Artdaily - The First Art Newspaper on the Net
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, December 21, 2021

 
As Europe returns artifacts, Britain stays silent

The Parthenon Marbles at the British Museum in London, Aug. 27, 2020. Greece’s government says the sculptures, which have returned to public view, should be sent back to Athens, but the British government says their fate isn’t its concern. Tom Jamieson/The New York Times.

by Alex Marshall


LONDON.- In 1984, Neil Kinnock, then leader of Britain’s opposition Labour Party, did something few politicians here have dared: He pledged to return the Parthenon Marbles. Those classical sculptures, often called the Elgin Marbles after the British aristocrat who removed them from the Parthenon in the early 1800s and brought them to London, were “a moral issue,” Kinnock told reporters during a visit to Athens, Greece. “The Parthenon without the marbles is like a smile with a missing tooth,” he said. Kinnock’s comments made headlines at the time, but when he returned to London, he found that few in his party shared his views, let alone Conservative members of Margaret Thatcher’s government. He didn’t push the idea. Most of his successors, including Tony Blair, insisted that the marbles should stay put in the British Museum, as one of its highlights. Last week, the sculptures returned to public view after a prolonged closure of the museum’s Greek gall ... More


The Best Photos of the Day







Utah Museum of Fine Arts acquires works by major Japanese American artist   National Gallery of Art acquires significant Gordon Parks photograph   V&A East Museum hits major milestone as it tops out in Stratford's Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park


Chiura Obata, "Upper Lyell Fork," woodcut. Purchased with funds from The William H. and Wilma T. Gibson Endowment, from the Permanent Collection of the Utah Museum of Fine Arts.

SALT LAKE CITY, UT.- Thirty-five works by Chiura Obata, one of the most significant Japanese American artists of the twentieth century, are now in the permanent collection of the Utah Museum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah—thanks to a generous gift from the Obata estate. “We’re very grateful to the Obata family for recognizing Utahns’ deep feelings for this incredible artist and for entrusting these wonderful objects to the UMFA,” said Gretchen Dietrich, UMFA executive director. “We’re honored to be able to care for them so that Utahns can enjoy them for generations to come.” “We are thrilled that art lovers will have the opportunity to appreciate and study these works by our grandfather,” said Kimi Hill of the Obata family. “Because many of these artworks were created in Utah, we hope people will be inspired to learn the history of wartime incarceration and go visit the ... More
 

Gordon Parks, Self-Portrait, 1941. Gelatin silver print. Image/sheet: 50.4 x 40.8 cm (19 13/16 x 16 1/16 in.) mount: 70.2 x 55.3 cm (27 5/8 x 21 3/4 in.) National Gallery of Art, Washington. Purchased as the Gift of Alan and Marsha Paller, Laura Arrillaga Andreessen and Marc Andreessen via the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, Raj and Indra Nooyi, Mitchell P. Rales, David M. Rubenstein, and Darren Walker in honor of Sharon Percy Rockefeller 2021.61.1

WASHINGTON, DC.- The National Gallery of Art has acquired one of Gordon Parks’s (1912–2006) earliest and most important pictures, Self-Portrait (1941). One of two known existing vintage prints of this photograph, it was given to fellow artist Charles White (1918–1979) in 1942 and is inscribed in white ink, “To my good friend and fine artist, best wishes Gordon Parks.” The print remained in White’s home for the rest of his life and was passed down to his daughter, Jessica White (from whom this print was acquired) because of her longtime affinity for Parks and his work. “The National Gallery has one of the most extensive research collections ... More
 

External render view of the new V&A East Museum at Stratford Waterfront, designed by O’Donnell + Tuomey © O’Donnell + Tuomey, Ninety90, 2018.

LONDON.- Last week the V&A marked the “topping out” of its new V&A East museum building – one of two V&A East sites currently under construction in Stratford’s Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park – with the shell of the building reaching its full height. Designed by O’Donnell + Tuomey and constructed by MACE, the 7,000 square metre V&A East Museum tops out at 42.5 metres high, following completion of the installation of its intricate steel frame. The V&A East Museum will open in 2025 on the Stratford Waterfront, alongside new buildings for the BBC, London College of Fashion, Sadler’s Wells and UCL, as part of East Bank, the Mayor of London’s vibrant new arts, innovation and education district, and a legacy of the London 2012 Games. Since breaking ground in August 2019, construction on the five-storey V&A East Museum building has continued almost uninterrupted, despite the inevitable disruption caused ... More



Works by Childe Hassam, Andrew Wyeth, and more on view in Norton Museum exhibition   'Design for All: from Prisunic to Monoprix, a French Adventure' on view at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs   LaiSun Keane opens an exhibition featuring three emerging artists


Childe Hassam, Wainscott Links, 1907 (detail). Oil on canvas. Canvas: 23 ½ x 29 in. (59.7 x 73.7 cm) Frame: 33 1/8 x 39 x 3 in. (84.1 x 99.1 x 7.6 cm) Gift of Doris and Shouky Shaheen, 2020.58.

WEST PALM BEACH, FLA.- The Norton Museum of Art opened From Hassam to Wyeth: Gifts from Doris and Shouky Shaheen (December 10, 2021 – May 1, 2022), featuring major oil and watercolors from American artists in the late 19th- to mid 20th-centuries, gifted to the Norton in 2020. The exhibition is the first in a series highlighting private collections that opened at the Norton this winter, illustrating the depth of its community of art collectors. The works from the Shaheen gift are being shown alongside the Norton's exhibition, Jane Peterson: Impressions of Light and Water (December 18, 2021 – June 12, 2022). With the works already on view in the museum's American galleries, these shows demonstrate the museum's deep holdings of American Impressionist painting. "From Hassam to Wyeth celebrates the remarkable generosity ... More
 

Vincent Darré, Bee Lamp, 2021. Glass, Metal. Photo © Eugénia Sierko / Monoprix.

PARIS.- The Musée des Arts Décoratifs celebrates the history of obtainable design with the exhibition Design for All: from Prisunic to Monoprix, a French Adventure from December 2nd, 2021, until May 15th, 2022. With more than 500 works – furniture, objets and advertising posters – Design for All retraces the creative and committed history of these two important French department stores who offered high style designs at affordable prices, summed up in the popular French slogan, “beauty at the price of ugly.” The exhibition highlights collaborations initiated by Prisunic in the 1960s, and continued by Monoprix, with iconic designers such as Terence Conran, Marc Held, Constance Guisset, Ionna Vautrin and India Mahdavi, while showcasing works by some of the most creative graphic designers, photographers, stylists and illustrators of their day including Roman Cieslewicz and Alexis Mabille. Architect and designer ... More
 

Raymond Hwang, Cake of Broken Dreams, 2021. Acrylic on canvas, 20 x 16 in.

BOSTON, MASS.- LaiSun Keane is presenting a three-person exhibition titled In Close Proximity featuring emerging artists Anna Berghuis, Kyra Gregory and Raymond Hwang on view from December 9, 2021 to January 23, 2022. The artists in this exhibition bring their unique and dynamic takes as young millennials navigating life and the effects of the global pandemic. Responding to isolation during the pandemic, Anna Berghuis started her FaceTime Series painting digital versions of subjects she communicated on FaceTime. Painted mainly in 2020 and in her childhood bedroom, her FaceTime portraits are studies of non-curated visages, providing contrasting takes on hyper-stylized and superficial facades bombarding us everyday via social media and on the TV screen. Kyra Gregory turns their focus on domesticity and the interiors. Their subjects are flatmates and friends sharing tight living spaces, having breakfast ... More



Arts groups bet big on holiday programming. Will children come?   Exhibition reveals a remarkable story about California history and Indigenous communities   A $550 million Springsteen deal? It's glory days for catalog sales.


A video about sharks at an exhibition at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, Dec. 10, 2021. An Rong Xu/The New York Times.

by Matt Stevens


NEW YORK, NY.- “I haven’t been to the Met in years,” Mattea Volpe, who is 10 years old, recalled bemoaning on her ride to the opera house. “I was exaggerating, but then I was like, ‘Wait, I actually haven’t!’” No children had. When she took her red velvet seat last week, Mattea became one of the first children under 12 allowed back inside the Metropolitan Opera House since the COVID-19 pandemic forced it to close in March 2020. When the Met reopened this September, its strict vaccine mandate kept young children away, since they were not yet eligible for shots. Now they are, and fully vaccinated children are being welcomed back — not a moment too soon for a company that had decided to bet heavily on child-friendly operas this holiday season. The Met, whose family holiday presentations have grown in popularity in recent years, is presenting two this season. To build on the success of its popular abridged ... More
 

Installation view of Jules Tavernier and the Elem Pomo, de Young, San Francisco, 2021. Photograph by Randy Dodson, © Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.

SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco announced the exclusive West Coast presentation of Jules Tavernier and the Elem Pomo. The exhibition steps into the 1870–1880s, a period when white settlers continued to claim and mine lands in California and the West that had been inhabited by Indigenous populations for thousands of years. During this time, landscape painter Jules Tavernier journeyed across the United States, portraying the ceremonies and gatherings he witnessed in the Indigenous homelands and the awe-inspiring beauty of the contested landscapes. Through his compositions and the accounts of Native art historians and cultural practitioners, the exhibition broadens perspectives on the West and highlights the resilience of Indigenous populations. “Jules Tavernier and the Elem Pomo is a timely exhibition that brings alternative perspectives to narratives that have dominated the interpretation ... More
 

Bruce Springsteen performs in New York, Oct. 20, 2021. Krista Schlueter/The New York Times.

by Ben Sisario


NEW YORK, NY.- In 1972, a struggling New Jersey musician hustled into Manhattan for an audition at Columbia Records, using an acoustic guitar borrowed from his former drummer. “I had to haul it ‘Midnight Cowboy’-style over my shoulder on the bus and through the streets of the city,” the rocker, Bruce Springsteen, later recalled in his memoirs. Half a century later, he can afford plenty of guitars. Last week Sony, which now owns Columbia, announced that it acquired Springsteen’s entire body of work — his recordings and his songwriting catalog — for what two people briefed on the deal said was about $550 million. The price, which may be the richest ever paid for the work of a single musician, caused jaws to drop throughout the music industry. But it was only the latest mega-transaction in a year in which many prominent artists’ catalogs have been sold, fetching eye-popping prices. The catalog market was already bubbling a year ago when Bob Dylan sold his songwrit ... More


Christie's announces new business initiative in China   Galerie Karsten Greve presents an exhibition of works by Leiko Ikemura   Alex Chinneck unveils giant new optical sculpture in Brighton


Render view: A close-up of Christie’s new Shanghai home.

SHANGHAI.- Following the monumental Radiance: The Basquiat Show in Shanghai and record-breaking autumn sales in Hong Kong, Christie's announced a new business initiative in China — the relocation of its Shanghai office and art space to BUND ONE, No. 1 East Zhongshan Road in spring 2022. In line with Christie’s history of anchoring our offices and galleries in the heart of major global cities such as London, New York, Hong Kong, and Paris, our new Shanghai office is located in a century-old historical building with a premium location in the heart of Shanghai’s art and culture scene, situated in the alluring and iconic Bund district. Completed in 1916, BUND ONE was the tallest building on the Bund at the time. Featuring an architectural style combining Baroque and Modernist, BUND ONE is now a new cultural landmark in Shanghai housing multiple art spaces. Once in residence, Christie’s will interact more closely with neighbori ... More
 

Leiko Ikemura, Usagi Kannon, 2012 - 2017. Bronze, patiniert, Ed. 5/5 + 2 AP. 98 x 44 x 37 cm © Leiko Ikemura. Courtesy Galerie Karsten Greve Köln, Paris, St. Moritz.

COLOGNE.- Galerie Karsten Greve is presenting Leiko Ikemura a.ï.r.e in Cologne. The collaboration between Leiko Ikemura and Galerie Karsten Greve began in 1987 with a solo show in the gallery's former Cologne exhibition space in Wallrafplatz. Since then, this exceptional artist's distinctive oeuvre which features painting, sculpture, drawing as well as photography, has consistently been presented at all gallery locations – Cologne, Paris, formerly Milan, and, since 1999, St. Moritz –in twenty solo exhibitions to date and regular accrochages. The current exhibition marks a new phase in Leiko Ikemura's artistic work. Around twenty paintings from the past eight years, ten watercolors created in 2018, and photographic works from 2020 are on display. The focus of the exhibition, both in form and content, is on overcoming ... More
 

Alex Chinneck, A spring in your step. Phtoto: Marc Wilmot.

LONDON.- British artist Alex Chinneck unveiled his most complex and ambitious sculpture to date at Circus Street in Brighton on 20 December. Titled, A Spring in your step, the new site-specific artwork takes the form of a spiral staircase spectacularly springing apart in three directions across the facade of a building in Circus Street, a new neighbourhood developed by regeneration specialist U+I in Brighton. Made from galvanised steel, and reaching 25 metres overhead, the surreal sculpture occupies the full height of a key architectural elevation at the heart of the square in Circus Street, creating a bold backdrop for this new event space. The artwork was conceived in direct response to the location and seeks to contribute to the energetic creative atmosphere envisaged for it. A Spring in your step transforms an ordinary staircase into an extraordinary sculpture. Following the form of a spiral ... More



Quote
Michelangelo Buonarroti was a good man, but he did not know how to paint. El Greco

More News
Helsinki celebrates culture and design in 2022
HELSINKI.- Support for events and the arts are markers of strong civil society. Events and culture can restore wellbeing, trust and a sense of unity amid the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. Dynamic event and cultural sectors of society are in line with the Helsinki City Strategy and elements of general wellbeing in Helsinki. On these principles, Helsinki celebrates culture and design in 2022. The year 2022 will strengthen the domestic and international position of Helsinki as a city of compelling events and notable cultural venues. Several new first-rate venues will open doors in the city. New cultural policies and grants will create conditions for a wide range of leisure activities. Helsinki was the World Design Capital of 2012. Today, 10 years later, the outcomes of the design year are seen everywhere in the city. They include various services provided by the city government, ... More

Solo exhibition of work by Shezad Dawood opens at the Fogo Island Gallery
JOE BATT’S ARM .- The Fogo Island Gallery presents Between Land & Sea, a solo exhibition of work by London-based artist Shezad Dawood featuring textile-based paintings, video, and a 1970s hand-made fishing net reworked by the artist. Materially and culturally specific to Fogo Island, the works emerge from Dawood’s time spent in residence with Fogo Island Arts and through conversations with local craft practitioners, fishers, and other community members. The resulting pieces integrate histories of economic and social processes, land use, and our evolving relationship to the sea. Between Land & Sea is accompanied by a series of public programs happening in March and April 2022, featuring invited interdisciplinary speakers in conversation. Combining local, experiential knowledge and current academic research, the programs will ... More

Louisiana Art & Science Museum receives $168,833 federal grant from IMLS for "Healthy Aging with LASM"
BATON ROUGE, LA.- The Louisiana Art & Science Museum recently received a $168,833 federal grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) for “Healthy Aging with LASM.” This three-year arts and wellness program will serve senior adults in our eleven-parish capitol region through a variety of in-person and virtual activities. This program will be delivered in partnership with the Capital Area Agency on Aging, the Baton Rouge General Arts in Medicine Program, and Dr. Rebecca Bartlett. “Senior adults are facing unprecedented levels of isolation, stress, and health risk due to the COVID-19 pandemic,” stated Nita Mitchell, LASM’s Director of Education. “To serve this vulnerable and sometimes overlooked population, our staff will collaborate with experts in the field of art and medical science as well as community partners. This ... More

The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art acquires rare collection of early American daguerreotypes
KANSAS CITY, MO.- The Henry Fitz Jr. Archive of Photographic History, an extremely rare group of early daguerreotypes and related material from the family of pioneering practitioner Henry Fitz, was purchased at auction in Cincinnati on November 15. It includes what is believed to be one of the earliest daguerreotype portraits made in the U.S., as well as two paintings and other early photographic works. “Since the transformative gift of the Hallmark Photographic Collection in 2005, the Nelson-Atkins has become a leader in the study and exhibition of photography,” said Julián Zugazagoitia, Menefee D. and Mary Louise Blackwell CEO & Director of the Nelson-Atkins. “This acquisition demonstrates the museum’s commitment to representing the history of photography both as it is developing today and in its earliest formations.” The archive includes 23 daguerreotypes ... More

GOST Books to publish HOT DAMN! by Chloe Sells in January 2022
LONDON.- Chloe Sells worked as a personal assistant for American writer and journalist Hunter S. Thompson from 2003 until his death in 2005. This new book combines Sells’ photographs of Hunter’s home—documenting the interior, his possessions and handwritten notes—with landscape of Aspen, Colorado, and her recollections of her time spent working with him. Some of Sells’ hand-printed photographs have been overlaid with traditional marbling techniques, to create a psychedelic ride through the home of one of the most brilliant writers of our time. 'Officially, I was a personal assistant. Unofficially, I did anything and everything that needed doing. One night, Hunter beckoned me to his chair in the kitchen and said, ‘So, you say you’re a photographer. Well, Taschen is doing a book of my photographs,’ followed by a mocking ‘Ha, Ha.’ I ... More

Carlos Marín, a member of Il Divo, dies at 53
NEW YORK, NY.- Carlos Marín, a Spanish singer and a member of Il Divo, the hit multinational quartet, died in Manchester, England, on Sunday, according to the musical group and local news media reports. He was 53. “It is with heavy hearts that we are letting you know that our friend and partner, Carlos Marín, has passed away,” Il Divo wrote in a post on Twitter on Sunday. “He will be missed by his friends, family and fans. There will never be another voice or spirit like Carlos,” Il Divo added. “We will miss our dear friend.” The musical group did not specify a cause of death. He was admitted to the intensive care unit of a hospital in Manchester on Dec. 8, where he was intubated and put in an induced coma, according to a report on Spanish television. Marín had already had COVID-19 last year. After suffering the disease, he expressed in a video ... More

'The Music Man' once had a disabled character. Then he was erased.
NEW YORK, NY.- Many know Meredith Willson’s 1957 Broadway musical, “The Music Man,” as a light comedy centered on a cheeky scam artist who pretends to be a musician and sells the idea of starting a boys’ band to a small town in Iowa. The show is being revived on Broadway starring Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster, and will begin performances this month. But several newly recognized drafts of the musical, written between 1954-57, show that originally, the story focused more on the town’s persecution of a boy in a wheelchair — carrying a much more serious message than the final draft. At the time, children with disabilities were routinely institutionalized in horrid conditions and denied an education. In the version that debuted in 1957, the only character that doesn’t fall for the scheme is Marian Paroo, a well-read single woman who has a shy ... More

World Auction Gallery will ring in the New Year with a 535-lot auction
EAST MEADOW, NY.- World Auction Gallery will ring in the New Year with a major, 535-lot auction on Sunday, January 2nd, led by a large collection of items by Yaacov Agam (Israeli, b. 1928) from a private collection; the largest collection of Judaica items, including silver, bronzes and more; and exceptional paintings by noted and listed American, Chinese and European artists. Also offered will be wonderful enameled Russian silver and Buccellati silver pieces; European porcelain, including Meissen and KPM; and Chinese and Japanese items. The auction will start promptly at 10 am Eastern time. Previews will be held December 28th thru January 1st, from 10 am to 4 pm by appointment only. To schedule a gallery appointment you may call 516-307-8180. Pieces in the Yaacov Agam collection include an Agamograph lithograph titled Festival #5, fully ... More

Galeri 77 hosts third solo exhibition of works by Mesut Karakış
ISTANBUL.- Galeri 77 is hosting Mesut Karakış’ third solo exhibition titled “Layers and Grooves” to be held within the gallery between December 16th and January 16th. Deviating from all other abstract works with his technique and color works and producing exceptionally successful works on this path, the artist takes the relationship between forms, spots and colors beyond the borders of the canvas by gravitating towards a more direct form in his paintings. Mesut Karakış has found an innovative way in the field of abstract painting. His treatment of paint and color as well as his painting method is unique. Without a brush or any other traditional tool, he creates appealing works that propel the concept of abstraction by truly revealing the power of color. While his early oeuvre was characterized by organic deformation and lyrical expressions, he later ... More

Mudam Luxembourg presents an installation of works by Isamu Noguchi and Danh Vo
LUXEMBOURG.- Continuing the programme of exhibitions specifically conceived for the unique architectural context of the Henry J. and Erna D. Leir Pavilion, Mudam Luxembourg – Musée d’Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean presents an installation that instigates a dialogue between the work of Isamu Noguchi (b. 1904, Los Angeles; d. 1988, New York), a major figure in modern art, and that of the contemporary artist Danh Vo (b. 1975, Bà Rịa, Vietnam), who is a leading figure within his generation. This new installation conceived by Vo further develops a body of work created for the 2018 exhibitions in the M+ Pavilion in Hong Kong (Noguchi for Danh Vo: Counterpoint) and the SMK - National Gallery of Denmark in Copenhagen (Danh Vo. Take My Breath Away). It includes an installation of Noguchi’s iconic Akari lamps and a new mineral and plant- based ... More

No 'Hamilton' until after Christmas, as virus upends the performing arts
NEW YORK, NY.- The Broadway production of “Hamilton” canceled all performances until after Christmas as a spike in coronavirus cases batters the performing arts throughout North America as well as in London. The cancellations, prompted by positive coronavirus tests among cast or crew members, come at the worst possible time for many productions, because the holiday season is typically the most lucrative time of year. On Saturday and Sunday, about one-third of Broadway shows canceled their performances. And there were multiple COVID-prompted cancellations off-Broadway, as well as in Chicago, Houston, Denver, Los Angeles and other cities. “Hamilton,” a sold-out juggernaut that had been the top-grossing show on Broadway, cited breakthrough COVID-19 cases in its company as the reason for the cancellation. The show has been ... More



The D.Daskalopoulos Collection Gift: A Human Experience






 



PhotoGalleries



Flashback
On a day like today, Italian painter Masaccio was born
December 21, 1401. Masaccio (Italian: December 21, 1401 - summer 1428), born Tommaso di Ser Giovanni di Simone, was the first great Italian painter of the Quattrocento period of the Italian Renaissance. According to Vasari, Masaccio was the best painter of his generation because of his skill at imitating nature, recreating lifelike figures and movements as well as a convincing sense of three-dimensionality. Masaccio died at twenty-six and little is known about the exact circumstances of his death. In this image: San Giovenale Triptych (1422).



ArtDaily Games


Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .



The OnlineCasinosSpelen editors have years of experience with everything related to online gambling providers and reliable online casinos Nederland. If you have any questions about casino bonuses and, please contact the team directly.


Truck Accident Attorneys



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

best essay writing service

Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

If you're looking for the perfect online casino for you, check out this trusted オンカジ ランキング , the most reliable in Japan!

สล็อต

Houston Dentist

Find Nettikasinot at Kasinohai.com

PureKana delta 8 gummies taste great and provide a pleasant and relaxing effect that's about as authentic of a delta 8 experience as you can get.

Kubet

truc tiep bong da

The OnlineCasinosSpelen zonder CRUKS editors have years of experience with online gambling providers and reliable online casinos Nederland. If you have any questions about casino bonuses and, please contact the team directly.

สล็อตเว็บตรง

Attorneys

list of online casinos

Casinozonderregistratie.net finds the best online casino buitenland for all the art fans in the Netherlands.

Nieuwe-casinos.net reviews the latest nieuwe online casino daily.

sa gaming


Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       


The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful