| The First Art Newspaper on the Net | | Established in 1996 | Monday, February 18, 2019 |
| New York museum says ancient coffin was looted, will go back to Egypt | |
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Gilded Coffin Lid for the Priest Nedjemankh (detail) Late Ptolemaic Period (15050 B.C.) Cartonnage, gold, silver, resin, glass, wood The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Purchase, 2017 Benefit Fund; Lila Acheson Wallace Gift; Louis V. Bell, Harris Brisbane Dick, Fletcher, and Rogers Funds and Joseph Pulitzer Bequest; Leona Sobel Education and The Camille M. Lownds Funds; and 2016 Benefit Fund, 2017 (2017.255b) Image: © The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. NEW YORK (AFP).- The Metropolitan Museum of Art will return an ancient gilded coffin to Egypt after New York prosecutors determined that it had been looted from that country, the museum said. The museum had purchased the prized coffin, dating from the first century BCE, in July 2017 from a Paris art dealer for a price of nearly four million dollars. But the Manhattan district attorney's office determined that the mummy-shaped golden coffin had been sold with fake documentation, including a forged 1971 Egyptian export license. It was not clear what had sparked the district attorney's investigation. The statement Friday quoted Met CEO Daniel Weiss as apologizing to the Egyptian people and specifically to Antiquities Minister Khaled El-Enany. "After we learned that the Museum was a victim of fraud and unwittingly participated in the illegal trade of antiquities, we worked with the DA's office for its return to Egypt," Weiss said. ... More |
The Best Photos of the Day The Städel Museum is devoting a major special exhibition to one of the most momentous chapters in the history of European art: Venetian painting of the Renaissance. Entitled "Titian and the Renaissance in Venice", the show unites more than a hundred masterpieces - In the early sixteenth century, artists of the "City of Water" developed an independent strain of the Renaissance relying on purely painterly means and the impact of light and colour. Photo: Städel Museum.
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| Monet - Reinventions of Impressionism in a new large-scale exhibition | | Hayward Gallery presents nearly 100 photographs by Diane Arbus | | Exhibition offers comprehensive insights into the artistic and thematic breadth of the Renaissance in Venice | Claude Monet (French, 1840-1926), Water Lilies, ca. 1914-1917. Oil on canvas, 65 3/8 x 56 in. (166.1 x 142.2 cm). Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Museum purchase, Mildred Anne Williams Collection, 1973.3 Image courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and the Kimbell Art Museum announce Monet: The Late Years, the first exhibition in more than 20 years dedicated to the final phase of Monets career. About 60 paintings, the exhibition traces the evolution of Monets practice from 1913, when he embarked on a reinvention of his painting style that led to increasingly bold and abstract works, up to his death in 1926. Assembled from major public and private collections in Europe, the United States, and Asia, including the holdings of the Fine Arts Museums and the Kimbell, Monet: The Late Years includes more than 20 examples of Monets beloved water lily paintings. In addition, the exhibition showcases many other extraordinary and ... More | | Installation view of diane arbus: in the beginning at Hayward Gallery, 2019. Photo: Mark Blower. LONDON.- Hayward Gallery presents diane arbus: in the beginning, including nearly 100 photographs that redefine the achievement of one of the most prominent and influential artists of the 20th century. The exhibition takes an in-depth look at the formative first half of Diane Arbus career, from 1956 to 1962, when the American master developed the direct, psychologically acute style for which she later became so widely celebrated. Presented across the upper floor of the Hayward Gallery, this solo show includes some fifty photographs which have never been shown in Europe, all vintage prints from the Diane Arbus Archive at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. diane arbus: in the beginning features arresting portraits of individuals across the spectrum of American society. Arbus discovered the majority of her subjects in New York City, from Fifth Avenue to the Lower East Side, from Times Square to Cone ... More | | Titian (c. 1488/901576), Portrait of a Young Man, ca. 1510. Oil on poplar, 20 x 17 cm. Frankfurt am Main, Städel Museum © Städel Museum ARTOTHEK. FRANKFURT.- The Städel Museum is devoting a major special exhibition to one of the most momentous chapters in the history of European art: Venetian painting of the Renaissance. Entitled Titian and the Renaissance in Venice, the show unites more than a hundred masterpieces In the early sixteenth century, artists of the City of Water developed an independent strain of the Renaissance relying on purely painterly means and the impact of light and colour. One of their most important exponents was Titian (ca. 1488/901576), who would hold the key position in the Venetian art scene all his life. The Frankfurt show assembles more than twenty examples by Titian alone and thus the most extensive selection of his works ever before on display in Germany. It also presents paintings and drawings by Giovanni Bellini (ca. 14351516), Jacopo Palma ... More |
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| With 'Roma,' Alfonso Cuaron reinvents how he makes films | | The Museo del Prado is making more than 400 audiovisual archives available, spanning 100 years of its history | | Bauhaus at 100: Celebrating the artists & their legacy at Sotheby's | Alfonso Cuaron attends the 71st Annual Writers Guild Awards New York ceremony at Edison Ballroom on February 17, 2019 in New York City. Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Writers Guild of America, East/AFP. MEXICO CITY (AFP).- Mexican filmmaker Alfonso Cuaron has experimented before with styles and genres, from space epic "Gravity" to road trip coming-of-age tale "Y Tu Mama Tambien" to fantasy flick "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban." But with "Roma," his highly acclaimed autobiographical love letter to his childhood, he flipped the script, so to speak -- a lot of the time, the actors didn't even have the whole script. He filmed chronologically, in black and white, and did the filming himself. Sometimes he gave the cast contradictory instructions to see what would happen, and if it would yield movie magic. Based on the 10 nominations his film earned for the Oscars on February 24 -- including four for Cuaron alone, for best picture, director, original ... More | | Opening of the new galleries, 1956. News extracted from NODO. Images courtesy of Filmoteca Española. MADRID.- The Museo del Prado, in collaboration with the Filmoteca and Radio Televisión Española (RTVE) and with the generous participation of private companies and individuals, has created a new documentary archive which, for the first time and during its Bicentenary year, offers a survey of the audiovisual history of the Museo del Prado. Among the results is the new availability of the previously unseen documentary Introduction to the Museo del Prado (1985) by Basilio MartÃn Patino with photographic direction by Juan MarÃne, as well as the restoration of five short films that required urgent conservation: Velázquez (1937) by Ramón Berreiro; Mythology in the Prado: Rubens (1948) by José MarÃa Elorrieta; The lost Paradise (1948) by Luciano Emmer and Enrico Gras (pioneers in the production of art documentaries); Goya in the ... More | | Wassily Kandinsky, Vertiefte Regung (Deepened Impulse), oil on canvas, 1928 (est. £5,500,000- 7,500,000). Courtesy Sotheby's. LONDON.- Marking the 100th anniversary of the founding of the influential German school of art and design, Sothebys Impressionist and Modern Art Evening and Day Sales will present artworks by those who taught at the Bauhaus and those whose outputs were transformed by its teachings. Founded in 1919 by the architect Walter Gropius, the Bauhaus which resided in Weimar, Dessau and Berlin until it was closed down under pressure from the Nazis in 1933 aimed to unite the disciplines of crafts, art and architecture. This core objective was conceived as a reimagining of the material world that would reflect unity in all the arts as a response to the rapid modernisation of life. The auctions on 26 and 27 February will comprise works by key proponents of the emblematic movement, including Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Oskar Schlemmer, László Moholy-Nagy ... More |
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| Glenn Murcutt announced MPavilion 2019 architect | | Claudia Comte creates an immersive installation for Copenhagen Contemporary's largest hall | | Mudam Luxembourg opens the most significant retrospective to date dedicated to the paintings of Jutta Koether | Glenn Murcutt AO is often referred to as Australia's most famous architect. MELBOURNE.- The Naomi Milgrom Foundation today announced the commission for the sixth annual MPavilion has been awarded to Pritzker Prize-winning Australian architect Glenn Murcutt AO. The announcement comes as MPavilion 2018, designed by Barcelonas Carme Pinós of Estudio Carme Pinós closed on Sunday 17 February, having received an overwhelming public response with 133,000+ visitors and 520 free events over 139 days. Naomi Milgrom AO, founder of the Naomi Milgrom Foundation commented: Im thrilled to be working with Glenn Murcutt. Hes been at the forefront of contemporary architecture for decades with groundbreaking designs that are sensitive to landscape and cross-cultural collaboration. Quintessentially Australian and ahead of his time, Glenns thoughtfulness about people, place making and the environment continues to inspire us all. Glenn Murcutt, commented on his commission for MPavilio ... More | | Claudia Comte, I Have Grown Taller from Standing with Trees (2019). Installation view at Copenhagen Contemporary. Photo: Roman März. COPENHAGEN.- For her first exhibition in Denmark, the Swiss artist Claudia Comte has created an immersive installation for Copenhagen Contemporarys largest hall. The presentation brings together sculpture, sound and 3D prototyping with the artists interest in archaeology, biodiversity and forestry. Inside the hall, rows of six-metre-tall debarked spruce trees are positioned along a grid of millimetric precision that directly corresponds to a digitally printed graphic carpet. A large ceramic sculpture sits at the centre of this seemingly peaceful forest, which is enveloped by filtered light, sound and the mild scent of resin released by the pale spruces. Moving through the exhibition, however, a collapse of order becomes apparent. The trunks have been struck by a powerful force and are suspended in a state of disorder. The geometrical grid of the carpet evokes the root system of the trees, which, via underground fungi ... More | | Mède, 1992. Courtesy Galerie Buchholz, Berlin/Cologne/New York © Jutta Koether. LUXEMBOURG.- Mudam Luxembourg Musée dArt Moderne Grand-Duc Jean continues its winter-spring season with the most significant retrospective to date dedicated to the paintings of Jutta Koether (b. 1958, Cologne). The exhibition presents four decades of Koethers paintings produced between 1983 and 2018, several of which have rarely been shown previously. Tour de Madame is a collaboration with the Brandhorst Museum in Munich and was listed as one of the top 10 exhibitions of the year in Artforum magazine. At Mudam, the exhibition is organised as three moments. In the West Gallery, a retrospective view of paintings created between 1983 and 2016 is presented in a salon style that references collectors cabinets, and the memory of the first retrospective exhibition staged by Pablo Picasso in Zurich in 1932. Presented in the East Gallery is the eponymous Tour de Madame, a cycle of 15 paintings made by Koether for the exhi ... More |
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| Paul Pretzer returns to portraiture with his signature dark humor in new exhibition at MARC STRAUS | | Bertoia's announces its 700-lot Spring Signature Sale | | Kewenig opens the exhibition "The Palace of Perfect" with works by James Lee Byars | Installation view. NEW YORK, NY.- MARC STRAUS opened Paul Pretzers fourth solo exhibition of new paintings. Pretzer returns to portraiture with his signature dark humor. Pretzer frequently references famous Renaissance paintings and we are encouraged to make the associations amid his oddities and allusions to contemporary popular culture. For example, Pretzers depiction of hands, as in the gesticulations of Blender (2018) or the fondling touch of the tattooed Hasenmann (2018)evoke Zurbaran and Da Vinci, yet these are pure inventions and wonderfully contemporary. Pretzers use of symbolism largely invokes the surrealists but his quixotic choices of characters and narrative is very much his own. He loves to play with historical genres. Portrait (2018), composed in the classical manner, cropped at mid-torso, is a strange yet captivating figure straight out of Blaxploitation culture-her Afro hair could easily replace the halos from 15th century ... More | | Marklins largest boat, the Ocean Liner Augusta Victoria, made from 1909-1915, 45in. long, ex Malcolm Forbes collection. Est. $50,000-$80,000. VINELAND, NJ.- How does an auction house match a sale like the one Bertoias held last September, with its blockbuster lineup of pristine early American clockwork toys, rare French Martin toys and still banks from long-held collections? The answer is, by offering more of the same. On March 9-10, Bertoia Auctions will present its 700-lot Spring Signature Sale showcasing Part II of Frank Mohrs incomparable 60-year collection of Fernand Martin and early American tin and clockwork toys; as well as Part II of the superb 40-year still bank collection of Douglas Jackman. In addition, the auction lineup features the revered multi-generation estate collection of Sam Downey Jr., and approximately 100 rare and exceptional penny toys from the Michael Bertoia collection. We think this is going to be one of those ... More | | James Lee Byars, The Touched Sphere, 1988. Marble 40 x 40 x 40 cm | 15 3/4 x 15 3/4 x 15 3/4 in. The Estate of James Lee Byars, courtesy Kewenig, Berlin. Photo: Stefan Müller. BERLIN.- Kewenig is presenting the exhibition The Palace of Perfect with works by James Lee Byars (1932 1997). James Lee Byars is considered one of the most distinguished personalities of 20th century art. In particular with his performances, he opened up new terrain for his time and ahead of present-day contemporary art, crossing artistic boundaries that had thitherto prevailed. Comparable only to Andy Warhol or Joseph Beuys, his work was inextricably linked to the appearance of his person. Byars, the man in the gold suit, with black gloves and a black top hat, his eyes - sometimes his whole face - cloaked behind the veil of a black silk scarf; the artist as a magician, as a magician of things in a world of everyday life, a strange solitaire who, in the dazzling exposition of himself, not ... More |
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The Monumental Intimacy of Jenny Saville's Female Nude
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| More News | Rockwell's 'Four Freedoms' paintings on display in Washington WASHINGTON, DC.- Seventy-eight years after President Franklin D. Roosevelts famous State of the Union address inspired artist Norman Rockwell to create his iconic Four Freedoms series of paintings, the works of art are on display in the nations capital as part of a seven-city international tour. Enduring Ideals: Rockwell, Roosevelt & the Four Freedoms opened this week at the George Washington University Museum and the Textile Museum and will be on view through April 29. Enduring Ideals is the first comprehensive traveling exhibition devoted to Mr. Rockwells depictions of Mr. Roosevelts Four Freedomsfreedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want and freedom from fearand is a rare opportunity to see these masterpieces together outside their permanent home in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. The exhibition, organized ... More Le Board and the Untitled Space gallery open "Indira Cesarine x Neon" solo exhibition NEW YORK, NY.- The Untitled Space gallery announced Indira Cesarine x Neon, a solo exhibition of works by artist Indira Cesarine, curated by Jenny Muskin Goldman of Kin + Gold, at Le Board on 5th Avenue. The exhibit, which is presented in collaboration with The Untitled Space, is the inauguration of their resident artist series of exhibitions presented by Le Board at the luxury living brands flagship, located off Central Park South. The exhibit will be on view at Le Board through April 13th, 2019. The exhibit presents a collection of original neon artworks created by the artist between 2017-2018. Known for her empowering feminist themes, Indira Cesarines artwork engages a narrative of social discourse and art activism. Cesarines artwork has been featured internationally at many galleries, museums and festivals, including The Metropolitan Museum ... More Exhibition of paintings by Abstract Expressionist painter Judith Godwin opens at Berry Campbell Gallery NEW YORK, NY.- Berry Campbell Gallery opened an important exhibition of paintings by legendary Abstract Expressionist painter, Judith Godwin. This historic exhibition is a survey of sixteen paintings, including several large-scale examples from the 1950s originally shown at the Betty Parsons Gallery. This exhibition is accompanied by a sixteen-page catalogue with an essay written by Gwen Chanzit, Ph.D., Curator Emerita of Modern Art and Curator of Women of Abstract Expressionism (2016) originated by the Denver Art Museum. The exhibition continues through March 16, 2019. From 1950, when she first exhibited her work to the present, Godwin has held to her convictions, using a language of abstract form to respond with unbowed directness and passion to life and nature. For Judith Godwin, painting is an act of freedom and a ... More Crocker Art Museum opens exhibition of international street photography SACRAMENTO, CA.- Street photography came into existence nearly two centuries ago, alongside the invention of some of the earliest cameras. Since then, the genre has evolved in style, scope, and technique due largely to technological advancements, most notably the portable 35mm camera and, today, the ubiquitous smartphone. Despite its name, street photography does not necessitate the street as a backdrop or people as the subject. Closely related to documentary photography, the genre encompasses a spectrum of compelling images usually taken in public spaces that reveal something about the subject or stir emotion in the viewer. Drawn from the collection of Lois and Dr. Barry Ramer, The Roaming Eye features more than 70 photographs by 43 distinguished photographers. Artists, subjects, and locations featured in the exhibition ... More Firstsite, Colchester, opens an interactive installation by the New York-based artist Zoe Beloff COLCHESTER.- Firstsite, Colchester, is presenting an interactive installation by the New York-based artist Zoe Beloff. Entitled Emotions Go to Work, the exhibition examines how technology, through a variety of means be it internet marketing or Artificial Intelligence is increasingly able to read our feelings and transform them into valuable assets. Using samples of early black and white cartoons, kinetic experiments, slick advertorials, film projection, watercolours and cardboard cut-outs, through to the ubiquitous emoji, the exhibition presents itself as a riot of human and non-human faces, each of which build a picture of the interwoven history between man and machine. The exhibition considers a number of key questions, such as what balance must be struck between entrusting machines with the freedom to reshape us in their image ... More "The Weather Garden: Anne Hardy curates the Arts Council Collection" opens at Towner Art Gallery EASTBOURNE.- Towner Art Gallery is presenting The Weather Garden: Anne Hardy curates the Arts Council Collection, in which the artist-curator selects the work of twenty-six artists for a setting she has specially created within the gallery space. The Weather Garden alludes to external meteorological weather as well as embodied emotional weather, and how environmental physical experience might affect or reflect a psychological state. The exhibition presents a shifting, impermanent environment of gently fluctuating light choreographed by local weather data, and a breezeblock floor extending the length of the gallery. Over thirty works comprising sculpture, photography and video explore what Hardy calls, the, sensuality and vulnerability of the body, the relationship between body and material, human and non-human, internal and external landscapes. ... More Exhibition is first to focus specifically on the role of drawing in the life and work of Lina Bo Bardi BARCELONA.- The architect Lina Bo Bardi (1914-92) always felt a strong connection with drawing. Throughout her lifetime and in all the realms of art she ventured into, drawing was always present. Rather than a tool for designing, drawing was a fundamental means of expression for Bo Bardi, arising from a strong sense of curiosity and doubt. Drawing was her language, the extension of her thoughts, and the vehicle for her minds explorations. Ultimately, it was her most genuine way of examining, feeling and relating to the world. Bo Bardi discovered drawing as a child, through her father an amateur painter and received her training in art and architecture in her native Italy. After developing a unique and successful career in Brazil, Lina Bo Bardi is now considered one of the most outstanding architects of the 20th century and has been internationally acclaimed ... More Waverly's Feb. 28 auction shines spotlight on U.S. presidential material, rare first-edition books FALLS CHURCH, VA.- A letter written by Abraham Lincoln in the early days of the Civil War, a document from 1793 signed by Washington and Jefferson; and a rare first-edition copy of Uncle Toms Cabin (1852) are a few of the highlight lots in a February 28 auction to be hosted by the Waverly Rare Books division of Quinns Auction Galleries. Start time is 6 p.m. Eastern, and all forms of bidding will be available, including absentee, phone and live LiveAuctioneers. The one-page Lincoln letter, framed and handwritten on Executive Mansion stationery, was penned on June 10, 1861, just two months after the firing on Fort Sumter. Lincoln writes to Captain John Adolphus Dahlgren (1809-1870), asking about the possible government purchase of a new gun. He signs it, Yours truly, A. Lincoln. The letter should command $6,000-$8,000. The 1793 document, signed ... More Sprüth Magers opens exhibition of works by Sterling Ruby LOS ANGELES, CA.- Since the early 2000s, Sterling Ruby has developed an eclectic and uncompromising practice that has mined the triumphs, tragedies, and peculiarities of the American experience across an ever-evolving range of media. Finding a tensile balance between chaos and order, grand and intimate gestures, and high and pop cultural references, Rubys paintings, sculptures, ceramics, collages, textiles, and videos expose the cracks within many of the aesthetic and social constructs we take for granted as fixed or immovable. Uniting his work is an overarching compendium of visual archetypes that continue to unfold into a distinct and rich artistic vocabulary. Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers are presenting DAMNATION, the artists fifth solo exhibition with Sprüth Magers and his first at the Los Angeles gallery. The centerpiece ... More H&H Classics to offer favourite cars of film stars & movie moguls LONDON.- When petrol is cheap and there are 2,800 miles from sea to shining sea then its no surprise that America produced huge powerful cars like this that could eat up dead straight roads and make driving a joy. H&H Classics are selling these two period beauties at No Reserve- a Cadillac from the 1930s and Lincoln from the 1940s - at their next sale at the Imperial War Museum, Duxford, on March 20th. Both of these cars hail from the collection of the late Ian Grange, who retired last year after 60 colourful years in the car business. Damian Jones, Head of Sales at H&H says: These wonderful cars, so redolent of their time, are highly presentable which is no surprise given the late Ian Granges discerning eye. Either would make a stunning addition to any collection. These cars were the favourites of film stars, movie moguls and the good ... More
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Flashback On a day like today, stained glass artist Louis Comfort Tiffany was born February 18, 1848. Louis Comfort Tiffany (February 18, 1848 - January 17, 1933) was an American artist and designer who worked in the decorative arts and is best known for his work in stained glass. He is the American artist most associated with the Art Nouveau and Aesthetic movements. In this image: Tiffany Studios (New York), Dragonfly Library Lamp, ca. 1905 - 10 Leaded glass; cast bronze Gift of Walter P. Chrysler, Jr.
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