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Harvard Museum will return hundreds of Native American hair samples

A photo provided by the National Archives shows a first- and second-grade class at the Genoa Indian Industrial School in Genoa, Neb., in 1910. (National Archives via The New York Times)

by Christine Chung


NEW YORK, NY.- The Peabody Museum at Harvard University said that it would return a collection of hair samples that were taken in the early 1930s from hundreds of Native American children who were forced to attend government-run boarding schools. The museum apologized for its decadeslong ownership of the samples, which were taken from about 700 students spanning about 300 tribal nations, and said it would try to return the clippings to living relatives and the tribes that the students belonged to. “The Peabody Museum apologizes to Indigenous families, communities and tribal nations for our complicity in the objectification of Native peoples and for our more than 80-year possession of hair taken from their relatives,” the museum said in a statement, adding that it acknowledged the “cultural and spiritual significance” of hair and the harm its removal had caused. The museum, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is dedicated to cultural heritage and its collection features objects and images ... More


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40th anniversary appellate court ruling 1982 libel lawsuit against a painting   Tim Van Laere Gallery opens a group show   Poster Auctions International's third sale of the year, on November 13, finished at just over $2.2 million


The Mugging of the Muse II©2022 Paul Georges Foundation Inc, courtesy Simon Lee Gallery London/Hong Kong.

NEW YORK, NY.- Paul Georges’s (PG) The Mugging of the Muse was at the center of the first libel lawsuit against a painting in history. PG lost the suit in 1980, opening potential legal floodgates to the censorship of art, journalism, and freedom of speech. PG hired the expensive and brilliant premiere civil rights and First Amendment attorneys Victor Kovner and Harriette Dorsen, who helped him win on appeal protection of the First Amendment right to freedom of speech and expression. The legal ordeal that began in 1974 ended in 1982. Victor Kovner & Harriette Dorsen, lawyers for The Village Voice newspaper, had won prominent cases all the way to the Supreme Court, yet paying their $10k bill on a 10-year plan came at great personal sacrifice for PG and his family. Silberman and Siani vs. Paul Georges (1975-1982) was a lawsuit pitting court approved censorship against the right to freedom of speech in a painting ... More
 

Ettore Spalletti, Vaso, 1992 Color impasto on wood 180 x 46 x 29 cm ⌀ 29 cm ( lower base). Courtesy Tim Van Laere Gallery, Antwerp.

ANTWERP.- Tim Van Laere Gallery is presenting Let's Go!, a group exhibition presenting works by Bram Demunter, Jean Dubuffet, Kati Heck, Leiko Ikemura, Stanislava Kovalcikova, Friedrich Kunath, Jonathan Meese, Albert Oehlen, Tobias Pils, Tal R, Ben Sledsens, Ettore Spaletti, Dennis Tyfus, Rinus Van de Velde, Inès Van den Kieboom, Henk Visch, and Franz West. While solo exhibitions allow you to fully enter the world of one artist and give you a glimpse of what the world looks like according to that artist, a group show offers different windows and pathways to various points of view and ways of seeing. It's for this reason group shows are a vital part of the gallery's program. By combining works from different artists in all kinds of media, the inner dialogue between the artist and his/her work is brought to a larger table, where its meaning gets challenged and debated by the surrounding works. It makes for an open dialogue where ... More
 

Geo Ham, Amilcar. 1924. ($28,800).

NEW YORK, NY.- Poster Auctions International’s third sale of the year, on November 13, finished at just over $2.2 million. Rare Posters Auction LXXXVIII saw sustained passion for rare and never-before-seen lithographs from the Art Nouveau and Art Deco eras, continuing PAI’s streak of $2 million auctions this year. Jack Rennert, President of PAI, said, “We are always humbled by the enthusiasm of our consignors and bidders at auction. Collectors demonstrated continued passion for rare and important lithographs, leading to several new sales records.” Alphonse Mucha continued to hold sway over admiring buyers. The top sale from this Belle Époque master was his 1911 Princezna Hyacinta, which was won for a record-breaking $78,000 against an estimated $35,000-$45,000. Another new high sale went to the ca. 1899 Bleuze-Hadancourt / Parfumeur, which was sold for $45,600 (est. $17,000-$20,000). All prices quoted include the buyer ... More



Only known Marilyn Monroe photo Inscribed to Joe DiMaggio sells for $300,000 to set auction record at Heritage   The Vancouver Art Gallery presents 'Guud san glans Robert Davidson: A Line That Bends But Does Not Break'   Exhibition of more than 250 artworks from distinct cultures across the African continent


Marilyn Monroe. Photograph Inscribed and Signed to Joe DiMaggio.

DALLAS, TX.- “I love you Joe, Marilyn.” Heritage Auctions’ latest Historical Platinum event, held Dec. 1, was filled with myriad documents written and signed by such titans of history as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Stephen F. Austin, John Kennedy, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Theodore Roosevelt and others whose names fill countless history books. Their landmark manuscripts and milestone memories brought more than 430 bidders to an auction that realized more than $2.48 million in a span of only two hours Thursday afternoon. But five words handwritten by one woman topped them all. The only known photograph of Marilyn Monroe inscribed to Joe DiMaggio sold Thursday for $300,000 to set a new auction record for a signed Monroe photograph. The picture, a publicity still taken in 1953 for Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, was already among the most famous and coveted of Monroe’s portraits. It is now the most ... More
 

Robert Davidson, Chest-End Design, 1970, screenprint on paper. Collection of the Vancouver Art Gallery, Gift of Mrs. Margaret McKee.

VANCOUVER, BC.- The Vancouver Art Gallery presents Guud san glans Robert Davidson: A Line That Bends But Does Not Break from November 26, 2022 to April 16, 2023, an exhibition of Robert Davidson’s renowned prints and paintings spanning his decades-long career. The exhibition draws on the Vancouver Art Gallery’s extensive collection of Davidson’s work, supplemented by paintings from private collections, showcasing his profound knowledge of Haida art and his ability to revive, preserve and innovate brilliantly within the Haida tradition. Since the 1960s, Guud san glans Robert Davidson has been instrumental in the renaissance of Haida art and culture and has long been appreciated as one of the most inventive artists working within Haida artistic traditions. Guud san glans Robert Davidson: A Line That Bends But Does Not Break welcomes viewers into the exhibition ... More
 

Attributed to Ofunwa Ume of Awka. Helmet Mask (Mgbedike), 20th century. Igbo; Nigeria. Dierking Collection, Zurich. Photo by Thomas Scheidt, courtesy of Dierking, Zurich.

CHICAGO, IL.- The Art Institute of Chicago is presenting The Language of Beauty in African Art, an exhibition of more than 250 artworks from dozens of distinct cultures across the African continent. Unlike previous exhibitions that have been guided by Western aesthetic standards, The Language of Beauty in African Art seeks to elevate the local indigenous perspectives on beauty and ugliness of the artworks’ makers and communities. The exhibition is on view at the Art Institute of Chicago from November 20, 2022 through February 27, 2023.  When Westerners began to collect and study African art in the early 20th century, they admired objects for a range of perceived qualities; however, they rarely if ever took into account any form of local appreciation, value, and criticism. Western scholarship consequently made many ... More



Freedom of Movement: Exhibition presents contemporary art and design from the NGV Collection   Art Institute receives a remarkable collection and $3M endowment gift from The Stenn Family   Adelson Galleries New York opens Patrick Hughes' first solo show in New York since 2017


Alex Prager, Face in the crowd 2013 (still) three-channel digital video projection, sound, 11 min 52 sec. ed. 1/3. National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Bowness Family Fund for Contemporary Photography, 2014. 2014.670 © Alex Prager, courtesy of the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong.

MELBOURNE.- Freedom of Movement: Contemporary Art and Design from the NGV Collection is a new exhibition featuring more than 60 works of contemporary art and design by some of the most recognisable names working today, including Patricia Piccinini, KAWS, nendo, Paola Pivi, Nick Cave, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Shilpa Gupta, Alicja Kwade, Daniel Arsham and Alex Prager. Offering a dynamic survey of the State collection across contemporary furniture, lighting, painting, film, sculpture and installation, the exhibition provides audiences the chance to engage with remarkable contemporary works in new and surprising contexts, as well as to appreciate the spectacular correlations and interrelationships between art and design. Crossing cultures, disciplines and traditional ... More
 

Eve Hesse. Untitled, 1967. Promised gift of The Stenn Family.

CHICAGO, IL.- The Art Institute of Chicago is pleased to announce both the acquisition of a transformative collection of contemporary prints and drawings and a financial gift from The Stenn Family. A promised gift of 97 prints and drawings—from artists including Josef Albers, Eva Hesse, Lee Bontecou, Judy Chicago, Donald Judd, and Sol LeWitt—will be united with more than 100 previously given works from The Stenn Family, creating a truly outstanding collection of works on paper by Pop, Conceptual, and Minimal artists from the 20th century. Representing an era that saw a radical change in how works on paper were made, used, and appreciated, this gift will allow museum visitors to see an expansive representation of this foundational moment in the history of drawing. Mark Pascale, Janet and Craig Duchossois Curator of Prints and Drawings at the Art Institute of Chicago, celebrates this moment ... More
 

Patrick Hughes, Patrick’s Palazzi, 2022 (detail), Oil on board construction, 26 x 58 x 8 inches.

NEW YORK, NY.- Adelson Galleries New York presents Patrick Hughes: A New Perspective. This exhibition — Hughes' first solo show in New York since 2017 — exemplifies the artist’s array of subject matter, from Venetian scenes to complex interiors and still lives. The exhibition is primarily composed of new Reverspective paintings exhibited for the first time, as well as several of Hughes’ collaged paintings and multiples. (British, b. 1939) Patrick Hughes’ first solo show was in 1961 in Mayfair, London. The catalogue introduction was by the critic David Sylvester. He has since held one person exhibitions in Los Angeles and San Francisco, Chicago, Boston and New York, and in France, Germany, Italy, Holland, Belgium and Switzerland, one hundred and fifty-four so far. Patrick made his first reverspective relief painting in 1964 and has refined his technique hugely over the last fifty years. It is widely imitated. These ... More


Arnold & Son Spiderweb watch designed in collaboration with artist Matt Copson goes to auction block   New Art Dealers Alliance and Pérez Art Museum Miami announce fifth Annual Acquisition Gift selection   New Torpedo Factory Art Center installation reminds viewers to connect with nature this winter


Arnold & Son offered the renowned artist carte blanche to create the design of his choice.

NEW YORK, NY.- Swiss watchmaker Arnold & Son has commissioned British artist Matt Copson to create a unique timepiece for auction: the Arnold & Son x Matt Copson edition. The one-of-a-kind Arnold & Son HM Swiss Institute by Matt Copson watch will be a feature lot in the TimeForArt auction, a subset of the upcoming Phillips New York Watch Auction: SEVEN, on December 11, 2022. Arnold & Son commissioned Copson in tribute to the Swiss watchmaker’s longstanding British ties, and together, the creative partners designed a luminous spiderweb-inspired watch for the first-ever benefit watch auction in support of contemporary art. The lot is available for preview at Phillips New York between December 3-9. The inaugural edition of TimeForArt curates exceptional timepieces from the world’s foremost watchmakers, including the Arnold & Son x Matt Copson collaboration, with 100% of the proceeds going directly to supporting today’s most visionary ... More
 

Patrick Dean Hubbell, You Keep Our Spirit Safe Between All Within the Day to Night, 2022, Oil, Acrylic, Enamel, Acrylic Dispersion, Sewing on Canvas, Wood Stretcher Bar, 76 x 72 in.

MIAMI, FLA.- New Art Dealers Alliance and Pérez Art Museum Miami announced the selection of the fifth annual NADA Acquisition Gift for PAMM, an acquisition gift for the museum’s permanent collection. PAMM Associate Curator Jennifer Inacio and Assistant Curator Maritza Lacayo have selected Patrick Dean Hubbell’s You Keep Our Spirit Safe Between All Within the Day to Night, 2022 from Nina Johnson. “We are thrilled to acquire a work at NADA for the fifth year and we are looking forward to having Patrick Dean Hubbell in PAMM’s collection! We are fascinated by his practice, which makes reference to his indigenous identity while also amplifying aspects of indigenous contemporary art within the western ideologies of art. PAMM’s mission is centered on amplifying diverse voices and Hubbell’s work is the perfect addition to that conversation,” said PAMM ... More
 

Saya Behnam, The Cycle of Nature and Time, 2022. Installation view in Studio 9 at Torpedo Factory Art Center.

ALEXANDRIA, VA.- Torpedo Factory Art Center’s newest installation, The Cycle of Nature and Time, invites viewers to reconnect with nature this winter season. Each year, the Torpedo Factory Art Center commissions artists to create an installation to be on view during the winter season to activate the Art Center through the busy holiday season. This year, artist Saya Behnam, Torpedo Factory Art Center studio 229, presents The Cycle of Nature and Time, an installation that features a cascade of dried flowers and plants to represent the cycles of nature. Benham’s work invites viewers to contemplate the winter season as a time for regeneration and decay, important to the natural cycle of life. In her artist statement, Behnam says, “I try to show the beauty of life in death, the rhythm, harmony, and the cycle of nature and time in fresh, dried and decayed. The lack of attention to our environment and surroundings made me focus ... More



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Color alone is both form and subject. Robert Delaunay

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The Architectural Team and Beacon Communities debut award-winning affordable passive house building for Boston seniors
BOSTON, MASS.- The Architectural Team, an award-winning architecture and master planning firm, and Beacon Communities LLC, a privately-owned real estate firm that develops, acquires, invests in, and manages multi-family housing, have announced the completion of a ground-breaking new affordable housing building for seniors in South Boston. Known as Phase Three C of The Anne M. Lynch Homes at Old Colony, this 55-apartment midrise building stands out for its use of Passive House design principles. Constructed by Dimeo Construction, it is one of just a handful of affordable housing developments in the state built to the stringent, energy-saving standard better known for its use in high-end, single-family homes. Thanks to this innovative ... More

Crypto crashes, but the awards go on
NEW YORK, NY.- It was not the ideal time for a celebration of the cryptocurrency industry. But the hall was booked, the guests had arrived, and so the show went on. On Wednesday, shortly after Sam Bankman-Fried gave a livestreamed interview to The New York Times seeking to dispel the notion that he was the Bernie Madoff of the blockchain, a few hundred people piled into the Faena Forum in South Beach for the Crypties, an awards ceremony billing itself as the Oscars for Web 3.0. By night’s end, they would learn the winners in 10 categories, including NFT Project of the Year and Metaverse Project of the Year. The event was organized by Decrypt Studios, a film and production company financed by Joseph Lubin, a co-founder of cryptocurrency platform ethereum. In June, when the Crypties were announced, bitcoin and ethereum had lost about half their peak value in an industrywide ... More

Julia Reichert, documentarian of the working class, dies at 76
NEW YORK, NY.- Julia Reichert, a filmmaker and educator who made a pioneering feminist documentary, “Growing Up Female,” as an undergraduate student and almost a half-century later won an Academy Award for “American Factory,” a documentary feature about the Chinese takeover of a shuttered automobile plant in Dayton, Ohio, died Thursday at her home in nearby Yellow Springs, Ohio. She was 76. Steven Bognar, her husband and filmmaking partner, confirmed the death. The cause, diagnosed in 2018, was urothelial cancer, which affects the urethra, bladder and other organs. She learned she had non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2006. Reichert, a longtime professor of motion pictures at Wright State University in Dayton, was at the forefront of a new generation of social documentarians who came out of the New Left and feminist movements of the early 1970s ... More

'Ain't No Mo" review: After great tribulation, an exodus of Black citizens
NEW YORK, NY.- Jordan E. Cooper’s new Broadway play starts with the kind of roof-raising scene most writers would have stashed away for a big bang of a finale. Pastor Freeman (Marchánt Davis) is standing by a coffin, about to give the eulogy for Brother Righttocomplain, a stalwart member of the African American community who embodied protest and grievances. Righttocomplain’s purpose has just ended, though, hence the funeral: It is Nov. 4, 2008, and Barack Obama has been elected president, ushering in a promising new era for Black Americans. “Ain’t no mo’ shot down dreams with its blood soaking the concrete outside room 306,” Freeman declares. “Ain’t no mo’ riots.” The list goes on as he revs up, whipping his congregation and the audience into a frenzy. By the time he asks “Can I get a Chaka Khan?,” it’s impossible not to answer back ... More

Post-sale results: John Moran Auctioneers: California and American Fine Art
LOS ANGELES, CA.- On Tuesday, November 15, 2022 Moran’s had a full day presenting two sales. The second one being the Autumn rendition of their California and American Fine Art sale. The selection featured fresh to market works, many coming from the West and Southwest and represented a wide range of subjects and time periods. Leading the sale was a work by William Wendt, followed by a Theodore Earl Butler painting. Other highlighted artists included: John Marshall Gamble, Colin Campbell Cooper, Margaret Keane, and an impressive collection of Christopher Blossom works. Willian Wendt was one of the most important artists to live and work in Laguna Beach during his lifetime. His vision, style, and expression created a rigorous and disciplined mix of academicism and impressionism. Lot 2053 presented Wendt’s, So Lone a Lake (Malibou Lake, CA) ... More

Dramatizing the story of a gay mid-century tattoo artist who was so much more
NEW YORK, NY.- You might not expect a show about a man who wrote for the Illinois Dental Journal to come with a warning about “nudity, graphic images and adult themes.” But Samuel Steward, the subject of John Kelly’s “Underneath the Skin,” which began previews at La MaMa on Thursday, may well be one of the wildest figures to ever prowl the outer reaches of American literature. Steward was an academic and a tattoo artist, a friend of Gertrude Stein’s who had trysts with Rudolph Valentino and Thornton Wilder, and such a meticulous documentarian of his own sex life that his extensive records, which included a detailed “Stud File,” were catnip to a certain Alfred C. Kinsey. “With this one, I just had to go for the gusto,” Kelly, 63, said of the piece, which he wrote, designed, directed and stars in. (Three other actors play various characters, and Lola Pashalinski ... More

Hans Magnus Enzensberger, leading light in German letters, dies at 93
BERLIN.- Hans Magnus Enzensberger, a poet, essayist, playwright, journalist, editor and translator whose wide-ranging intellect and writings resonated among West Germany’s postwar literary generation, died Nov. 24 in Munich. He was 93. His German publisher, Suhrkamp Verlag, announced his death but did not give a cause. Considered one of the leading intellectual forces in West Germany and later in the reunified Federal Republic of Germany, Enzensberger was, by his own account, fluent in “about seven languages,” living across much of Europe, including Scandinavia, Italy, France and, in the run-up to the 1968 student revolution there, West Berlin. A.S. Byatt once described him as “the ironic German par excellence” and an “ideal European — polyglot, polymath, skeptical and humane, with a strong sense of history both good and evil.” When he was 16, Enzensberger ... More

Exhibition at Alison Bradley Projects a curated selection of ceramics
NEW YORK, NY.- Alison Bradley Projects is presenting FIRE: A Curated Selection of Ceramics, featuring work by artists Jane Yang-D'Haene, George Ohr, Miwa Neishi, Nick Mauss, Keiko Narahashi, Fawn Krieger, Jiha Moon, Ewen Henderson, Yoona Hur, Yuta Segawa, David Kennedy Cutler, William J. O'Brien, Ruth Duckworth, Toshiko Takaezu, Beate Kuhn, and more. FIRE presents a rotating body of over 50 works by a broad range of ceramic artists, from the fifteenth century to the current day. This exhibition serves to introduce the gallery’s ceramics program, which is grounded in the pre-modern lineage of Japanese and Korean vessels. Showcasing a selection of three-dimensional works, the pieces on view offer a window into the malleability of the medium and diversity of the ever-progressing ceramic tradition. These works challenge the boundaries of the ceramic ... More

London's Apollo Art Auctions invites collectors to Dec. 11 holiday 'feast' of antiquities, cultural art
LONDON.- Apollo Art Auctions hopes to make your Christmas merry and bright with unique antiquities, ancient artworks, coins and wearable jewelry chosen especially for their beautiful December 11, 2022 holiday sale. Whether you’re a collector or a gift-giver in search of something unforgettable, you’ll find it in this impeccably curated auction. The 500+ cataloged lots encompass a broad range of well-provenanced and expertly authenticated artifacts from Classical Europe, through Egypt and the Near East, as well as many treasures from India and China. The peerless array of wearable ancient jewelry and decorative objects – created in gold, silver, bronze, pottery, stone and glass – outshines anything a Christmas shopper might see at the toniest of Fifth Avenue or Rodeo Drive jewelry stores. Just a few of the highlights are: a British medieval gold ring with a massive sapphire ... More



The Collection of Mary Tyler Moore | Spotlight | Sotheby's






 



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Flashback
On a day like today, Russian artist Alexander Rodchenko died
September 04, 1956. Aleksander Mikhailovich Rodchenko was a Russian artist, sculptor, photographer and graphic designer. He was one of the founders of constructivism and Russian design; he was married to the artist Varvara Stepanova. In this image: A Tate Modern staff looks over the works of Aleksander Rodchenko's (1891-1956), 'Composition no.50, 1918, (L) and Liubov Popova's' (1889-1924), ' Painterly Architectonic' (R) at the Rodchenko and Popova - Defining Constructivism exhibit at the Tate Modern in London, Britain, 10 February 2009. Arguably two of Russia's most influential and important artists, Aleksander Rodchenko (1891-1956) and Liubov Popova (1889-1924), Defining Constructivism explored the work of these two great artists from 1917 to 1925.



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