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Man is accused of attempting to sell fake Basquiats and Harings

A provided image shows an artwork connected to a scheme of selling false Keith Haring paintings. According to a criminal complaint, employees at New York auction houses were approached about the art. A man was taken into custody and charged with wire fraud. Department of Justice via The New York Times.

NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Angel Pereda, 49, of Mexico, was taken into custody in New York and charged with wire fraud after prosecutors accused him of trying to sell artworks that he falsely claimed had been created by Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York announced on Friday. Prosecutors said that on at least one occasion, Pereda created and sent new fake provenances to an intermediary in New York claiming that a painting was by Basquiat, in the hopes that it could be sold for millions of dollars. Basquiat’s 1982 work “Untitled” sold for $110.5 million at auction in 2017. William F. Sweeney Jr., an assistant director at the FBI, said in a statement, “Mr. Pereda conned art buyers, hoping his victims wouldn’t see the difference between real art and a forgery.” Pereda did not immediately respond to a request for comment. He faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. ... More


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Exhibition at Hauser & Wirth shines a light on its Los Angeles artists   Lisson Gallery announces representation of Olga de Amaral   White House sets ethics plan for sales of Hunter Biden's art


Richard Jackson, STUNGUN, 2020. Neon, 30.5 x 86.4 x 10.2 cm / 12 x 34 x 4 in © Richard Jackson. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth. Photo: Jeff McLane.

LOS ANGELES, CA.- Hauser & Wirth spotlights its Los Angeles artists with a multimedia group presentation of nearly 30 artworks. ‘In Focus: LA Artists’ showcases the groundbreaking techniques, diverse viewpoints, and intergenerational relationships of the gallery artists who call one of the world’s most creative cities home: Larry Bell, Mark Bradford, Charles Gaines, Richard Jackson, Paul McCarthy, Christina Quarles, Gary Simmons, Henry Taylor, Diana Thater, and the late artists Luchita Hurtado, Mike Kelley, and Jason Rhoades. On the occasion of Hauser & Wirth’s 5-year anniversary in the Arts District and in celebration of the community that has been integral to its vision for nearly 30 years, the presentation highlights the lasting contributions of the artists and foreground their influential practices, which have been instrumental in making Los Angeles an international capital of artistic ... More
 

Olga de Amaral, Escrito 17, 2016. Linen, gesso, acrylic and gold leaf, 200 x 130 cm. 78 5/8 x 51 1/8 in. © Olga de Amaral; Courtesy Lisson Gallery.

LONDON.- Lisson Gallery today announced representation of Olga de Amaral in New York, London and Shanghai, ahead of her first major retrospective in North America, To Weave a Rock, which is co-organised by Cranbrook Art Museum, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas, where it will debut this summer (25 July – 19 September 2021), before travelling to the Cranbrook in October 2021 and the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, New York in late 2022. Two exhibitions at Lisson Gallery will take place this year, first in East Hampton in August and then in New York in November. Olga de Amaral: “I am thrilled to join Lisson Gallery because of their commitment to artists whose work does not fall into neat categories. Lisson has long embraced artists, like myself, whose experimental techniques blur the boundaries between painting, sculpture and installation.” Alex Logsdail, Lisson Gallery: “ ... More
 

Hunter Biden, the president's son, at his art studio in Los Angeles, Nov. 1, 2019. Biden will be able to sell his paintings through a New York dealer, who will not disclose the buyers or the prices. Elizabeth Weinberg/The New York Times.

by Zolan Kanno-Youngs


WASHINGTON (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- The White House has helped develop a system for Hunter Biden to sell pieces of his art without him, or anyone in the administration, knowing who bought them, the latest effort to respond to criticism over how President Joe Biden’s son makes his money. Under the arrangement, a New York City art dealer would sell the paintings, which the dealer has said he is pricing at between $75,000 and $500,000, while keeping secret all information about the sales, according to a person familiar with the plan. The gallerist, Georges Bergès, has agreed to not share any information about the buyers or prices of Hunter Biden’s work with anyone. Bergès has also agreed to reject any offer that appears suspicious, ... More



Christie's appoints Rebecca Yuancao Yang as Chairman, China   Baltimore Museum of Art announces 175 acquisitions, new commission, and additional gifts   Unique private collection of rare pianos to go up for auction


Rebecca has an entrepreneurial background with diverse interests. © Christie's Images Ltd 2021.

HONG KONG.- Christie’s announced the appointment of Rebecca Yuancao Yang as Chairman, China, effective from 1 August 2021. Based in Shanghai and reporting to Francis Belin, President, Christie’s Asia Pacific, Rebecca will bring with her a wealth of experience, deep knowledge, and widespread connections in China, to foster the development and cultivation of trusted relationships with top tier clients to support the expansion of Christie’s in China. Rebecca will work closely with Julia Hu, General Manager, China, and our global specialist community to drive top client transactions. As the brand ambassador for Christie’s in China, Rebecca will maintain a high external profile through participation in key marketing campaigns, as well as events organised by clients. Francis Belin commented, “China is undoubtedly a country of strategic importance to our business: a market which presents ... More
 

Mequitta Ahuja, Order, 2020. The Baltimore Museum of Art: Purchase with exchange funds from the Pearlstone Family Fund and partial gift of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. BMA 2021.112.

BALTIMORE, MD.- The Baltimore Museum of Art announced today that it has received a significant promised gift of 90 works of art by nearly 70 artists from long-standing museum supporters Nancy Dorman and Stanley Mazaroff. The gift is particularly strong in photographs and works on paper, including those created by acclaimed artists Hans Hofmann, Helen Frankenthaler, Grace Hartigan, Alfredo Jaar, Christopher James, Louise Lawler, Andres Serrano, Gary Simmons, Wolfgang Tillmans, Sze Tsung Leong, and Fred Tomaselli. The collection also includes important works by artists based in or with strong ties to Baltimore such as Larry Cook, Roland Freeman, Connie Imboden, Soledad Salamé, Elizabeth Talford Scott, and Stephen Towns. Examples of other paintings, sculpture, textiles, mixed-media works, and ... More
 

The pianos have been collected by one of the world’s foremost piano restorers, David Winston.

LONDON.- Dreweatts auctioneers is to offer an exceptional private collection of rare pianos in a landmark sale on September 23, 2021. The collection was amassed by David Winston, who holds a Royal Warrant as Restorer and Conservator of Pianos to HM the Queen. It is comprised of 26 unique instruments dating from the 18th century to present day. Amongst those expected to achieve the highest bids is a rare 1925 Pleyel grand piano fitted with an original ‘Auto Pleyela’ self-playing mechanism, in a spectacular Chinoiserie Louis XV case (estimate £40,000-£60,000) and a remarkable double piano from Pleyel, which is one of only 50 ever made. This model, which has a guide price of £30,000-£50,000, was once owned by the concert pianist wife of French writer and minister of culture André Malraux. Speaking about the sale, Will Richards, Deputy Chairman of Dreweatts said, “It is rare to see so many exquisite pianos together in ... More



Imaginary deaths, real grief: Thai artist honours fallen anime heroes   Praz-Delavallade opens an exhibition of new drawings by Soufiane Ababri   Pilar Corrias opens two exhibitions of new work by Tala Madani


Jinnipha Nivasabut wanted to mourn the deaths of her favourite characters in popular shows and manga series. AFP PHOTO.

BANGKOK (AFP).- Portraits of dozens of anime characters, each with a small altar for fans to leave flowers, adorn the wall of a Bangkok gallery -- a tribute to fictional heroes who met an untimely death. The 2D Afterlife exhibit is made up of 50 of these creations from artist Jinnipha Nivasabut, who wanted to mourn the deaths of her favourite characters in popular shows and manga series. The core concept "is to explore the idea of why the deaths of these fictional characters could have such an impact on real people," the 22-year-old anime lover said. Eschewing anime's cartoon style, she instead painted the fallen heroes with the realism of stately oil portraits. "In my memories, I see these characters as real persons. They’re like members of my family so I decided to draw these characters to resemble real persons as much as possible," she said. Japanese anime and manga enjoy ... More
 

Soufiane Ababri, Bedwork (Jeffrey Dahmer), 2021. Colored pencil and wax pastel on paper, 25 5/8 x 19 3/4 in. 65 x 50 cm.

LOS ANGELES, CA.- Praz-Delavallade is presenting Bunch of Queequeg, an exhibition of new drawings by Soufiane Ababri and his first solo presentation in the US. The exhibition will be on view through 26 August, 2021. “Eroticism opens the way to death. Death opens the way to the denial of our individual lives. Without doing violence to our inner selves, are we able to bear a negation that carries us to the farthest bounds of possibility?” --Georges Bataille, Eroticism: Death and Sensuality (1957) It’s well past midnight at a salty New England inn when Ishmael, the narrator of Herman Melville’s Moby Dick (1851), is awoken by a strange bedfellow. Queequeg, a Polynesian harpooner, is looking for a place to sleep. He’s introduced as an object of horror: candlelight reveals his “tropical tanning” to be a “purplish yellow” coat of Maori tattoos. “This wild cannibal, tomahawk ... More
 

Tala Madani, Perfect Copy II, 2021. Oil on linen, 100.3 x 80 x 2.5 cm. 39 1/2 x 31 1/2 x 1 in. Courtesy of the artist and Pilar Corrias, London.

LONDON.- Pilar Corrias opened two exhibitions of new work by Tala Madani. ‘Skid Mark’ is at the gallery’s Eastcastle Street location, 4 June – 10 July 2021, whilst ‘Chalk Mark’ inaugurates the gallery’s new location at 2 Savile Row, opening 8 July and running until 8 September 2021. The exhibitions include painting and animation, and together constitute the artist’s first UK solo presentation in five years. ‘Chalk Mark’ brings together new works exploring education and instruction. Where ‘Skid Mark’ focuses on the interior world, ‘Chalk Mark’ takes on the exterior, examining the ways in which children are controlled and cultured by their schooling. A series of Chalk Board paintings engage with the role of copying and repetition in learning, via repeated motifs that are deliberately undisciplined and unruly. Children are depicted as accosted by education, with one pai ... More


75 artists selected for New Contemporaries 2021   Yorkshire Sculpture Park presents Rachel Kneebone's most ambitious sculpture to date   Maureen Paley opens a solo exhibition by Wolfgang Tillmans


Elsa James, ‘Black Girl Essex; Here We Come, Look We Here’, 2019. Courtesy the artist.

LONDON.- New Contemporaries announced this year's selected artists for Bloomberg New Contemporaries 2021. The rigorous two-part selection process was headed by a panel of three internationally renowned artists comprising Hew Locke, Tai Shani and Michelle Williams Gamaker, who have selected a new generation of artists in what has been a challenging year. 75 artists – from final year students and recent graduates of UK arts institutions, to practitioners on alternative peer-to-peer learning programmes – have been selected to take part in New Contemporaries 2021 open submission opportunities. This includes participation in the annual touring exhibition and the newly launched digital platform supported by Bloomberg Philanthropies, as well as access to digital residences and projects, studio bursaries, mentorships, talks and workshops. Selected artists for Bloomberg New Contemporaries 2021 are: Susan Atwill, Mataio ... More
 

Rachel Kneebone, 399 Days, 2012-13. Courtesy a European Collection. Photo © Jonty Wilde.

WAKEFIELD.- Yorkshire Sculpture Park is presenting 399 Days by Rachel Kneebone (b.1973) in the unique environment of the 18th-century Chapel. The artist’s most ambitious sculpture to date, 399 Days is named after the length of time it took to make, is over five-metres in height and comprises 63 exterior panels. Monumental in scale yet exquisite in detail, it echoes historic sculptures such as Trajan’s Column, a plaster cast of which is displayed in the sculpture court of the V&A, where 399 Days was also shown from 2017-2019. Kneebone’s sculptures do not depict the full human form, but allude to the body through the use of a mass of legs appearing to be in motion, often shown in relation to organic forms such as flowers and orbs. Clay, and its more refined form of porcelain, have been used for thousands of years to make objects for the home and for display. Rachel Kneebone has developed her own unique form of sculpture, ... More
 

Wolfgang Tillmans, Remy at Spectrum, 2015 (detail) © Wolfgang Tillmans, courtesy Maureen Paley, London / Hove.


HOVE.- Maureen Paley is presenting a solo exhibition at Morena di Luna by Wolfgang Tillmans, which is his tenth with the gallery and his first to be featured at the gallery’s space in Hove named by the artist. Wolfgang Tillmans seeks to challenge the potentiality of making pictures. His work has epitomised a new kind of subjectivity in photography, pairing intimacy and playfulness with social critique and the persistent questioning of existing values and hierarchies. Through his seamless integration of genres, subjects, techniques, and exhibition strategies, he has expanded conventional ways of approaching the medium, and his practice continues to address the fundamental question of what it means to create pictures in an increasingly image-saturated world. Tillmans transforms Morena di Luna into an overall installation spanning both gallery spaces and the connecting hallway. The title ... More



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In life beauty perishes, but not in art. Leonardo da Vinci

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Katherine Bradford's first solo exhibition with kaufmann repetto opens in Milan
MILAN.- kaufmann repetto is presenting Lifeguards, Katherine Bradford’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. Katherine Bradford’s mesmerizing yet rigorous visual language freely traverses the relationship between nonobjective and representational painting, allowing potential narratives to unfold and interweave with the investigation of form and color. In Bradford’s exhibition, Lifeguards, we find ourselves immersed in a world of vast expanses of color depicting water and sky, populated by bathers and swimmers. Shades of blue ranging from cobalt to azure, and ultramarine to turquoise, divide the canvas into distinct horizontal planes, while the variations in saturation and tone evoke an elusive yet palpable atmosphere. Lighter and darker hues are interchangeable and used without functional or hierarchical distinction. Subtle modulations of pale lavender ... More

Africa enters Cannes with homage to Chad 'heroines'
CANNES (AFP).- Africa took centre stage at the Cannes festival on Thursday with a film celebrating Chadian women who navigate religious dogma and male domination with courage, ruses and female solidarity. "Lingui" by Cannes veteran Mahamat Saleh Haroun is the main competition's only entry from sub-Saharan Africa, and tells the story of a pregnant teenager in the poor outskirts of Chad's capital N'Djamena. The 15-year old girl, daughter of a single mother, wants an abortion but faces huge obstacles, both legal and religious, within her Muslim community. In a society where men seem to hold all the power and are rarely held accountable for their actions, the women have to find covert ways to protect themselves. "It's a film about the ordinary lives of women," Haroun told AFP in an interview. "They are the heroines of everyday life." ... More

Architect finds a sense of belonging for his family's homeland, and for himself
NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- The first time Omar Degan set foot in Mogadishu, in October 2017, he quickly grasped that it bore little resemblance to the picturesque cityscape his parents, Somali refugees who had fled to Europe, described to him growing up. Instead of an idyllic scene of whitewashed buildings and modernist architecture set against the turquoise waters of the Indian Ocean, he found a new Mogadishu, one that had emerged in a rush to rebuild after Somalia’s civil war. Concrete roadblocks and blastproof walls remained pervasive, and camps for displaced people abutted multicolored condominiums with barely a hint of local styles or heritage. For Degan, a 31-year-old architect, that dissonance echoed a loss of cultural identity that he has since worked to restore, and that he hopes others will increasingly embrace in the process ... More

Exhibition brings together work by 10 British African diaspora artists
CAMBRIDGE.- Kettle’s Yard opened Untitled: art on the conditions of our time. This exhibition brings together work by 10 British African diaspora artists with a focus on how their innovative practices ask important questions about some of the most important cultural and political issues of our turbulent times. The exhibition features new commissions by Barby Asante, Appau Junior Boakye-Yiadom and NT, as well as new and recent work by Larry Achiampong & David Blandy, Phoebe Boswell, Kimathi Donkor, Evan Ifekoya, Cedar Lewisohn, Harold Offeh and Ima-Abasi Okon. Painting, drawing and printmaking sits alongside performance, video and sound installation. The exhibition title refers to the longstanding art historical convention of leaving artworks ‘untitled’ in order to encourage attention onto the works themselves, and eliminate reliance upon ... More

The eight-year marathon to bring Anne Frank to the big screen
CANNES (AFP).- After making one of the most successful adult animated films of all time in "Waltz With Bashir", Israeli director Ari Folman vowed never to tackle the mind-bending complexity of such projects again. But when he got the chance to bring the iconic story of Anne Frank to the big screen for children, he couldn't resist -- even though it ended up taking over his life for eight years. "Where is Anne Frank", which debuted at Cannes this week, is another beautifully drawn cartoon, and his first to be aimed at younger audiences. Folman happily admits this is because his last attempt at an adult animation -- "The Congress" starring Robin Wright and Harvey Keitel -- was a massive flop. Despite being praised by critics, that film was "a disaster in the box office," Folman told AFP in an interview at Cannes. "I hassled so many people, raised $10 million, ... More

Anna Netrebko headlines Athens as Greece reopens for live opera
ATHENS (AFP).- Russian operatic superstar Anna Netrebko makes a rare appearance in Athens on Saturday in an all-star concert that will mark the reopening of live performances at the Greek National Opera even as authorities sound the alarm over a resurgence in coronavirus infections. Netrebko will headline the All Star Verdi Gala at Athen's historic Panathenaic stadium, the site of the first modern Olympic games, in an evening of arias and duets from some of Verdi's best-loved operas, such as "Aida", Il Trovatore", "The Force of Destiny", "Otello" and "Rigoletto". She will star alongside her husband, Azerbaijan tenor Yusif Eyvazov, Greek baritone Dimitry Platanias and Georgian mezzo Anita Rachvelishvili, accompanied by the orchestra of the Greek National Opera under the baton of French conductor Philippe Auguin. "We are very excited, ... More

Blenheim Art Foundation opens exhibition by Tino Seghal
WOODSTOCK.- Blenheim Art Foundation opened a major solo exhibition by Tino Sehgal, taking place 9 July – 15 August 2021. Following a year of extensive confinement indoors, this is the first exhibition at Blenheim designed specifically for the Park and Gardens. Tino Sehgal (b. 1976) is known for artworks composed exclusively using the human body, voice, and social interaction. His artistic practice focuses on the fleeting gestures and subtleties of social encounters, with participation and open exchange as the subjects of value, rather than material objects. For this project, Sehgal presents a complex, roaming choreography imagined for Blenheim, involving more than 30 participants. Conceived as a series of scenes rather than works with fixed locations, the exhibition moves fluidly throughout the Park and Gardens like a game of encounters, ... More

The collection of Diane and Sam Stewart will star in single-owner sale at Bonhams
LOS ANGELES, CA.- On Wednesday, August 4, Bonhams Los Angeles will hold a single-owner sale of the Collection of Sam and Diane Stewart, with Ernest Martin Hennings’ Indian Horsemen leading the sale. This work, which the Stewarts purchased from Bonhams in 2004, was painted at the height of the artist’s mature career. The composition features three Navajo figures on horseback in the immediate foreground, set against a yellow aspen landscape, a common theme often seen in Hennings’ oeuvre. The work is estimated at $600,000 – 800,000. Bonhams Western Art Specialist Katherine Halligan commented, “The Collection of Sam and Diane Stewart features a simply magnificent array of artwork, including the iconic top lot Indian Horsemen by Hennings, Dunton’s Delivering the Mail, an important and timely depiction of a working ... More

Using the wisdom of dance to find our way back to our bodies
NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Somewhere in the middle of April, I started taking up space again in the world, the bigger one outside of my apartment, beyond my neighborhood. Taking up space is a bizarre feeling after a year spent inside. It’s sometimes exhilarating, sometimes terrifying. It’s always strange. As we emerge from the pandemic, we’re not just walking around without masks, we’re learning how to reenter our bodies. It’s wild out there — meaning the merry, unnerving combination of New York City and lifted restrictions — but it’s still time to hold on to all that is slow. The pandemic, devastating in so many ways, has also been a chance to explore the value of the body and of the everyday, a chance to refocus your eyes, to realize, as dance critic Edwin Denby wrote: “Daily life is wonderfully full of things to see. Not only people’s ... More

The Arizona collection of U.S. large cents to be offered at Heritage Auctions
DALLAS, TX.- A discerning eye taking advantage of important opportunities(no comma) led to the formation of The Arizona Collection of United States Large Cents, a special collection named after the home state of the shrewd collectors who assembled it. The trove features more than 150 coins, mostly within the Condition Census for their individual varieties. These coins carry the provenance of many collectors including Boka, Eliasberg, Holmes, Husak, Koshkarian, Naftzger, Pogue, Reiver, Starr, Twin Leaf and several others. This Arizona collector chose some of the best examples out of those past collections. The collection spans from 1793 to 1857, including exceptional quality and historically important examples of all types that will be offered without reserve during Heritage Auctions' Florida United Numismatic Convention U.S. Coins Auction in January ... More



Wataru Tominaga on "Refashioning"






 



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Flashback
On a day like today, Italian painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo died
November 11, 2024. Giuseppe Arcimboldo (1526 or 1527 - July 11, 1593) was an Italian painter best known for creating imaginative portrait heads made entirely of objects such as fruits, vegetables, flowers, fish, and books. In this image: Giuseppe Arcimboldo, Vertumne (portrait de Rodolphe II), vers 1590, Huile sur bois. Skokloster, Château de Skokloster (Suède).



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