In an undated image provided by J.R. Hutter, the businessman Martin Mobarak destroys what he heralded as a Frida Kahlo. Mobarak created 10,000 nonfungible tokens of the artwork. (J.R. Hutter via The New York Times)
First came the mariachi band, a flame-juggling dancer and the models in bathing suits and ballgowns sauntering beside the pool of a Miami mansion. Then the spectacle began. A businessperson who built his wealth on waves of speculation riding the dot-com surge in the 1990s and then the rapid growth of bitcoin in recent years popped a drawing out of its frame that he heralded as a page from Frida Kahlos personal diary. Wearing a sequined blazer with the artists portrait on his back, he pinned the picture to a martini glass filled with blue rubbing alcohol. It was set aflame, and the artwork was reduced to ashes. Attendees at the opulent July gathering, which was captured in a promotional video, had been notified that the drawing was being transformed to live eternally in the digital realm through the creation of non-fungible tokens that represented the rebirth & immortality of a timeless piece. Those who chose to buy an NFT with the ether ... More
NEW YORK, NY.-David Richard Gallery is pleased to present Optical, Shaped and Color Abstractions: Paintings 1963 1965 by Ronald Davis in his first solo exhibition with the Galley and first solo exhibition in New York since the presentation of his 1960s Monochrome Paintings at Franklin Parrasch Gallery in 2010. This presentation includes 7 geometric, hard-edge, and color-based abstract paintings from 1963 to 1965, all acrylic on canvas and created in California, and 4 drawings from 1966, 1975 and 1977. Together, these paintings and drawings map Daviss early explorations of illusory space and optical effects in the two-dimensional picture plane: starting from the early 1960s paintings in this exhibition and minimalist monochrome paintings from 1965; to his very well-known large scale shaped dodecagons, cubes and slab cast resin paintings (1966-1972); then to the ... More
"Sonnenflecken", Max Pechstein. Estimated at $1,200,000 1,800,000. Photo Bonhams.
NEW YORK, NY.- On December 6 in New York, Sonnenflecken (1922), a masterpiece by Max Pechstein (1881-1955), renowned painter and member of the Die Brücke group, will highlight Bonhams Impressionist & Modern Art auction. Offered at an estimate of $1,200,000 1,800,000, the work is one of a series of boldly colored Expressionist landscapes and waterscapes Pechstein painted during the early 1920s and is emblematic of a period of great productivity and creativity in his life, a rebirth as he called it, during which he was completely devoted to his art. Sonnenflecken likely belongs to the series of Colorist landscapes which Pechstein executed in and around Leba a small village on the Baltic coast of what is now Poland from July to September 1922, with the central subject being the reflection of the sun on water, the study of which would recur in his later works. Pechsteins enthusiasm for the rustic environs of Leba is imb ... More
NEW YORK, NY.-Gagosian is pleased to announce Vestment, an exhibition of new works by Theaster Gates at 976 Madison Avenue, New York. Vestment, a new series of tar paintings or torch works by Gates, continues the artists ongoing engagement with formalism and mark making at the scale of the roof. In this suite of paintings and a sculpture, Gates diverges from earlier monochromatic torch works and experiments with color as a formal device for exploring spiritual and stylistic hierarchies, religious garments and aggrandizement, and the symbolism and universalism of nationhood. The new tar paintings serve as a distillate of some of the key intellectual musings with which Gates has grappled over the past year and throughout his practice. Invoking his recent ... More
Christina Vassallo is the institutions new Alice & Harris Weston Director. Photo: Jessi Melcer.
CINCINNATI, OH.-The Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati has announced the appointment of Christina Vassallo as the institutions new Alice & Harris Weston Director. An accomplished and effective arts administrator and curator, Vassallo brings more than ten years of executive-level experience at forward-thinking contemporary arts institutions, currently serving as Executive Director of The Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia. She comes to the CAC with a history of successful leadership in fundraising, education and outreach initiatives, and artistic collaborations of varying scope and size, as well as a deep understanding of the cultural ecosystems of Ohio and the Midwest, having previously served as Executive + Artistic Director of SPACES in Cleveland from 2014 to 2019. Vassallo begins in her new role at the CAC in March 2023. It was important to the Board that we select someone with an understanding of not just ... More
Fine and rare late 17th century ebony cased quarter repeating striking table clock Thomas Tompion, no. 198. Estimate: £200,000-300,000. Photo: Bonhams.
LONDON.- Two exquisite timepieces by the Father of English Clockmaking, Thomas Tompion (1639-1713) from the Elliot Collection of Fine English Clocks feature in Bonhams Fine Clocks Sale in London on Wednesday 30 November 2022. The collection also includes an important late 17th century ebony veneered longcase clock of three-month duration by another great clockmaker of the Golden Age, Joseph Knibb (1640-1711). In addition to these masterpieces of timekeeping, Old Master pictures, 19th century paintings and classic English decorative arts from Alan and Tara Elliots historic country home are to be offered in separate sale The Old Rectory Chilton Foliat at Bonhams on Tuesday 6 December. Tompions ebony table clock numbered 198, was made in around 1692, and embodies all that Tompion owners cherish. The tall rectangular dial with its twin subsidiaries allows the crucial functions (time, ... More
In an image provided by the auction house Christies, The Canal at St-Georges-Motel (ca. 1930), painted by Winston Churchill. It sold at Christies for $376,000 in October 2022, evidence of expanding interest in the British leaders work as an artist. (Christie's via The New York Times)
NEW YORK, NY.- Winston Churchill, whose fiery resolve and puckish impudence led many to embrace him as an inspiring, authentic, if imperfect, leader, never set out to become an accomplished artist. He only began painting as a respite from depression when, at age 40 in 1915, he resigned as the civilian head of Britains Royal Navy during World War I. He had advocated that the Allied navies open what turned out to be a disastrous front in the Dardanelles strait. Painting came to my rescue in a most trying time, he later wrote. But perseverance, which served Churchill well in other settings, also led him to become a reliable, productive performer with a brush who created more than 500 works. They are prized today, perhaps more for their authorship than their aesthetics, but they are ... More
Third Floor Gallery Installation View. Photo: Sperone Westwater, New York.
NEW YORK, NY.-Sperone Westwater is presenting an exhibition of moody, contemplative watercolors and works on paper by artist and filmmaker David Lynch. I Like to See My Sheep marks his second show with the gallery, featuring nine new works on paper from 2021, as well as 22 monochromatic watercolors made between 2010 and 2017. A concurrent exhibition, Big Bongo Night, at Pace Gallery in Chelsea features Lynchs paintings and sculptures. The collection of watercolors were made at Idem printing press in Paris, which was the subject of a 2013 documentary, Idem Paris, directed by Lynch. Hervé Chandès from the Fondation Cartier first introduced me to Patrice Forest [the studios director], Lynch explains. I see this incredible place, and I get the opportunity to work there. And this was like a dream! It just opened up this brand-new world. In this atmosphere so conducive to creating, he was inspire ... More
An untitled 1961 work of welded steel, canvas, wire and rope at Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, on Feb 22, 2010. (Chad Batka/The New York Times)
by Jennifer Szalai
NEW YORK, NY.- Lee Bontecou, whose enormous, enigmatic wall-mounted sculptures garnered the kind of public acclaim and institutional backing in the 1960s typically reserved for male art stars at the time, died Tuesday at her home in Florida. She was 91. Her representative, Bill Maynes, confirmed the death but declined to specify where in Florida she lived. Bontecou was one of the first and, for a time, one of the only women shown at the influential Leo Castelli Gallery, whose roster of artists included Cy Twombly, Frank Stella and Robert Rauschenberg. In the mid-1960s, artist and critic Donald Judd praised her pioneering use of a three-dimensional form that was neither painting nor sculpture and deemed her one of the best artists ... More
Live Auction on 10-11 December to Feature Important Timepieces by George Daniels, Rolex, Patek Philippe, Cartier, Omega, and Urwerk. Image courtesy of Phillips.
NEW YORK, NY.-Phillips will present the full catalogue for The New York Watch Auction: SEVEN, showcasing nearly 180 rare and important timepieces, including the previously announced Cartier London Crash and the early F.P. Journe Tourbillon Souverain numbered 038/99T. Featuring the only known Patek Philippe ref. 2499 retailed by Howes, the auction offers an exceptional selection of watches from time-tested brands alongside independent makers. Following the success of the world tour, the watches will be unveiled in New York at 432 Park Avenue in the public exhibition opening on 3 December. The auction will then take place over the course of two days on 10-11 December. Paul Boutros, Head of Watches, Americas, and Isabella Proia, Head of Sale, said, Following Phillips White Glove sale in Geneva just days ago, which ... More
Big Daddy Fun/Second Version, 1995. Cast rubber, wood, and pipe. 82 ½ x 77 x 49 in.
WATER MILL, NY.-The Parrish Art Museum presents Mel Kendrick: Seeing Things in Thingsthe first major survey of Kendricks (American, b. 1949) work highlighting his four-decade career. On view November 6, 2022 through February 19, 2023, the exhibition explores how Kendrick, one of Americas renowned contemporary sculptors, pushes the limits of his materialswood, rubber, and concreteto create sculpture that lays bare the process by which it was made, manipulating the language of abstraction with wit and rigor. Through his creative inquiry, Kendrick invites viewers to think about the relationships between representation and abstraction, sculpture and the body, organic and synthetic, and natural and made by hand. Focusing on the development of specific bodies of work, the comprehensive, multi-gallery ... More
Shary Boyle, Rage, 2022, Porcelain, underglaze, china paint, glazes, gold lustre, gold chain, 13 x 20.5 x 12 inches.
NEW YORK, NY.-Sargents Daughters is presenting The Forgetting, the first New York solo presentation of Toronto-based artist Shary Boyle. Boyles practice bridges diverse forms of artmaking, including sculpture, drawing, installation and performance. In 2013, Boyle represented Canada at the 55th Venice Biennale, and her work has appeared in major international venues, including the Gyeonggi International Ceramic Biennale, South Korea; The Gardiner Museum, Toronto, Canada; and Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, PA. In this exhibition, the artist combines a range of materials, as well as specific social and political histories, to produce a new body of work which explores the formation of personal identity in the midst of cultural crisis. Concurrent with The Forgetting, Boyles traveling solo exhibition, Outside the Palace of Me, is on view ... More
Tomashi Jackson, detail view.
NEW YORK, NY.-Tilton Gallery will present today "Tomashi Jackson: The Great Society", November 10th through January 21st. This will be Jackson's third solo show at the gallery. A reception for the artist will take place on Thursday, November 10th from 6:00 to 8:00 pm. In The Great Society, Tomashi Jackson continues to explore past legislation and key moments of history that are emblematic of times of important change and that are relevant to the present. She selects images that embody the spirit as well as facts of those moments to examine these historical events for their impact, heedful of how they resonate in our current time. For this exhibition, images taken from the public domain focus on three events where the possibility and promise of a great society was presented to audiences public and private in 1963, 1965, and 1969. Jackson looks at President Lyndon Baines Johnson's first formal speech about his intentions for the ... More
Quote The more minimal the art, the more maximum the explanation. Hilton Kramer
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Nantucket Historical Association receives serendipitous gift relating to naval officer with island ties NANTUCKET, MASS.-The Nantucket Historical Association announced it has been gifted additional items relating to the life of U.S. Navy Commander John Franklin Walling, who was lost at sea in 1945 while commanding the submarine USS Snook during World War II. This past August, the NHA announced it would receive Commander Wallings commissioning sword from Raymond F. DuBois, who received it from his mother and Wallings widow, Annabella Walling DuBois. Following this announcement, the NHA was contacted by Susan Carpenter, whose grandparents and mother had been dear friends of Annabella Walling and who, remarkably, was in possession of Wallings diaries from 193340. After years of trying to find someone to return the diaries to, she was delighted to place them in the NHAs care to accompany Commander Wallings sword. They record Wallings time at the U.S. ... More
Yuan Yuan's solo exhibition "Understory" opens today at Kiang Malingue gallery HONG KONG.-Kiang Malingue and Qiao Space present Yuan Yuans exhibition "Understory", showcasing seven recent paintings created by the artist in the last two years, and a series of paintings created between 2012 and 2017. This is the Berlin-based artists first exhibition in Asia after Irregular Pearl at Kiang Malingue's Hong Kong gallery space in 2020. By juxtaposing a number of artworks from different periods and inspired by different realities, the exhibition presents the artists ever-deepening painting practice since 2008, revealing Yuan's keen insight as he navigates through the complexities of the representational realm. Yuan Yuan's recent large-scale paintings include Private Submarine made in 2022. Faithful to an absurd reality, the artist's signature meticulous approach avoids direct depiction of objects, focusing instead on "the patterns of shadows, the light and ... More
Museum of the Moving Image to honor Sarah Polley, Kazuo Ishiguro, and Laura Poitras at 2022 Moving Image Awards Gala ASTORIA, NY.- The Board of Trustees of Museum of the Moving Image today announced that acclaimed filmmaker Sarah Polley (Women Talking), renowned storyteller Kazuo Ishiguro (Living), and Academy Awardwinning documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras (All the Beauty and the Bloodshed) will be honored at their annual 2022 Moving Image Awards on Thursday, December 1, in Astoria, Queens. The esteemed honorees will be celebrated by friends and collaborators with a special program in the grand Sumner M. Redstone Theater, preceded by a cocktail reception and followed by dessert in the Hearst Lobby. Additional special guests to be announced. It is a great honor to recognize Sarah Polley, Sir Kazuo ... More
"Passing The Hour: Mhlekazi Samson Mnisi, A Contemporary Of No Peer" at Keyes Art Mile in Johannesburg JOHANNESBURG.- Mhlekazi is an African honorary badge bestowed to distinguished personalities of meritorious capability, abbreviated as Mhl. I am here with a little child in me, everyone seem to be older, wiser and more knowledgeable, through the years I have not past three, still all towers and fascinate in all degrees, when will I be the man in the mirror, to me he is always a mirage, every time I reach him I find an Illusion, so I am back at three with all my confusion, how I pray for growth and understanding, that all possess but fools and three year old, I believe only a foolish old man feels like three year old child, I do mind the fact that I cant seem to develop my mind. I pray to the spirit of Old to move me to the man I see in my reflection, all my emotions and thoughts have not matured past the child I feel, I am a man defeated by a child within, I am resigned to ignorance and wonder ... More
PHOTOFAIRS New York to launch September 2023 NEW YORK, NY.-Creo announced the launch of PHOTOFAIRS New York, a new contemporary art fair dedicated to photo-based and digital artworks. The Fairs inaugural edition will take place on September 8-10, 2023 at the Javits Center on Manhattans West Side and will feature 80-100 galleries from around the world, presenting a state-of-the-art view of visual culture. The Fairs strong curatorial approach will create a new platform where photography and new technologies intersect. It will provide a dedicated space for galleries and audiences to explore new trends in the contemporary art market centered around digital practices and innovative installations. From fine art photo-based works to experimental filmmaking, VR and NFTs, PHOTOFAIRS New York will connect collectors and visitors with international galleries and boundary-pushing artists inviting discourse and interaction. ... More
An auction that will let fans disguise themselves as John Hamm's Fletch DALLAS, TEXAS.- On Nov. 20, Heritage offers authenticated props, costumes from the Miramax film Confess, Fletch and the HBO Original The Time Travelers Wife. Greg Mottola has a confession: Until he signed on to write and direct the newly released Confess, Fletch, he had never read any of Gregory Mcdonald's nine novels starring investigative reporter Irwin Maurice Fletcher. Of course, Mottola the filmmaker responsible for The Daytrippers, Adventureland and Superbad had seen the 1985 Chevy Chase film based on Fletch, published in 1974. Many men of a certain age say, in their mid- to late 50s have introduced themselves as Dr. Rosenpenis, attempted to charge something to the Underhills or insisted it's all ball bearings nowadays. But those were all gags written for a movie that bore little relation to Mcdonald's novel save for some of its plot and a few of its ... More
Review: Making an epic visual impact with minimal means NEW YORK, NY.- A naked man mounts a bull. A bull gives birth to a naked woman. A woman, ensconced in a sort of translucent vulva costume, gives birth to a silicone baby. These are just a few of the surreal and primal images that populate Dimitris Papaioannous Transverse Orientation, a nearly two-hour wordless spectacle somewhere between dance, theater, circus arts and visual installation that had its New York premiere at the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Monday. Papaioannou, who began his career as a painter and comics artist, knows how to work on a large scale, having choreographed opening ceremonies for the 2004 Olympic Games in his home city, Athens, and for the 2015 European Games. The most intriguing aspects of Transverse Orientation, his second Brooklyn Academy presentation (after The Great Tamer in 2019), arise from a tension between ... More
The Warhol discovers Rare Velvet Underground master tapes PITTSBURGH, PA.-The Andy Warhol Museum announces the discovery and digitization of the rare master tapes of the Velvet Undergrounds debut album The Velvet Underground & Nico (1967, Verve Records). Recently identified while processing Andy Warhols archive at The Warhol, the nine initial tracks recorded by the band were the bedrock of the album that became one of my most jarring and influential albums in rock music. The monophonic reel-to-reel ¼ tapes feature alternate versions and mixes of songs later issued on the 1967 release. Youre hearing the album as the band originally intended, said Matt Gray, manager of archives at The Warhol. The track listing alone is a retelling of the album; the quality of sound is remarkable; it gives you a new perspective. The Velvet Undergrounds relationship with Andy Warhol began ... More
Fair And just solution for Nazi looted art At Ketterer Kunst MUNICH.- It is a precious gem with a great provenance and an eventful history: Now Carl Spitzwegs painting Lagernde Karrner (Rast der Streuner) will be called up in the autumn auctions at Ketterer Kunst in Munich on December 9/10 in an amicable agreement with the heirs after Olga Mengers. Up until 1916, Carl Spitzwegs painting was part of the renowned collection of Carl Hugo Schmeil, which was dissolved in an auction that year. The catalog of Helbing/Cassirer caught the attention of the recognized Berlin commercial judge Dr. Alfred Mengers, who acquired the subtle masterpiece for the grand price of 7,000 Mark. Mengers, who was also the director of his familys Velvetfabrik M. Mengers & Söhne in Berlin, lived in a large villa with his wife Olga Henriette. Olga was the daughter of the important businessman and art lover Sigmund ... More
Joe Tarsia, an architect of the sound of Philadelphia, dies at 88 NEW YORK, NY.- Joe Tarsia, the recording engineer and studio operator who was among the architects of the lush, fervent blend of soul, disco and funk known as the Sound of Philadelphia, died on Nov. 1 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. He was 88. His death, at a retirement community, was confirmed by a friend, video producer Steve Garrin, who did not cite a cause. At Sigma Sound Studios, the recording hub he established in 1968, Tarsia worked with the producers Kenny Gamble, Leon Huff and Thom Bell on blockbuster hits by Philadelphia soul luminaries like the OJays and the Delfonics. Known for his precision at the mixing board and his imaginative use of echo and other ambient effects, Tarsia was the engineer on scores of gold and platinum recordings. We were lucky to be recording at Sigma Sound with Joe Tarsia, Gamble said in a 2008 ... More
Photographer An-My Lê: "A good picture is one that is surprising".
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On a day like today, English artist William Hogarth was born
December 10, 1697. William Hogarth (10 November 1697 - 26 October 1764) was an English painter, printmaker, pictorial satirist, social critic and editorial cartoonist who has been credited with pioneering western sequential art. His work ranged from realistic portraiture to comic strip-like series of pictures called "modern moral subjects". Knowledge of his work is so pervasive that satirical political illustrations in this style are often referred to as "Hogarthian." In this image: A visitor looks at a William Hogarth painting 'David Garrick as Richard III', on display at Tate Britain art gallery in London, Monday, Feb. 5, 2007.
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