| The First Art Newspaper on the Net | | Established in 1996 | Wednesday, August 4, 2021 |
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| Hands off the library's picture collection! | |
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Darin Mickey, a photographer and chair of the creative practices program of the International Center of Photography, browses the Accidents folder of the New York Public Librarys Picture Collection, in the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building in New York, July 30, 2021. Founded in 1915, the collection lends images to library users who are seeking visual information of a mind-boggling range. Gus Powell/The New York Times.
by Arthur Lubow
NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Artist Joseph Cornell once requested a picture of a street urchin with a white cockatoo. Andy Warhol borrowed hundreds of images for inspiration and never returned them. For more than a century, the Picture Collection of the New York Public Library has flourished, gloriously but precariously, as a shape-shifting misfit within a Dewey Decimal grid. Founded in 1915, the collection lends images to library users who are seeking visual information of a mind-boggling range: Praying, Fairies, Expositions, Rear Views more than 12,000 rubrics from Abacus to Zoology, a history of taste that is still expanding. Its files are classified by subject matter, and available for browsing on open shelves. You see the people go through it and touch it and have the spontaneity of discovery, said Taryn Simon, the conceptual artist who has been photographing the Picture Collections treasures for nine years, making collages that can currently be seen at the Gagosian here. ... More |
The Best Photos of the Day Artemis Gallery will hold its VARIETY SALE | Antiquities & Ethnographic Art Auction on Thu, Aug 05, 2021 9:00 AM GMT-5. The sale features classical antiquities, ancient and ethnographic art from cultures encompassing the globe. Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Etruscan, Near Eastern, Asian, Pre-Columbian, Native American, African / Tribal, Oceanic, Spanish Colonial, Russian, Fossils, Fine Art, more! In this image: Costa Rican Stone Flying Panel Metate - Zoomorphs. Estimate $9,500 - $14,250.
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Shoe obsession for the ages: Prince's killer collection of custom heels, now on view | | Thaddaeus Ropac Salzburg exhibits a group of works from 1977-1991 | | New book explores Indigenous Australian collections in museums across the UK for first time |
Boots worn by Prince in the Raspberry Beret music video in 1985. John Wagner Photography via The New York Times.
by Sally Franson
CHANHASSEN (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Before we start, I want to get one thing straight: You havent lived until youve seen a grown man gasp over a giant wall of high heels. Not just any heels. Stiletto heels, custom-made for a size 7 foot. Fabric-covered ankle boots, mainly, but also knee boots, over-the-knee boots and platforms, in colors bright as Oz. Male, female, Black, white, young, old everyone visiting The Beautiful Collection: Princes Custom Shoes at Paisley Park on a recent Saturday tour went gaga over Prince Rogers Nelsons heels. More than 300 pairs, soles cleaned, fabrics vacuumed, shapes stuffed and lit up from behind, delivering us from gender norms and pandemic loungewear. Hark! Here were the hand-painted cloud boots from the Raspberry Beret music video; the platform roller skates documented by Questlove and discovered, posthumously, in a custom-made briefcase; and ankle ... More | |
Donald Judd, Untitled, 1991, Clear anodized aluminum with transparent amber over yellow plexiglass. Donald Judd Art © 2021 Judd Foundation / Bildrecht, Wien 2021. Image courtesy Judd Foundation.
SALZBURG.- Donald Judd at Thaddaeus Ropac Salzburg presents a group of works from 19771991, a period in which the artists work was defined by the principles that had formed his artistic vision. The exhibition provides insight into the diversity of Donald Judds formal and material repertoire, highlighting his distinctive visual vocabulary and deliberate use of mathematical proportions. Spanning works in plywood, painted wood, plexiglass and aluminum media through which he interrogated the relationship between form and color the exhibition features work that has never previously been exhibited, alongside seminal floor works which remain at the core of Judds practice. The earliest example of this type of incised cadmium red light floor work was exhibited in Judds first ever solo exhibition at Green Gallery, New York (196364) and now forms part of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture ... More | |
Four greenstone axes with wooden handles, Yarra River, Victoria. Museum records indicate the handles were made by the last chief of the Yarra Yarra, which would refer to Aboriginal leader William Barak. © University of Aberdeen.
LONDON.- Museums across Great Britain and Ireland hold Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultural heritage of exceptional value. Until now these collections have been largely unknown, rarely seen and sometimes misunderstood. A major new book published by the British Museum on 2 September, Ancestors, artefacts, empire: Indigenous Australia in British and Irish Museums explores nearly 160 artefacts selected from over 30 public museums. New high-resolution photographs are paired alongside text by twenty-two Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australian and international experts. This landmark publication, the product of years of research, presents a multi-stranded narrative and interdisciplinary scholarship that reveals new insights into Britains Australian history as much as Australias British history. Gifted, sold, exchanged and bartered by Indigenous Australian people, and accepted, ... More |
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Tunji Adeniyi-Jones joins White Cube | | Neal Schon's guitar collection brings more than $4.2 million at Heritage Auctions | | Iraq reclaims 17,000 looted artifacts, its biggest-ever repatriation |
Tunji Adeniyi-Jones, Twin Serpents, 2021. Oil on canvas, 198.1 x 137.2 cm | 78 x 54 in. © the artist. Photo © JSP Art Photography. Courtesy White Cube.
LONDON.- White Cube is pleased to announce representation of the New York-based artist Tunji Adeniyi-Jones. His first exhibition with the gallery opens at White Cube Bermondsey from 19 November 2021 January 2022. Born and educated in the UK and now living and working in the USA, Adeniyi-Joness practice is inspired by the ancient history of West Africa and its attendant mythology, as well as his Yoruba heritage. His vibrant compositions are comprised of abstract backgrounds of lush, stylized foliage with sinewy bodies emerging and dissolving into tessellating shapes and interlocking swathes of colour. Positioning his works within a specifically Nigerian cultural landscape, notably the post-colonial writing of Chinua Achebe, Wole Soyinka and Amos Tutuola, Adeniyi-Jones addresses the perception of the black body within Western painting ... More | |
1959 Gibson Les Paul Standard Sunburst Solid Body Electric Guitar, Serial #9 0696. Sold for $350,000.
DALLAS, TX.- Like the song says: Everybody wants a thrill. This weekends event at Heritage Auctions starring guitars from the Neal Schon Collection provided more than a few. Saturdays auction was held only hours before Schon and Journey headlined Lollapalooza in Chicago (to rave reviews), and as a warm-up act more than 90 instruments from the guitarists historic assemblage sold for more than $4.2 million. That includes two Holy Grails now in the hands of new owners: One 1959 Gibson Les Paul Standard Sunburst sold for $350,000, while another of the six-string Ferraris favored by arena-rock gods realized $300,000. Those two guitars are now the most expensive vintage instruments sold in Heritage Auctions history, with seven of Schons guitars ranking among the Top 20 in the auction houses hall of fame. Nearly 500 bidders from around the world, on the phone and online and on the floor at Heritages global ... More | |
Iraq's Minister of Culture Hassan Nazim speaks during a handover ceremony of looted Iraqi antiquities returned by the United States, at the Ministry of foreign Affairs in the capital Baghdad. Sabah ARAR / AFP.
by Jane Arraf
IRBIL (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- When the Iraqi prime ministers plane touched down in Baghdad last week after an official visit to the United States, its cargo included 17,000 archaeological artifacts returned by a prominent museum and an Ivy League university in the largest-ever repatriation of looted Iraqi antiquities. On Tuesday, plywood crates holding the thousands of clay tablets and seals pieces from Mesopotamia, site of the worlds earliest civilizations were stacked next to a table displaying a few of the artifacts as the Iraqi Culture Ministry took custody of the cultural treasures. The repatriation of so many objects rounds out a remarkable chapter in the story of a country so ravaged by decades of conflict and war that its very history ... More |
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Harn selects Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects │ Partners to design new wing | | Hamptons Fine Art Fair brings 70 international galleries to Southampton Arts Center over Labor Day Weekend | | Lincoln Center, seeking wider range, names new artistic leader |
Left to right: Tod Williams, Billie Tsien and Paul Schulhof. Photo: Taylor Jewell.
GAINESVILLE, FLA.- The Harn Museum of Art at the University of Florida recently selected Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects | Partners to design an estimated 20,000-square-foot addition scheduled for completion in 2024. As the Harn concludes its 30th anniversary year and launches a strategic plan for the next 5 years, the new wing will provide a multi-purpose space for activities that will further fulfill the Harn Museums mission to inspire, educate and enrich peoples lives through art. After an extensive and highly competitive search working with UF Planning, Design and Construction, Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects | Partners was selected from an applicant pool of 19 architectural firms. They will be tasked with designing an expansion that will include more gallery space for exhibitions and a dedicated gallery space for the Florida Art Collection, which is a recent gift of 1,200 works of Florida-themed art ... More | |
Audrey Flack, Passages, 1951, Gouache on paper, 23 3-4 x 18 1-2 inches (60.3 x 47 cm). Photo: Hollis Taggart.
SOUTHAMPTON, NY.- Hamptons Fine Art Fair, the inaugural international fine art fair from the producers of ShowHamptons, has announced their 2021 exhibitor list, featuring artworks by 70 select national and international galleries, with 51 in-person booths and the remaining exhibiting in online virtual reality booths. For the first time ever, Hamptons Fine Art Fair will take place inside and amongst the beautiful grounds of the historic Southampton Arts Center, a unique opportunity for art lovers and patrons to purchase important works in the museum. HFAF will feature works by 400+ respected artists with over 1000 pieces, totaling $100+ million in art for immediate acquisition. The in-person fair will be a welcome return to the bustling Hamptons art and social scene after a period of online events, with thousands of attendees expected to pass through the fair over ... More | |
Shanta Thake, Lincoln Centers new chief artistic officer, outside Lincoln Center in New York, July 30, 2021. Caroline Tompkins/The New York Times.
by Javier C. Hernández
NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Feeling the pressure to attract new audiences and rethink its offerings even before being upended by the coronavirus pandemic, Lincoln Center announced Tuesday that it had chosen a theater executive with a reputation for working across disciplines as its next artistic leader. Shanta Thake, most recently an associate artistic director at the Public Theater, will assume the role of chief artistic officer at the center, the nations largest performing arts complex, as it works to broaden its appeal beyond classical music and ballet into genres such as hip-hop, poetry and songwriting. Thake who at the Public spent a decade managing Joes Pub, a cabaret-style venue, and more recently began overseeing Under the Radar, Public Works and other ... More |
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D'Stassi Art launches new gallery in London's Shoreditch | | "Olympic Agora" cultural hub now on view at Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 | | Yankunytjatjara artist Kaylene Whiskey awarded Melbourne Art Foundation 2022 Commission |
D'Stassi Art Founders Edward Sanders and Michael Howes.
LONDON.- DStassi Art announced the launch of its new gallery located in East Londons Shoreditch. Formerly home to the legendary Boiler Room Events, DStassi Art will open on August 6th with the inaugural exhibition, Pop Nightmare, featuring new paintings by Australia-based artist and musician, Sidney Teodoruk. Drawing on the nostalgia of childhood and the evocative signage of circus sideshow banners, Teodoruks work is a playful and poetic exploration of color and lyrics. With London reopening for in-person events, DStassi Art will host a public reception for Pop Nightmare on August 6th from 7pm til late. For more information and to RSVP, please visit www.dstassiart.com. Founded by friends and fellow art enthusiasts, Michael Howes and Edward Sanders, DStassi Art is inspired by the ethos of the radical inclusivity of the 1980s graffiti and street art movements and aims to infuse greater passio ... More | |
Roald Bradstock, The Race Against Time (2021) © Roald Bradstock.
TOKYO.- The first-ever Olympic Agora commemorates the cultural aspect of the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020, featuring a permanent, site-specific legacy sculpture by French artist Xavier Veilhan; a photography installation by Japanese artist Rinko Kawauchi; multimedia installations by Japanese artist Makoto Tojiki and Canadian studio Moment Factory, respectively; a series of new artworks by Olympian and Paralympian Artists-in-Residence; and an exhibition of treasures from the holdings of The Olympic Museum. Virtual tours and digital offerings unite local and international audiences in the Agora experience. The President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), Thomas Bach, drew parallels between sport and art upon his visit to the Olympic Agora in central Tokyo. About the Agora, the IOC President said: This is a fantastic demonstration of how, in the Olympic community, we blend sport and culture, which is one of the miss ... More | |
Artist Kaylene Whiskey. Courtesy of Iwantja Arts. Photo: Meg Hansen.
MELBOURNE.- Australias national museum of screen culture and Melbourne Art Foundation, the non-profit organisation and owner of the biennial Melbourne Art Fair, announced Kaylene Whiskey as the recipient of the Melbourne Art Foundation 2022 Commission, supported by Artwork Transport and Panasonic. Set to be unveiled at the Melbourne Art Fair in February 2022 before moving to its permanent home in the ACMI collection, Whiskeys new video work will be the ninth commission of the 15-year program. It marks several firsts: the first time the Melbourne Art Foundation Commission program has partnered with ACMI, the first time the Commission has awarded a First Nations artist, and the first time it has supported the production of a moving image work. Established in 2006, the Melbourne Art Foundation Commission program provides a living artist with a rare opportunity to realise an ambitious work for unveiling at Melbourne Art Fa ... More |
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Michael Armitage, Paradise Edict: virtual tour
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More News |
New National Gallery exhibition announced for 2022: The DoubleWASHINGTON, DC.- When two forms or motifs are presented together, or doubled, our eyes cant help but compare them. Doubling focuses and divides our vision; it causes us to see double and identify differences and similarities in what we observe. The art of the double causes us to see ourselves seeing. The Double: Identity and Difference in Art Since 1900 is the first major exhibition to consider how and why artists have employed doubled formats to explore perceptual, conceptual, and psychological themes. Presenting more than 120 works made between the beginning of the 20th century and today, this expansive show is organized in four parts: seeing double; reversal; dilemma structures; and the doubled and divided self. Among major themes, artists in the exhibition explore questions of identity and differencethe difference between ... More b-side Festival announces programme led by resident and international artistsISLE OF PORTLAND.- Cementing its status as one of the most unusual and innovative contemporary art festivals in the UK, b-side is back with an exciting, playful, and challenging programme led by Portland-based and world-renowned artists including Creatives Garage, Olivia Furber, and Ramzi Maqdisi. Energising the cultural scene in Dorset, b-side Festival presents work from South West based creatives alongside new and established artists from across the UK and beyond. With the artwork commissioned via an international open call over two years ago, allowing the artists the time and creative space to produce site-responsive works, the festival encourages artists to take risks and make resonant connections with the Isle of Portland. This year, b-side Festival has commissioned 14 new, unique artworks exploring the concept: Common Lands. ... More Winner of The Queen's Platinum Jubilee Emblem competition announcedLONDON.- The winning entry of The Queens Platinum Jubilee Emblem Competition has been revealed today, following a national competition run by the V&A in conjunction with Buckingham Palace. Edward Roberts, 19, a graphic design student from Nottinghamshire studying at Leeds University, will see his winning entry feature prominently throughout the celebrations of the first ever Platinum Jubilee. Inspired by and symbolising The Queens historic 70-year reign, the new emblem will be used widely as the nation comes together to celebrate the Platinum Jubilee next year. It will feature throughout the festivities of 2022, which will include televised national events, street parties and community gatherings, and will also be used for all official merchandise commemorating the Jubilee, and across digital and social media. On winning the Emblem Competition, ... More Venezuelan refugee orchestra back together after Argentine lockdownBUENOS AIRES (AFP).- After a year and a half of silence due to the coronavirus pandemic, the sounds of the Latin Vox Machine orchestra have returned to a house in Buenos Aires. The group -- made up of Venezuelans who fled their country's economic crisis to Argentina -- is preparing for a performance of the Symphonic Little Prince, a symphony they created during the lockdown, and that they released on disc at the end of July. The violas are rehearsing in the living room, while the violins are in the kitchen. Later, the keyboards and choir will take their places to practice. They hope to play their symphony in public for the first time in November. The orchestra's director Enmanuel Gonzalez can hardly wait. "The Little Prince is a beautiful project. It was a labor of quarantine and was also an escape, it was all that we thought about," he said. "I'm really looking ... More Lynn C. Franklin, literary agent and memoirist on adoption, dies at 74NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Lynn C. Franklin, a literary scout and agent whose clients included Archbishop Desmond Tutu and who made a mark with her own book, in which she shared her personal story about giving up her son for adoption in the 1960s, died July 19 at her home in the New York City borough of Manhattan. She was 74. The cause was metastatic breast cancer, said her sister, Laurie Franklin Callahan. Starting in the 1970s, Franklin, who had grown up around the world as an Army brat, established a career as a scout for international publishers, finding and procuring the rights for forthcoming titles in North America so that they could be translated and published in other countries. She headed her own boutique literary agency in New York, Lynn C. Franklin Associates, which specialized in works of nonfiction, and she represented ... More IMMA opens the first chapter of a major exhibition showcasing the IMMA Collection to celebrate its 30th birthdayDUBLIN.- IMMA presents the first chapter of The Narrow Gate of the Here-and-Now, IMMA: 30 Years of the Global Contemporary, a new Museum-wide exhibition showcasing the IMMA Collection to celebrate 30 years of IMMA. The Narrow Gate of the Here-and-Now opens in four phases throughout 2021, with each new chapter exploring the past three decades through different thematic approaches. Chapter One: Queer Embodiment opened on 30 July followed by Chapter Two: The Anthropocene on 24 September; Chapter Three: Social Fabric on 5 November; and Chapter Four: Protest and Conflict on 19 November. This is the first time that the Museum has been given over entirely to showing the IMMA Collection and will ... More Superb Astons to grace next H&H Classics sale at the Imperial War MuseumLONDON.- The next H&H Classics sale at the Imperial War Museum, Duxford on September 8th offers Aston Martin enthusiasts two chances to find the car of their dreams. There is a 1971 DB6 Mark II and a 1959 DB Mark III, both highly collectable cars which would be a ticket to all Aston Martin and classic car events, not to mention the sheer joy of all future driving. James McWilliam of H&H Classics comments: Its a privilege to be offering two cars that have been in such long term ownership and which represent such fond memories to both the vendors. The 1971 Aston Martin DB6 Mark II has done 61,746 miles from new and has been in its current family ownership since 1972. It is a very late example of a MKII with ZF 5-speed manual gearbox. Estimate £350,000 - £400,000. It is reputedly one of just 239 MKII examples built and has matching chassis ... More Where do theater artists go to ask questions? Poughkeepsie.POUGHKEEPSIE (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- For Michael R. Jackson, the question was quite specific. What kind of underscoring do you write for a melodramatic yet serious musical inspired by soap operas, Lifetime movies and Law and Order: SVU? Jackson has been developing his musical, White Girl in Danger, since 2017, through so many workshops and readings that he can barely list them all. He had already nailed down the plot, about a Black performer on a surreal soap who schemes, from the blackground, to outshine the white stars and get a story of her own. Now he needed to figure out something smaller but crucial: how to apply the organ stings, ominous monotones and other instrumental plot thickeners that would underline the satire and keep the audience on track. That was the reason he spent two weeks recently on the stately ... More Dr. Robert L. Stahl retires from the Monhegan Museum of Art & HistoryMONHEGAN ISLAND.- The Monhegan Museum of Art & History announces the retirement of Dr. Robert L. Stahl from the positions of Director of the James Fitzgerald Legacy from 2004 to 2021, Associate Director of the Monhegan Museum 2004 to 2019, and Co-Director of the Museum from 2019 to 2020. In addition to volunteering his time in these leadership roles, Stahl served as Treasurer for the Monhegan Museum for many years. Stahl served as the first Director of the James Fitzgerald Legacy, the extensive estate of James Fitzgerald including his house and studio on Monhegan Island (both built by Rockwell Kent) and an extensive body of Fitzgeralds artwork, from the time it became part of the Monhegan Museum in 2004. In this role he worked tirelessly to preserve and promote the art of James Fitzgerald by organizing annual ... More Linde B. Lehtinen appointed Curator of Photography at The HuntingtonSAN MARINO, CA.- The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens announced today the appointment of Linde B. Lehtinen as curator of photography. Lehtinen, who has served as assistant curator of photography at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) since 2015, will join The Huntington in early September. Linde brings a brilliant combination of museum and archives experience, scholarly insight and achievement, and a well-rounded understanding of the history of photography and of photographers, making her an exceptional choice for this position, said Sandra Brooke, Avery Director of the Library at The Huntington. At SFMOMA, Lehtinen curated an exhibition on artist Elad Lassry and helped organize a range of exhibitions on photography and photographers, including a show on Mike Mandel and a major ... More After 40 years, a luminary of theater's avant-garde departsNEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- When Blanka Zizka retired from her post as artistic director of the Wilma Theater at the end of July, it was truly the end of an era. I have been at it for 40 years, Zizka said in a video interview from Philadelphia, where the company is based. Thats a long time. Zizka and her husband, Jiri, were born in Czechoslovakia, where they immersed themselves in the underground scene of the late 1960s and early 70s, notably the work of innovative titans like Jerzy Grotowski and Tadeusz Kantor. The couple eventually immigrated to the United States and then landed at the Wilma Project in 1979, becoming artistic directors in 1981. They divorced in 1995, and she became the sole artistic director of the renamed Wilma Theater in 2010. And now, at 66, she will be its artistic director emeritus. Throughout the Wilmas ... More |
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PhotoGalleries
Aston Hall
Yukinori Yanagi
The Interior
Music of the â80s
Flashback On a day like today, French designer Louis Vuitton was born August 04, 1821. Louis Vuitton (4 August 1821 - 27 February 1892), was the founder of the world-famous Louis Vuitton brand of leather goods now owned by LVMH. Prior to this, he had been appointed as trunk-maker to Empress Eugénie de Montijo, wife of Napoleon. In this image: In the courtyard of the Asnières workshops, around 1888, Louis, Georges and Gaston L. Vuitton (sitting on a Bed trunk) © LOUIS VUITTON ARCHIVES.
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