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The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, September 14, 2021

 
Sculptor Tony Rosenthal's personal collection debuts at Roland Auctions NY

Big Red. Welded And Painted Aluminum - Tony Rosenthal (American, 1914-2009). Large welded and painted aluminum free standing lattice sculpture, signed, circa 1998.

GLEN COVE, NY.- Southampton based iconic American abstract sculptor Tony Rosenthal (American, 1914-2009) curated and refined his own personal collection, both in the Rosenthal home and upon its Southampton, NY property, over the course of a half century. Now, for the first time ever, the collection will be available to lovers everywhere. as Roland Auctions NY in Glen Cove, NY, in collaboration with the Tony Rosenthal estate, will present the Personal Collection of Tony Rosenthal on Saturday, September 25th at 10 am (ET). The auction event will feature many very impressive pieces from the Rosenthal home in Southampton, NY. “We are grateful to the artist’s estate for the opportunity to bring this truly outstanding artwork into the public sphere”, says Bill Roland. In preparation of the September 25th auction of the Personal Collection of Tony Rosenthal, three of his favorite pieces, “Lovers’, “Big Red” and “Mandala” variation (From the Ring Serie ... More


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Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Czech Republic announce the return of an Italian pageant shield   Sotheby's to offer the personal collection of Richard L. Feigen this fall in New York   Janet Borden, Inc. opens a new exhibition of photographs by Neil Winokur


"Shield showing the Storming of New Carthage (recto)," made in Italy c. 1535, attributed to Girolamo di Tommaso da Treviso (Italian, born c. 1497, died 1544), after a design by Giulio Romano (1492/99–1546). Wood, linen, gesso, gold, pigment, diameter: 24 inches (61 cm). Bequest of Carl Otto Kretzschmar von Kienbusch, 1977; deaccessioned 2021. Image courtesy Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2021.

PHILADELPHIA, PA.- The Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Czech Republic’s National Heritage Institute jointly announced today an agreement whereby an important Italian pageant shield with decoration attributed to Girolamo di Tommaso da Treviso (Italian, 1497-1544) has now been confirmed as belonging to the Czech Republic and will be returned to the Czech Republic from Philadelphia, where it has been on display in the Museum’s Galleries of Arms and Armor since 1976 as part of the Carl Otto Kretzschmar von Kienbusch Collection. Timothy Rub, the George D. Widener Director and CEO of the Philadelphia Museum of Art and Naděžda Goryczková, the General Director ... More
 

Lorenzo Monaco, The Prophet Jeremiah. Tempera on panel, gold ground. Estimate $600/800,000. Courtesy Sotheby's.

NEW YORK, NY.- Sotheby’s announced that it will offer works from the personal collection of one of the most respected figures in the art world, the late Richard L. Feigen, in a dedicated single owner sale in New York on 18 October. Exemplifying the legendary dealer’s keen eye and instinct, Collector, Dealer, Connoisseur: The Vision of Richard L. Feigen -- will present 55 paintings and works on paper from the major schools of Europe from the 14th to 20th centuries amassed over the dealer’s 60+ years in the art world. The selection includes a variety of works including portraits, landscapes and genre scenes, with particular strengths in Italian gold-ground paintings, British landscapes and 20th-century German art. Highlights from the collection will be on view at Sotheby’s London galleries from 17 – 23 September, and the entire collection will be displayed alongside the ... More
 

Neil Winokur, Bok Choy.

NEW YORK, NY.- Janet Borden, Inc. opened Neil Winokur: Produce, a new exhibition of photographs by this master of the irreducible. The exhibition runs from 11 September – 20 October 2021. Neil Winokur, who is widely known for his deadpan rendering of dogs, people, and pets, has turned his attention to fruits and vegetables. Begun during quarantine, these are luscious portraits of humble forms. Although free of irony, the images evince a playfulness as well. They are seductive without being sentimental, illustrative not metaphorical. The straightforward pose of the object against a brilliantly monochromatic color background is Winokur's signature style. Using gels in addition to color backdrops, Winokur charms more light and more intense hues that usually seen. This gives the subjects their iconic look. Even mushrooms are seductively attractive. Each print bursts with hyper-saturated color. Fennel fronds are gently articulated against an ... More



Unearthed at a British golf course: A log coffin from the Bronze Age   Cardi Gallery opens a comprehensive exhibition of Irving Penn's work   Lucy Lacoste Gallery announces the passing of renowned ceramic sculptor Arnie Zimmerman


Ian Panter, the head of conservation at York Archaeological Trust, with the Bronze Age log coffin discovered on a British golf course in 2018. Charlotte Graham via The New York Times.

by Maria Cramer


NEW YORK, NY.- In July 2018, Hugh Willmott was overseeing the excavation of an Anglo-Saxon burial site in northeast England when a regional preservation official told him about a potentially more exciting find. Just down the road, at Tetney Golf Club, a local golf course, workers digging in a small pond with a giant excavator had hit something extremely unexpected: a prehistoric coffin containing the skeletal remains of a man. When Willmott, an archaeologist and senior lecturer at the University of Sheffield, arrived at the golf course the next day, he found a scene that he said could only be described as “a mess.” Ten to 12 feet underground, the crew had discovered a waterlogged burial site and an exposed coffin broken in pieces. ... More
 

Irving Penn, Black and White Vogue Cover (Jean Patchett), New York, 1950, Gelatin silver print mounted to Strathmore paper, 43.8 x 40.3 cm (17 1/4 x 15 7/8 in) © Condé Nast.

MILAN.- Cardi Gallery Milan is presenting Irving Penn, a comprehensive exhibition of the artist’s oeuvre that offers the opportunity to experience the breadth of Irving Penn’s artistic practice for the first time in over 30 years in Milan, Italy. Spanning over two floors of exhibition space, the show explores Penn’s signature fashion photography and beyond, including a separate first floor solely dedicated to the artist’s work related to Italy. Presenting a remarkably diverse body of work stretching from the 1940s to the 1990s, this exhibition showcases photographs from nearly all chapters of Penn’s seminal artistic career. In collaboration with The Irving Penn Foundation, Irving Penn takes place September 9–December 22, 2021. Considered to be one of the greatest photographers of the 20th century, Irving Penn ... More
 

Photo of Arnie by Ann Rosenthal.

CONCORD, MASS.- Lucy Lacoste Gallery who has shown the internationally renowned ceramic sculptor Arnie Zimmerman several times over the years, announced with sadness the passing of the sculptor at his home in Hastings New York on July 29, 2021. He was 67. Three of Zimmerman’s works were featured prominently in the recently acclaimed ceramic exhibition at the Metropolitan Art Museum: Shapes out of Nowhere from the Robert Ellison collection. Altogether the Metropolitan acquired a total of eight sculptures by the artist through this Collection. Zimmerman received his MFA form Alfred University and his BFA from the Kansas City Art institute. Originally drawn to the making of pots for the sake of their simplicity, Zimmerman then trained as a stone carver in France. This led to his prominence in the mid 1980’s with large scale carved vessels resembling giant totems, such as one over eight feet tall found in the collection of the Honolulu Mus ... More



Huma Bhabha opens first solo exhibition with Xavier Hufkens   Prestel publishes 'Portrait of an Artist: Conversations with Trailblazing Creative Women' by Hugo Huerta Marin   When Wes Anderson comes to town, buildings get symmetrical


Huma Bhabha, Untitled, 2020. Ink, acrylic, pastel and collage on paper, 77.2 × 57.8 cm, 30 3 ⁄8 × 22 3 ⁄4 in. Courtesy the Artist and Xavier Hufkens, Brussels. Photo: HV-studio.

BRUSSELS.- Xavier Hufkens announced Huma Bhabha’s (b. 1962) first solo exhibition with the gallery. Featuring new sculptures and drawings, The Setup presents an overview of the visual and material language that the artist has been developing for over three decades. Bhabha’s sculptures are informed by a myriad of cultural references and executed in an equally diverse range of materials, processes and techniques. She is known for her evocative assemblages crafted from modest and unconventional materials (clay, Styrofoam, wood, wire, plaster, jute, paint) and for her powerful, totemic figures in materials such as cork or bronze. In parallel, Bhabha also creates complex, multi-layered works on paper in which the fearsome and the strange are rendered penetrating and beautiful. The exhibition brings together these various strands of Bhabha’s oeuvre in an installation that plays ... More
 

Yoko Ono photographed by Hugo Huerta Marin for Portrait of an Artist. Published by Prestel.

LONDON.- Portrait of an Artist: Conversations with Trailblazing Creative Women is a remarkable new book bringing you face-to-face with an incredible selection of pioneering women who have reshaped the creative industries. Published by Prestel on 7th September, Portrait of an Artist features world-famous women all photographed and interviewed by Mexican artist Hugo Huerta Marin. These unseen candid images and ground-breaking interviews will be published for the first time. From legendary visual artists Yoko Ono and Tracey Emin to groundbreaking musicians like Annie Lennox and Debbie Harry, and fashion giants such as Miuccia Prada and Diane von Fürstenberg, this collection of original interviews and Polaroid photographs of almost 30 trailblazing women spans creative industries, nationalities and generations to bring together a never-before published collection of leading voices. Each creative is interviewed by multi-disciplinary artist ... More
 

In a photo provided by Roger Do Minh, the crew built the backside of the French Dispatch building on set to capture a moment where a character walks up a visible staircase. Roger Do Minh via The New York Times.

by Mekado Murphy


NEW YORK, NY.- What happens when you combine the cinema of Wes Anderson with a charming, historic French city? You get a stylized version of France that highlights the director’s whimsical passions — like centuries-old buildings reframed in symmetric picture-book ways and neighborhoods accented with quaint and colorful accessories. “The French Dispatch” is Anderson’s ode to journalism, French cinema and the magic found while winding through the country’s cobblestone streets. It is heavily peppered with distinct, fussed-over design elements that both celebrate and heighten its French aesthetic. The movie, which is scheduled to be released in theaters on Oct. 22, focuses on an American magazine that is published in the ... More


Bonhams and The Connor Brothers join forces in aid of The Big Issue   'Convergent Evolutions: The Conscious of Body Work' opens at Pace   Christie's appoints Natasha Le Bel as Global Head of Communications


The Connor Brothers (British), We Must Be Careful. Estimate: £ 3,000 - 5,000. Photo: Bonhams.

LONDON.- Bonhams is teaming up with The Connor Brothers for an exclusive charity auction of 11 new works. Created in celebration of the 30th anniversary of The Big Issue, the duo will offer 11 specially created works as part of Bonhams Prints and Multiples sale on 22 September in Knightsbridge. The works, which include Normal Is The Cruelest of All Insults, and Tell Me Beautiful Untrue Things, have individual estimates of £3,000 - 5,000 (each to be sold with no reserve). All profits will be donated to The Big Issue, UK. Speaking of the collaboration, The Connor Brothers said: “Coming back into the world, it feels like a lot has changed. One thing we’ve noticed is the high streets are noticeably quieter than they were pre-lockdown. This might be nice for shoppers, but it’s pretty catastrophic for Big Issue vendors, who rely for their income on passers-by buying the magazine. "For 30 years the Big Issue has provided a ‘hand ... More
 

Lucas Samaras, Sittings 8 x 10, 2/21/80, 1980. Color Polaroid photograph, 10" x 8" (25.4 cm x 20.3 cm) unique. © Lucas Samaras, courtesy Pace Gallery.

NEW YORK, NY.- Pace Gallery is presenting Convergent Evolutions: The Conscious of Body Work, an exhibition curated by Online Sales Director Christiana Ine-Kimba Boyle and on view in New York from September 10 to October 23, 2021. The exhibition explores how intergenerational artists have used various instruments within their practices to grant or deny viewers the agency of viewership while also surveying the body’s response to the visual plane. Central to the presentation are the artists’ abilities to manipulate the ways that viewers interact with and experience their works. The show takes its title from a scientific term that refers to the development of similar traits in species belonging to different time periods. The exhibition marks Boyle’s major curatorial debut at Pace. Since joining the gallery in May 2021, Boyle has spearheaded Pace’s growing NFT program. Among ... More
 

Natasha will oversee strategic communications for the company as a member of the senior leadership team. Photo: Alice Prenat. © Christie's Images Ltd 2021.

NEW YORK, NY.- Christie’s announced the appointment of Natasha Le Bel as Global Head of Communications. Based in New York at Christie’s Americas headquarters in Rockefeller Center, Natasha will oversee strategic communications for the company as a member of the senior leadership team. Reporting to CEO Guillaume Cerutti, Natasha will work closely with Christie’s executive management group, regional presidents and communications and marketing teams in New York, London, Paris, and Hong Kong to lead and coordinate key aspects of the company’s executive and corporate communications programs. A native New Yorker with a global viewpoint, Natasha brings to Christie’s twenty years of experience providing strategic counsel and developing communications campaigns for cultural clients including major museums, performing arts organisations, educational institutions ... More



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The Symbolists... must be fought like a disease. Camille Pissarro

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Molly Ott Ambler appointed Head of the Fine Art Division for Bonhams US
NEW YORK, NY.- Bonhams announces Molly Ott Ambler has been appointed Head of the Fine Art Division for Bonhams US. In her new role, Molly, who was previously the Director of Impressionist and Modern Art at Bonhams, will provide leadership for the international auction house’s 20th Century Fine Art departments, including Post-War & Contemporary Art, Impressionist & Modern Art, and American Art. Among many notable achievements, Molly facilitated the consignment of Picasso’s Femme au béret mauve that sold at Bonhams New York in May 2021 for $10.8m. Molly will work closely with Leslie Wright, Chairman of Bonhams North America, as well as Ralph Taylor, Global Head of Post-War & Contemporary Art, and India Phillips, Global Head of Impressionist and Modern Art, both of whom will continue to lead their respective departments on a global basis. Molly joined Bonhams in ... More

Nino Castelnuovo, 'The Umbrellas of Cherbourg' star, dies at 84
NEW YORK, NY.- Nino Castelnuovo, a popular Italian film and television actor who found success beyond his home country when he starred alongside Catherine Deneuve in the soaringly sentimental French new wave musical “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg,” died Sept. 6 in Rome. He was 84. His death, in a hospital, was confirmed by his representative, Simone Oppi. Castelnuovo, who brought an incandescent charm to the screen, became a star during a golden age of Italian cinema. He collaborated with leading directors such as Luchino Visconti and Vittorio De Sica and acted alongside greats such as Alberto Sordi and Claudia Cardinale. If he achieved international notice with “Umbrellas,” he did not truly attain fame in Italy until 1967, for his role as Renzo in a television series based on Alessandro Manzoni’s 1827 literary epic, “The Betrothed,” which takes place during a plague in the ... More

Review: Passion Fruit Dance Company brings the club to the stage
NEW YORK, NY.- As they have been doing regularly since the start of the pandemic, the father-son DJ duo known as St. James Joy got the party started right, this time at the BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival on Friday evening. Then DJ Pfunk and house producer Saadiq Bolden shook the newly renamed Lena Horne Bandshell, with some stronger sounds and enough bass to make even seated bodies vibrate. The atmosphere of a dance club was taken outside mostly intact. All this, though, was preshow. The main event was a performance by the up-and-coming Passion Fruit Dance Company, which is dedicated to transferring the dance and culture of house and hip-hop from the club to the stage. And something about this transfer felt blocked, incomplete, trapped. “Trapped,” in fact, was the title of the work, a premiere. The skilled dancers began encased in cocoons of stretchy ... More

How surreal! How radical! How avant-garde! How Broadway?
NEW YORK, NY.- Among the 21 returning and 19 new productions scheduled to begin performances on Broadway before the end of the year, the seven plays written by Black playwrights have received the most attention. And rightly so: It’s long past time that the commercial theater paid more than lip service to representation and inclusion. But another change is also happening on Broadway, this one about genre and provenance instead of authorship and inclusion. An unusually large proportion of the 10 plays opening this fall are what one producer calls “formally inventive” and what others might label downtown, avant-garde, experimental or (that dread word) challenging. Three of the most prominent — “Is This a Room,” “Dana H.” and “Pass Over” — come from off-Broadway and off-off-Broadway theaters. That is not in itself so odd; the noncommercial world has fed the commercial ... More

Curtains up! How Broadway is coming back from its longest shutdown.
NEW YORK, NY.- Broadway is back. Or so it hopes. A year and a half after the coronavirus pandemic forced all 41 theaters to go dark, silencing a symbol of New York and throwing thousands out of work, some of the industry’s biggest and best known shows are resuming performances on Tuesday. Simba will reclaim the Pride Lands in the “The Lion King.” Elphaba and Glinda will return to Oz in “Wicked.” A young, scrappy and hungry immigrant will foment revolution in “Hamilton.” The long-running revival of “Chicago” will give ‘em the old razzle dazzle. Plus there’s one new production, the childhood reminiscence “Lackawanna Blues,” offering a reminder that Broadway still provides a home for plays, too. Broadway’s reopening is a high-stakes gamble that theater lovers, culture vultures and screen-weary adventurers are ready to return — vaccinated and masked — to these storied ... More

The New Art Centre opens an exhibition of work by Edward Allington and Nika Neelova
SALISBURY.- The New Art Centre opened One of Many Fragments – an exhibition of work by Edward Allington and his former student at Slade School of Fine Art in London, Nika Neelova. Inspired by architectural details and artefacts, both artists reimagine objects and visual qualities that have been so commonly used they are now overlooked. Where Allington plays with the replication of classical designs and motifs, Neelova repurposes materials to create new forms. Edward Allington (1951 – 2017) is known for his experimental approach to sculpture and was a central figure in the ‘New British Sculpture’ movement of the 1980s, alongside contemporaries such as Antony Gormley and Richard Deacon. His work is characterised by the stylistic influences of classical architectural forms and his sculpture often features fragments of columns, pediments and cornices with classical ... More

Sullivan+Strumpf opens two new online exhibitions of works by Kirsten Coelho and Jemima Wyman
SYDNEY.- Two excellent new exhibitions have just opened at Sullivan+Strumpf Sydney; and although the gallery is currently closed due to lockdown orders, these shows are wonderfully brought to life in the carefully curated Sullivan+Strumpf online Viewing Room.Kirsten Coelho, There on the other shore, marks the Sullivan+Strumpf solo debut of one of Australia’s finest ceramic artists. Renowned for her porcelain vessels “of other-worldly perfection”, Coelho’s work is has been influenced by the history of ceramics, in particular the aging surfaces of nineteenth and early twentieth-century domestic enamel wares such as jugs, flask, bowls, beakers; echoes of the pleasures of daily life which she reiterates in inviolate meditations on the history, purity and order of daily rituals and routines. In this latest exhibition she brings together five different porcelain clay bodies; using her handmade ... More

Jane Lombard Gallery presents a new body of work by Sawangwongse Yawnghwe
NEW YORK, NY.- Jane Lombard Gallery is presenting Cappuccino in Exile, a new body of work by Sawangwongse Yawnghwe made in response to the Myanmar military coup that began in February of 2021. Using painting both as a mechanism for indexing the present and accessing the past, Yawnghwe explores current events in parallel with his family's exilement following the Burmese military coup of 1962. The exhibition is on view at Jane Lombard Gallery from September 10th - October 23rd, 2021. Myanmar (formerly known as Burma) is in turmoil. On the morning of February 1st, 2021, a day before the inauguration of a new administration, a coup began as democratically elected members of the country’s ruling party were forcefully removed from office by the Tatmadaw, Myanmar’s military. Proclaiming a year-long state of emergency, the Tatmadaw declared the results of ... More

Workplace opens an exhibition of new multi-media and installation works by Simeon Barclay
LONDON.- Workplace is presenting England's Lost Camelot, an exhibition of new multi-media and installation works by British artist Simeon Barclay. England's Lost Camelot is Barclay’s first solo show with Workplace and opened this September at the gallery's West End location. The exhibition takes as its starting point the legacy of the gallant knight, examining the persistence of its associated iconography in British folklore and its lasting influence in the construction of still prevalent ideas of masculinity. Combining research of this medieval legend with reference to popular culture and his personal biography, Barclay continues to explore the contestation, and strategic negotiation of cultural narratives that influence our behaviour and conformity to archetypes. The installation elements, which surround the works in the exhibition, feature artefacts and images borrowed from ... More

Anasa Sinegal named DEL Leader at MWPAI, ICAN
UTICA, NY.- Anasa D. Sinegal of Little Falls, NY, has been named Diversity and Engagement Leader for Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute and Integrated Community Alternatives Network (ICAN). The new position will strengthen diversity, equity, and inclusion across the community and received funding from The Community Foundation of Herkimer and Oneida Counties. Sinegal worked previously as a research analyst and consultant at Phenomenalogics Media Diversity Consultants. Prior to that, she was a Division Director at Central Piedmont Community College in Charlotte, North Carolina, where she served on a number of committees and was the digital media, journalism, and communication director. Sinegal holds a master’s degree in communications from Cal State University and a bachelor’s degree in journalism from University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. At Munson-Williams, she ... More

Ronchini opens an exhibition featuring new works by David Olatoye and Victor Ubah
LONDON.- Ronchini is presenting Historical Fictions II, an exhibition featuring new works by: David Olatoye and Victor Ubah, and curated by: Wunika Mukan. Historical Fictions II revisits artists David Olatoye and Victor Ubah, following along from their successful inaugural duo exhibition at Pacers Gallery, Lagos, Nigeria. The inaugural exhibition featured intimate portraits that embraced the universal themes of love and family, and the exhibition at Ronchini is a progression as it delves deeper into the textures of the artists’ visions. In Historical Fictions II, Olatoye and Ubah take a fresh approach to engaging their subjects with their environments in their new bodies of work. Through the lens of each of their sitters, both artists ripen their sense of play and possibility. Olatoye’s new work draws the curtain on the deep, romantic patina of his imagined idyllic home interior. Moving from more formally ... More

Elusive Hermès Himalayan Crocodile Birkin could exceed $100,000 at Heritage Auctions
DALLAS, TX.- There is rare, and then there is this kind of rare. An Hermès 30cm Matte White Himalayan Niloticus Crocodile Birkin Bag with Palladium Hardware, the incredibly rare and most desirable handbag ever created, is coming up in Heritage Auctions’ Autumn Luxury Accessories event happening Sept 26. The bag, in Like New condition, carries a pre-auction estimate of $80,000-100,000. It features the rarest of materials, the Nile crocodile, as well as two rolled handles, along with a flap top with a turnlock closure. Its interior is done in Gris Cendre Chevre Leather, featuring one zip pocket and one slip pocket. It also includes two keys, a lock and a clochette. “The Himalayan Birkin is the pinnacle of rarity, artistry and luxury created by the house of Hermès, which is as much a work of art as it is functional,” Heritage Auctions Luxury Accessories Director Diane D’Amato said. ... More

The work and legacy of surrealist poet Aimé Césaire featured at The Dalí Museum this fall
ST. PETERSBURG, FLA.- The story and legacy of renowned Martinique poet, author and politician Aimé Césaire (1913-2008) is being celebrated in a special installation at The Dalí Museum this fall. Aimé Césaire: Poetry, Surrealism and Négritude explores Césaire’s poems, political activism and strong ties to the art and literature of his time. Césaire once said about his writing: “Surrealism provided me with what I had been confusedly searching for.” Aimé Césaire: Poetry, Surrealism and Négritude is organized by The Dalí Museum and co-curated by founder and artistic director of Studio@620 Bob Devin Jones and Dalí Museum curator of education Peter Tush. The free exhibit is on view in the Raymond James Community Room on the Museum’s ground floor Sept. 10 through Dec. 5, 2021. “It has been an honor to leverage my passions by working with The Dalí to share with our ... More



Artist Asta Gröting: Bringing Things Out Into the Light






 



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On a day like today, Italian architect Renzo Piano was born
November 14, 1937. Renzo Piano, Ufficiale OMRI (born 14 September 1937 in Genoa) is an Italian Pritzker Prize-winning architect. Architecture critic Nicolai Ouroussoff said of Piano's works that the "...serenity of his best buildings can almost make you believe that we live in a civilized world." In 2006, Piano was selected by TIME as one of the 100 most influential people in the world. He was selected as the 10th most influential person in the "Arts and Entertainment" category of the 2006 Time 100. In this image: Italian architect Renzo Piano, right,waits to receive the Danish Sonning Prize and its 1 million kroner (US$190,000) award during a ceremony Wednesday Oct. 1, 2008, at Copenhagen University in Copenhagen. His wife, Emilia Rossato, left, was seated next to him during the ceremony. The architect received the award for "commendable work that benefits European culture" and Piano's works include the New York Times building and the High Museum of Art in Atlanta.



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