rebound to passenger numbers recorded in 2000 — the last year before the economic slowdown — until 2005.

“That has to do more with airlines’ capacity than there being anything wrong with Detroit,” Boyd said.

Newslinks for Wednesday September 3, 2008

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008


Francois Pinault via the TheLuxeChronicles

In February 2009, works from Francois Pinault’s collection coming to Moscow’s Contemporary Culture Centre “Moscow Garage” [RussiaIC]
Hirst’s $100 million diamond encrusted skull to begin its world tour in … Amsterdam [NYSun]
MoMa selects a Chief Curator of Painting from in-house [NY Times] and, the Guggenheim may soon appoint a new Director from Carnegie Museum [NY Times]
The Jeff Koons-in-Versailles debate continues on [TimesOnline]
Matthew Barney is on Ovation TV, airing Wednesday [OvationTV via C-Monster]
New on the global art scene Roman Abramovich’s girlfriend, Dasha Zhukova, basically summarized [Wall Street Journal]

Go See: P.F.1 at P.S.1/MoMA in Queens, NY through September 31

Saturday, July 26th, 2008

P.F.1 in the P.S.1 courtyard via NYSun

P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, an affiliate of The Museum of Modern Art, has its summer courtyard installation up and running. This year, the ninth annual MoMA/P.S.1 Young Architects Program selected WORK Architecture Company, from New York, to transform the outdoor courtyard into a fully functional urban farm, called Public Farm One, or P.F.1. The farm will stay at P.S.1 through the month of September.

Farming at the Museum [NYSun]
Works Like a Farm and Celebrating P.F.1 [Men’s Vogue]
Summer Farming at P.S.1 [Artnet]
Amale Andraos on the MoMA/P.S.1 Young Architects Program [Artinfo]
In Farm’s Way: PS1’s Hipster Farm [NYPress]
Going Farming at P.S.1’s Warm-Up Parties [VillageVoice]
P.F.1 (Public Farm One) by Work Architecture Company in P.S.1’s courtyard [PS1]

(more…)

Newslinks: Monday, July 14 2008

Monday, July 14th, 2008

This photograph taken in Jamaica four years ago, is believed to be Banksy via Daily Mail

After a year long investigation, Graffiti artist Banksy revealed? More here, and here [Daily Mail], [NYTimes], [Supertouchart]
–>
Ad agencies reverse the long-evident trend of artists poaching from popular ads by creating popular ads that poach from artists [NYTimes]
–>
A profile of Roman Abramovich’s girlfriend, Daria “Dasha” Zhukova, a new player on the art scene [TimesUK]
–>
Previously thought ‘fake’ is a Rembrandt, but not a self-portrait [The Art Newspaper]
–>
The Sun reviews Art Market tome ‘The $12 Million Stuffed Shark’ previously covered by AO here [NYSun]
–>
On Page Six: 303 Gallery employee fired for mistaking Marc Jacobs for a homeless man and Andres Serrano keeps it gritty in his new Chelsea show [NYPost]
–>
MoMA assembles modern prefab houses in adjacent vacant lot [NYTimesMag]

Review: ‘Paranormal Activity’ is abnormally scary.(A & E)

Seattle Post-Intelligencer October 14, 2009 We live in a world of reality TV, YouTube, digital cameras, and cell phones with access to the Internet and video capabilities. But ten years ago, before our ties to everyday home recorders, a little independent horror flick called The Blair Witch Project came out and scared the pants off people by providing something we hadn’t seen before: “real” video footage of scary stuff happening to “real” people. But can the same “real footage” angle still produce scares today? Director Oren Peli and his Paranormal Activity proves that yes, yes it can. go to site paranormal activity 2 online

Movie Trailers TV News Celebrity News Photos More from film.com Interview: Director Spike Jonze Talks Where the Wild Things Are Megan Fox’s Next Project: Underwear Ads Children’s Book Adaptations That Failed Dancing With The Stars Results: Chuck Liddell Is Counted Out The Pitch Meeting for Showgirls 2 Live-in boyfriend and girlfriend (Micah and Katie) videotape their everyday lives living in their house where Katie has reportedly experienced out of the ordinary occurrences. Over the course of three weeks, the two determine that some sort of presence is definitely in the house. But what? And why? And maybe most importantly, what can they do about it? Armed with only a camera and some computer software, the couple tapes their experience while attempting to figure out what to do.

What makes Paranormal Activity so darn effective is how real the whole thing feels. They didn’t try and pull a Blair Witch and claim that the events really took place — we live in the Internet age where any sort of white lie like that could be debunked in a matter of minutes. But everything from the couple — their relationship, the house they live in, their reactions to what’s going on around them — feels so real during even the mundane and normal parts of their lives that when the freaky stuff kicks in, it’s that much scarier.

The leads were key in making this movie work, and both Micah and Katie put their all into their roles. They hit the right emotional chords when they needed to, and when the terror kicks in for them, it kicks in for the audience as well. Only a few times did I feel their performances were fake, mostly due to some of the dialogue that was likely scripted in certain areas to steer the “plot” in the proper direction; otherwise, they felt like genuine people.

The house was also vital in making or breaking the film’s scare factor as the whole movie takes place in the couple’s house. The house felt like a real house, a house that you’ve probably been in at one time or another, or maybe even live in now. It’s an ordinary house with ordinary stuff. Again, what could possibly be scarier than freaky stuff happening in the woods? How about your own home? Provoking a fear of the unknown in the middle of the woods is easy to induce, but fear inside your everyday suburban house? That’s no easy task.

But the big question remains: Is it scary? By using sound effects, gaining night vision-style video, and an eerie premise, Paranormal Activity managed to produce a genuinely scary and downright creepy little horror flick. What may be the scariest tactic of all was the anticipation of what was going to happen each night the couple spent in the house. There’s so much focus and concentration on waiting to see something happen, that when something as simple as a door moving by itself does happen, it makes your hair stand on end. While the movie does pull a few cheap boo-scares, I can’t say they weren’t welcome — the sudden loud noises were jolting, but the reasons behind those noises were what made them scary. The use of the handheld camera also added to the scare factor, only showing you pieces of what’s going on at a time. in our site paranormal activity 2 online

Paranormal Activity is a terrifying movie experience, done through strategic storytelling devices, off-camera sound effects, and only the most primitive, basic special effects. By creating the fearful anticipation of what might happen each night, the film reaches heights in horror that haven’t been touched in a while. Micah and Katie were relatable and, best of all, they were real, making the events that unfold around them that much more intense and unbearable. While I thought the ending took an uncharacteristic turn from the rest of the movie, the film as a whole still provided a frightening experience and delivered what audiences everywhere have been asking for for years: a reason to sleep with the lights on for awhile, and just in time for Halloween to boot.

Grade: A- Ammon Gilbert covers the latest in horror weekly for Film.com.

View the original article on film.com

Newslinks: Saturday July 12, 2008

Saturday, July 12th, 2008


Snow Scene at Argenteuil 1875 by Claude Monet (1840-1926) via Guardian

On view at Tate Britain: 18 masterpieces recently bequeathed to British National Gallery, including works by Degas, Freud, Monet, worth roughly $200,000,000 [GuardianUK]
The art/fashion, Vuitton/Richard Prince link in London [Bloomberg]
Mutualart.com’s Top Art Exhibitions for 2008 [Businessweek]
French art thief pleads guilty in botched $4.7M masterworks sale, indictment covered by AO here [NYSun] [AO]
2009 Turner Prize judges announced [TheArtNewspaper]
MOMA buys 3 Jasper Johns works for undisclosed sum (note: 2 years ago a Johns sold for $80M) [NYTimes]

 

 

 

 

Newslinks: Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

Olafur Eliasson, ‘Visualization of The Parliament of Reality’, Bard College via Artdaily

Bard College has Olafur Eliasson’s 1st permanent US installation [Artdaily]
MoMA purchases 23 photo works from eight Chinese artists controversially bought in bulk [Bloomberg]
Two Pulitzer Prize winning authors gain rights to new Francis Bacon biography [Bookseller]
Next-generation, under-30’s legacy arts patrons: on the scene [NYTimes]
Tracey Emin’s $122,000 4-inch bronze sparrow goes missing from public work and then is inscrutably returned (publicity stunt?) [BBC]


Newslinks: Monday July 7, 2008

Monday, July 7th, 2008

Starry Night over the Rhone, Van Gogh via NYTimes

‘Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night’ coming to The MOMA [NYTimes]
Details of contract for the Louvre Abu Dhabi revealed [TheArtNewspaper]
In industry executive news: MoMA’s Chief Curator of Paintings and Sculpture says ‘Good-Bye’ [NYSun]
In other executive moves, DIA Art Foundation has a New Director, Philippe Vergne [NYMag]
More executive news: Neil MacGregor, of the British Museum, declines directorship of the Met [TIME]
In page six today: Andy Warhol criticized in memoir by former friend and Ahn Duong, former flame to Julian Schnabel and Simon de Pury, ends her marriage [NYPost]

Go See: Louise Bourgeois at Guggenheim, New York

Monday, June 30th, 2008


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Louise Bourgeois via Artatien
–>
The iconic artist, Louise Bourgeois, is honored by the culmination two major events. Her exhibit at the Guggenheim in New York recently opened on June 27th. June 25th was the theatrical premier of “Louise Bourgeois:The Spider, the Mistress and the Tangerine”, a documentary about her life and work at the Film Forum.

New Louise Bourgeois Documentary Film to Premiere at New York’s Film Forum [Artdaily]
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Louise Bourgeois at the Guggenheim [The Art Newspaper]
–>
Portrait of a Haunted Artist Who Befriended Giant Spiders [NY Times]
–>
‘Louise Bourgeois’: An Intimate Look at a Provocateur [NYSun]
–>
The Guggenheim Museum: Louise Bourgeois [Guggenheim]
–>
Raw Materials of a Life, Revealed by Sculpture [NYTimes]
–>
Louise Bourgeios at the Guggenheim [NYTimes]
–>
`Cumuls,’ Dolls Recall Daddy Dearest in Louise Bourgeois Show [Bloomberg]
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For Your Distorted Pleasure: Louise Bourgeois [NYTimes]
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Bourgeois Looms Large at the Guggenheim [NY artbeat]

(more…)

Go See: Olafur Eliasson at MoMA, New York, April 20- June 30

Monday, April 21st, 2008


Take Your Time at MoMA via NY Times

This weekend, the much- anticipated Olafur Eliasson exhibition, “Take Your Time,” opened in New York at both the Museum of Modern Art and its contemporary art outpost in Queens, P.S.1. The comprehensive survey of Eliasson’s work — his first retrospective in the United States– features sculpture, photographs, and installations described as “immersive environments.” The artist has also teamed up with the Public Art Fund to construct waterfalls that will be seen in the East River this summer.

Take Your Time: Olafur Eliasson [MoMA]
Take Your Time at P.S.1 [P.S. 1]
Stand Still; A Spectacle Will Happen[NY Times]
Don’t Believe Your Eyes: Eliasson’s Illusion Act at MoMA, P.S.1 [Bloomberg]
In Brilliant Color [NY Sun]
Waterfalls as Art To Be Installed in East River[NY Sun]
Seeing Things[New Yorker]
Northern lights [Art in America]
MoMA and P.S.1 presents Take your time: Olafur Eliasson [Artipedia]
“Eliasson in the Hands of Viewers at MoMA”
[NY Sun]
(more…)

NEWSLINKS 04.14.08

Monday, April 14th, 2008


–>
Victoria Beckham by Juergen Teller via New York Times

Juergen Teller’s casual, quirky, highbrow photographs  [NYTimes]
–>
Rothko’s kin petition to transfer his remains [NYTimes]
–>
Book Review: Renzo Piano’s monopoly; “Piano effect” [archidose via C-Monster]
–>
Matthew Barney honored by the National Arts Club [ NY Sun]
–>
Indian contemporary art at Wolverhampton, UK [Financial Times]
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Interview with Glenn Lowry, MOMA’s director [Timeout New York]
–>

20 sick at Thanksgiving party with indoor charcoal grill

SouthtownStar (Chicago, IL) November 27, 2011 Seven people were hospitalized with carbon monoxide poisoning after someone used a charcoal grill inside a Chicago home for Thanksgiving. this web site charcoal grill

Reports that ambulances were called to a home on Chicago?ˆ™s North Side before 11 p.m. Thursday. charcoalgrillnow.com charcoal grill

Twenty people reported symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning.

Seven people were taken to area hospitals. The others were treated at the home.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns that charcoal should never be burned inside because it gives off carbon monoxide.

AP

NEWSLINKS 04.09.08

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008


A David Hockney via Times Online.


Hockney donates largest piece to the Tate
[Daily Telegraph]
France loans to buyers, supports art market, competes with China [Int. Herald Tribune]
Inside Beijing’s Booming Central Academy of Fine Arts [New York Times]
“The Bather,” one of Cézanne’s greatest works [Wall Street Journal]
French film producer/director Claude Berri’s Paris art gallery in Paris designed by Jean Nouvel [ArtInfo]
MOMA lunch announces new IMPei designed Museum of Islamic art [NYMag]

British Dealer Anthony D’Offay Sells 725 Works to Tate for Reported Fifth of Their Value

Thursday, February 28th, 2008


Anthony D’Offay via MSNBC

The British art dealer Anthony d’Offay has made one of the biggest arts sales in Britain for a reported fifth of their value. 725 works have been sold to the national collection, the Britain’s Tate and Scotland’s National Galleries on Wednesday.
British Art Dealer Anthony d’Offay Sells Major Collection [MSNBC]
More Modern Art for British museums [Telegraph.co.uk]
The Battle between the Tate and the MOMA [Guardian Unlimited]

(more…)

NEWSLINKS 2.19.08

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Cai Guo-Qiang: 1st Chinese born artist with Guggenheim retrospective [New York Times]
New five-year contract for Lowry at MOMA (Not the MET) [The New York Times]
Ordway Prize, America’s Turner, announced; Driskell Prize also announced [ArtInfo]
Co-Head of I-Banking at Morgan Stanley named to Tate Board [Bloomberg]
Economist: German Expressionism is back [Economist via C-Monster]
Waning art sales spells cancellation for fledgling Duesseldorf art fair [Bloomberg]
Madrid’s famed “art triangle” adds a new cultural center to it’s roster [The Canadian Press]

Prefab Housing Approaches Modern Art

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

Vacant Lot adjacent to the MoMA where the five houses will be installed courtesy of the New York Times

Prefab houses—structures assembled largely off site and then delivered— have become the challenge trend at architectural schools and the Museum of Modern Art has commissioned five architects to confront the trial head on. Each architectural team approaches the structure differently, both conceptually and spatially, by addressing social and environmental needs through texture, materials, and efficiency. The exhibition, “Home Delivery: Fabricating the Modern Dwelling,” will open in July offering both tours of the structures as well as an extensive supplementary exhibit inside of the museum.

New York Times

MANSCAPING ; Popular makeover shows help convince men to tackle hairy problem areas

Portland Press Herald (Portland, ME) March 28, 2004 | RAY ROUTHIER Staff Writer RAY ROUTHIER Staff Writer Portland Press Herald (Maine) 03-28-2004 MANSCAPING ; Popular makeover shows help convince men to tackle hairy problem areas Byline: RAY ROUTHIER Staff Writer Edition: FINAL Section: Maine Life Column: Trends Memo: ‘MANSCAPING’ “Manscaping” is a term made popular by makeover experts on the hit TV show “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy,” and is defined as “the art and science of keeping your body hair under control.” The term covers trimming and/or shaping hair in the nose, ears, eyebrows and on the chest. For more information on the show, which airs at various times on the Bravo cable channel, go online at www.queereye.com. TAMING TIPS One reason men don’t always trim and tame their body hair is they don’t know how. Here are some tips on how to care for high-growth areas. EYEBROWS To trim, comb the brows straight up until the hair under the comb is the desired thickness. Then, using the comb as a guide, take a good pair of personal grooming sheers and cut off the hair above the comb. For removing hair between the eyebrows, either have a professional waxing done or get a good pair of tweezers from a beauty supply store. EARS Using an electric nose and ear trimmer, a beard trimmer, or scissors, simply lop off the hair that is sticking out of the ear. NOSE Same as for the ears, basically. Remember, the hair is there to act as a filter, so leave some inside the nose or ear. Also remember that nose and ear hair grows faster as men get near or into their 40s, because of hormonal changes in the body. CHEST Hairy chests can be trimmed with an electric hair trimmer, the kind most people use for home haircuts. If you want to leave a decent amount of hair, run the clipper “with the grain” of the hair, or in the direction the hair grows. If you want to get almost down to the skin, trim “against the grain” of the hair. BACKS, ARMS Best left to a professional hair waxer at your local salon or spa. THE MANSCAPER’S TOOLBOX Here are few of the trimmers on the market designed to let men have a little more control over problem areas. Trimmers may be better for nose and ears basically because they are less dangerous than scissors in those sensitive places. Wet/Dry Nose and Ear Trimmer and Hair Groomer by Panasonic – Retail price, about $19.99. This can be used in the shower, and can be used for ears, nose, sideburns, etc. Precision Nose and Ear Trimmer by Remington – Retail price, about $14.99. Smaller trimming head for tight spaces. Precision Deluxe Grooming Travel Kit by Remington – Retail price, about $17.99. Comes with guide combs for eight trimming lengths, neckline and sideburn attachments. web site beard trimmer

Sometimes we just don’t deal with an unseemly problem until there’s a bright and bouncy name for it. Such is the case with “manscaping.”

Sounds like it could be a term for bodybuilding or muscle sculpting, something like that. But its real definition – as devotees of the makeover show “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” will tell you – is the maintenance and control of male body hair.

Yuck, most of you will say now.

But if you’ve spent any time with a male over 35, you know this is a very real issue. All of a sudden, it seems, hair is sprouting from his nose, from his ears, from between his eyebrows. What used to be a fairly innocuous patch of chest hair brims from his shirt.

Men for the longest time simply lived with these, uh, growth areas. Especially here in Maine, home of the plaid flannel shirt and work boots augmented with duct tape. Men chalked up the surplus hair to “manly maturity,” even though hormonal changes are the scientific cause of all that extra hair. (It’s supposed to peak in a man’s fifties, then taper off. Whew.)

Lately, the popularity of “Queer Eye” and other makeover/style shows have been slowly helping to convince men in Maine of the need for a little manscaping. If they have a woman in their life, men become aware of the need a lot quicker.

“I think it’s just good grooming. Men are just feeling more like they want to be aesthetically pleasing for their wives or girlfriends. Women have been doing this all along. Now they’re getting us back and saying ‘You do the same thing,’ ” said Jean- Claude Poulin of Jean-Claude Hair and Skin Care in Portland.

“I had one guy come in because his 5-year-old daughter saw him mowing the lawn without a shirt, saw his hairy back, and said ‘That’s gross.’ “

The growth of manscaping can be seen in the host of “nose trimmers” and “ear trimmers” on shelves at Best Buy and other stores. There are also a wide range of clippers with attachments that can be used for the neck, the chest, or between the eyes.

For men who want that impeccably clean look, there are salons and spas around Maine that will do male waxing. Women have waxed for years, but now men who want completely hairless backs, chests, arms or legs have places to go for the painful process as well.

Talk about gender equity.

“We’re just living in a different age and men care more about how they look,” said Alanna York, owner of Head Games Salon for Hair and Body in Portland. “Ten years ago a guy might not have cared about (body hair), but now guys care.”

One guy who cares is Jerry Shaw, a 33-year-old commercial lender from Portland.

“As you get older, you get hairier,” said Shaw. “It’s not like I’m a man-beast, but I have patches (on his back). I just like to look clean. I’ve always been big on grooming.”

Shaw takes care of nose and ear and facial hair at home with “a good pair of clippers and good tweezers, which make all the difference.”

But for his back, where he says he has unruly patches, he gets periodic waxings from wax specialist Amy Loose at Head Games. Loose applies warm wax with a sort of roll-on deodorant container. Then she applies a strip of material, like felt, and pulls the wax and hair off.

“It’s so painful, men don’t have a reference point for how much it will hurt, but women do,” said Loose, who has been waxing for about seven years. “Men are stoic, so they don’t say anything.”

The process lasts about 15 minutes and costs about $50 for an entire chest or back, depending on how hairy a guy we’re talking about. To keep the back, or chest, clean for a whole summer, a man would probably have to repeat the process every month or six weeks, depending again on hairiness.

A lot of the waxing customers at Head Games are younger men, under 25, but men of all ages can be found manscaping.

Rich Lawler of Falmouth, who describes himself as “over 55,” is a former teacher who has been getting his back waxed for about 10 years. He said he likes to feel clean in the summer when swimming or working in the yard.

“I just like the smooth, clean feel,” said Lawler.

Poulin, at Jean-Claude Hair and Skin Care, is a pioneer of sorts in male waxing. He’s been doing it in Portland since 1983, when he read about it in an Australian men’s magazine.

It wasn’t really a booming business for him until the mid-1990s, when young men started baring chests and backs as a favored look. The business has been steadily climbing ever since.

He has a cross-section of people, from bodybuilder-types to business people. Poulin charges $40 to $45 to wax an entire back. “I have a retired Irish cop from Boston who drives up here (for waxing).”

Besides waxing, Poulin will also “sculpt” chest hair at his salon. He’ll design a chest hair pattern that’s flattering to the man’s body type, and then trim it into reality.

“Most men have a fuller waist line, so I’ll leave enough chest hair to create a line and make the belly look thinner,” said Poulin.

York, at Head Games, says many of her haircut customers ask for tips about taking care of other hairy areas, including the back of the neck and eyebrows. But while York is cutting a man’s hair, she’ll often trim areas the man isn’t expecting.

“If I see hair from the ear, I’ll trim it right off and the man will say ‘Hey, what are you doing?’ ” said York. “A lot of times they have no idea it’s there.” web site beard trimmer

York said many of her customers are more comfortable asking for manscaping-type advice now than they were several years ago. She says that’s partly because of all the media attention on men’s style, fashion and grooming.

The trendy idea of the “metrosexual” – an urban straight man who enjoys spending money on fashion and grooming – has helped to lend a playful tone to the idea.

But nobody has been bigger cheerleaders for men’s grooming than the five gay lifestyle experts who star on the Bravo cable channel’s “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy.” The show debuted last summer and became an instant hit, adding new words to the popular lexicon every week.

In each show, the five descend upon some straight guy in need of fashion and style help, and give him a new wardrobe, new home furnishings, and hopefully, an educated sense of style.

The “Fab 5,” as they’re called, introduced the concept of manscaping by helping some of the more hairy guys tame their body hair.

The show has even spawned a book, “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy: The Fab 5’s Guide to Looking Better, Cooking Better, Dressing Better, Behaving Better and Living Better.” There’s an entire section in the book dedicated to manscaping.

Still the concept of male body hair grooming got here to Maine a little late. But right now, local salons say, it’s growing. (Just like that nose hair, right?)

“It took a little longer to get to Maine, but there’s definitely a market for it here,” said York, of Head Games. “It makes sense. Every man with a unibrow should wax it. Every man should have a good pair of personal grooming sheers.”

Staff Writer Ray Routhier can be contacted at 791-6454 or at:

rrouthier@pressherald.com

Illustrations/Photos:

Caption: Staff photos by Shawn Patrick Ouellette Above: Wax specialist Amy Loose waxes hair from a client’s back at Head Games Salon for Hair and Body in Portland. Left: A manscaping tool – clippers. Aesthetician Amy Loose waxes hair from the back of a client at Head Games Salon for Hair and Body in Portland. Salons and spas around Maine do male waxing. Women have waxed for years, but now men who want hairless backs, chests, arms or legs seek out the process as well.

RAY ROUTHIER Staff Writer