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Exhibition details how Israel's Mossad tracked down and captured Adolf Eichmann

Curator and former Mossad agent Avner Avraham.

NEW YORK, NY.- The Nazi responsible for the murder of millions of innocent people might well have lived out his days in Argentina as “Ricardo Klement,” if fate, a Holocaust survivor, and Israel’s foreign intelligence service had not intervened. Featuring recently declassified artifacts and immersive multimedia presentations, the exhibition reveals the secret history behind the capture, extradition, and trial of one of the world’s most notorious war criminals. Operation Finale: The Capture & Trial of Adolf Eichmann is having its New York premiere at the Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust in New York City from July 16 to December 22, 2017. “This powerful exhibition presents the incredible but true espionage story of finding the Nazi who planned the murder of millions of Jews during the Holocaust, how he was brought to justice, and how the world responded,” said Museum President and CEO M ... More


The Best Photos of the Day
Best Photos of the Day
The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco are hosting Sarah Lucas: Good Muse, the artist's first major museum exhibition in the United States.

"Brave New World: Australia 1930s" opens at the National Gallery of Victoria   Eminent global art gallery owner reveals "10 questions" that clients should ask their dealer   Chinese writers navigate censors to earn cash via apps


Douglas Annand, Australia 1903–76, Max Dupain, Australia 1911–92, Australia, (c. 1937), colour and process lithograph, 105.3 x 68.4 cm (image and sheet), Australian National Maritime Museum, Purchased, 1991 (00015603), © courtesy of the artist’s estate.

MELBOURNE.- High-rise buildings, fast trains and engineering feats such as the Sydney Harbour Bridge jostled against the Great Depression, conservatism and a looming Second World War during the 1930s, one of the most turbulent decades in Australian history. A major exhibition at the NGV, Brave New World: Australia 1930s, explores the way artists and designers engaged with these major issues providing a fresh look at a period characterised by both optimism and despair. Tony Ellwood, Director, NGV, commented, ‘Brave New World explores an important period of Australian art history during which Abstraction, Surrealism and Expressionism first emerged, and women artists arose as trailblazers of the modern art movement. It offers an immersive look at the full spectrum of visual and creative culture of the ... More
 

Global art expert Jan David Winitz opened Claremont Rug Company in 1980. The Gallery now has clients on five continents.

OAKLAND, CA.- In the 37 years since founding Claremont Rug Company, an art gallery that specializes in art-level antique Oriental carpets from the “Second Golden Age of Persian Weaving,” eminent global art authority Jan David Winitz has fielded thousands of questions from connoisseurs and collectors seeking his advice about how to judge, value and select pieces to acquire. He observes that whether the work of art is an antique Oriental rug, a centuries-old oil painting, furniture or a piece of sculpture, the questions for a collector to ask a dealer are similar and extremely important to the decision to purchase a piece. “Every client brings a unique perspective and interest to the equation,” he says, “but all are ultimately seeking to acquire objects of beauty that satisfy their desires and provide both emotional and intellectual fulfillment. “Since 1980 when I opened Claremont Rug Company, I have been listening ... More
 

This photo taken on July 21, 2017 shows writer and former professor Qiao Mu displaying one of his posts on a mobile phone at his home in Beijing. GREG BAKER / AFP.

BEIJING (AFP).- When outspoken professor Qiao Mu posted his resignation letter on a popular Chinese messaging app, sympathetic readers tapped their phone screens to send him money, leaving him with a 20,000 yuan ($3,000) payday. China's widely-used applications have given writers like Qiao an outlet to self-publish and make money -- as long as their words respect the boundaries set by online censors inside the country's "Great Firewall". With Facebook and Twitter blocked in China, they post their works on WeChat, a messaging service with over 900 million worldwide users, or Weibo, a microblogging website -- both monitored by the Communist authorities. "I'm a typical Chinese person. I love my country and I want to change it. To reach the majority of the Chinese people I need to stay inside the Great Firewall and write in Chinese," Qiao told AFP. Qiao, 47, quit his library job because he was fed ... More


"Chitty Chitty Bang Bang!" illustrations soar into New-York Historical Society's collection   DeCordova awards Rappaport Prize to Sam Durant   Thomas P. Campbell receives Getty Rothschild Fellowship


Barney Tobey (1906–1989). Study for pp. 16–17 of Ian Fleming’s Story of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang! The Magical Car, 1968. Watercolor, gouache, and black ink on Bainbridge board. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. David M. Tobey, 2015.40.83.9

NEW YORK, NY.- The New-York Historical Society announced that Barney Tobey’s whimsical original illustrations for Chitty Chitty Bang Bang! The Magical Car (Random House, 1968) have been donated to its collection. Tobey’s watercolors illustrated the only children’s book written by James Bond author Ian Fleming, which Al Perkins adapted for beginning readers. Twenty-nine preparatory works—exhibited for the first time—are paired with the book’s page proofs with text in a special exhibition on view at New-York Historical until August 30. “We are grateful to Mr. and Mrs. David M. Tobey for donating his father’s vibrant and enchanting illustrations to our collection,” said Dr. Louise Mirrer, president and CEO of the New-York Historical Society. “Our visitors are in for a treat this ... More
 

Sam Durant. Photo by Sarah Waldorf/J. Paul Getty Museum.

LINCOLN, MASS.- DeCordova announced Sam Durant as the eighteenth recipient of the prestigious Rappaport Prize, an annual award of $25,000 given to a contemporary artist with strong connections to New England and a strong record of achievement. The Rappaport Prize, established in 2000, is one of the most generous contemporary art awards of its kind. In 2010, the Rappaport Prize was endowed in perpetuity by the Phyllis and Jerome Lyle Rappaport Foundation, assuring the ongoing support of contemporary art and artists in New England. “We are delighted to award the 2017 Rappaport Prize to Sam Durant,” says deCordova Executive Director John Ravenal. “He has an impressive record of international and solo exhibitions and a substantial history of scholarly and critical attention. His thoughtful and timely exploration of social justice and civil rights aligns perfectly with the Rappaport Foundations’ commitment to ... More
 

Fellowship provides housing and resources to one scholar each year.

LOS ANGELES, CA.- The Getty and the Rothschild Foundation today announced Dr. Thomas P. Campbell as the second recipient of the Getty Rothschild Fellowship. The fellowship supports innovative scholarship in the history of art, collecting, and conservation, using the collection and resources of both institutions. It offers art historians, museum professionals, or conservators the opportunity to research and study at both the Getty in Los Angeles and Waddesdon Manor in Buckinghamshire, England. As the ninth director of The Metropolitan Museum of Art from 2009 to 2017, Campbell pursued a groundbreaking agenda that combined scholarship with accessibility. He reinforced the Museum’s excellence in its collections, exhibitions, publications and international engagement while reimagining the visitor experience both in the galleries and via an industry-leading digital presence. During his tenure, the museum increased ... More


Himalayan and Chinese art take centre stage in Saffronart's first Asian Art Auction   Cleveland Museum of Art extends agreement with Director William Griswold through 2024   Historians race to preserve dying memories of Partition


Gau, Tibet, 19th century. Parcel gilt silver and copper, 7.5 in. Saffronart, Asian Art, 9 – 10 August 2017. Image courtesy of Saffronart.

MUMBAI.- Chinese porcelain from the 17th – 20th centuries, Tibetan thangkas and Nepalese paubhas, and exquisite bronze sculptures are part of Saffronart’s first Asian Art Online Auction, to be held on 9 – 10 August 2017 on saffronart.com. Among the Chinese porcelain pieces on auction is the collection of Dr. Harish Dhillon who was an educator, headmaster and writer. Dr. Dhillon developed an interest in Chinese art through extensive reading and interactions with fellow collectors and institutions worldwide. Over a lifetime of travel and research, he built up a fine collection of Chinese porcelain and artefacts, which are part of this auction. Among the pieces with a fascinating narrative is one from the Hatcher Cargo, one of the largest cargos of Chinese porcelain recovered from a 17th century shipwreck, around the port of Jakarta in 1983. Another piece from the Dhillon collection is from the famous Nanking Cargo, ... More
 

Griswold became the ninth permanent director in the museum’s history in May 2014. Image courtesy of the Cleveland Museum of Art.

CLEVELAND, OH.- The Cleveland Museum of Art Board of Trustees has approved a seven-year agreement with William M. Griswold to continue serving as the museum’s director through December 31, 2024. Griswold became the ninth permanent director in the museum’s history in May 2014. Accomplishments under Griswold’s leadership have included the successful conclusion of the capital campaign to raise funds for the museum’s historic renovation and expansion; oversight of the museum’s year-long centennial celebration in 2016 featuring a wide variety of engaging community events and outstanding special exhibitions; and strategic planning to chart the museum’s future as it begins its next century of operation. Based on these notable accomplishments and its solid confidence in Griswold’s long-term leadership of the museum, the Board of Trustees proposed an extension to the term of the original ... More
 

Sukhwant Kaur, 78, showing a photograph of her late father Sulkhan Singh in Amritsar. NARINDER NANU / AFP.

KARACHI (AFP).- Sitting in her Karachi home, Jamshed Jahan Ara looks straight into the camera as she explains in a trembling voice how her family fled India during Partition in 1947. Just six years old when she boarded an overcrowded train bound for the newly-created Muslim state of Pakistan, Ara recalls watching armed Sikhs approach -- then hearing her father tell her brother to kill the women of the family if the convoy was attacked. "One is my wife, another is my sister and one is my daughter," she recalls him saying. "So, dear, be a man. I can't shoot them. You must kill all three and we will fight (the Sikhs) till the last before we surrender.' "I asked, 'Why would Neeam kill me. I have done nothing wrong,'" the 76-year-old tells the camera, emotion flooding her face as she remembered her father's reply: "A bullet is better (than being captured)". On both sides of the border that divided the subcontinent 70 years ago, historians are racing ... More


The Best of Santa Fe auction to offer more than 800 lots of American Indian artifacts   Exhibition at C/O Berlin presents the varied work of German photographer Hans Hansen   Garvey Simon opens second annual exhibition featuring work by eight mid-career artists


Early-to-mid-1900s Southern Plains war shirt, a museum-quality beaded hide war shirt as picturesque as it gets and in very good shape (est. $20,000-$40,000).

SANTA FE, NM.- Over 800 pieces of American Indian artifacts, art and related collectibles, to include two major collections and other items in a variety of categories, will come up for bid at Best of Santa Fe, annual auction event hosted by Allard Auctions, Inc., based in Saint Ignatius, Mont. The auction will be held the weekend of Aug. 12-13, at the Santa Fe Scottish Rite Temple. This year’s Best of Santa Fe is being held the week before Indian Market, giving collectors of American Indian items added incentive to be in town that weekend. For those who can’t be there in person, online bidding will be provided by iCollector.com and LiveAuctioneers.com. Phone and absentee bids will also be taken. Santa Fe Scottish Rite Temple is at 463 Paseo de Peralta. One of the major ... More
 

untitled (Beirut), 1965, Lufthansa.

BERLIN.- C/O Berlin is presenting the exhibition Hans Hansen . Still Life from 13th July to 10th September, 2017. A VW Golf, built in 1988, neatly dismantled into around 7,000 pieces, graphically arranged glass blocks, the silhouette of a flower, or the captured image of a Japanese wooden mask—Hans Hansen’s view of things is greatly reduced, linear, and simultaneously full of energy. He always treats industrially manufactured products, natural objects, and everyday objects with the same precision and dedication. Technical accuracy and graphic minimalism lend the objects a visual life. Since the 1960s hardly any other photographer in the profession has shaped our perception of the everyday world of things as decisively as Hans Hansen. Hansen was one of the first photographers to set new aesthetic standards in both independent and applied photography, and to this day, he has been able to combine both fields equally. ... More
 

Kim Carlino, Cosmological Formations, series VII, IX, 2015. Watercolor, ink and mixed media on tyvek, 56h x 56w in. 142.24h x 142.24w cm.

NEW YORK, NY.- Garvey Simon announces Select 2, the second annual exhibition featuring work by eight mid-career artists chosen by director Elizabeth K. Garvey from the gallery’s innovative Review Program launched last year. This year’s artists are: Pokey Alrutz, Kim Carlino, Kathy Levine, Shona Macdonald, Robert Stuart, Leonard Sussman, Kate Walker, and Sun Won Yun. Gallery Director Elizabeth K. Garvey established the Review Program to open a dialogue between artists and galleries, a practice that has long been anathema to gallery orthodoxy. Neither the past practice of artists drowning galleries in heaps of slides nor today’s avalanche of emails is beneficial to either gallery or artist. Garvey believes that artists “need to have a working platform to engage with dealers who otherwise might not see their work.” In the first phase ... More

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Evidence of Babylonian Destruction of Jerusalem Found at the City of David


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Joe Namath Type I photo for his 1965 Topps rookie card to be auctioned by Huggins & Scott
LOS ANGELES, CA.- Joe Namath’s Type I photo used for his legendary 1965 Topps rookie card will be auctioned by Huggins & Scott Auctions from July 21-August 3. Interested bidders may participate in the auction online. PSA/DNA Photo Authenticator Henry Yee wrote after appraising the photo, “It is without question the single most important football photograph to ever be offered in a public auction.” The Type I photo was used for Namath’s 1965 Topps rookie card. A Type I photograph is issued from the original negative within two years of being shot. Legendary photographer Bob Olen took the famous pose of Namath. Olen was the official photographer for the Yankees and Jets. He also was believed to have taken the photo for Mickey Mantle’s 1951 Bowman rookie card. The 1965 Topps Namath card has much in common with the 1952 Topps Mickey Mantle, as ... More

South Korea former presidential aide jailed over artist blacklist
SEOUL (AFP).- A top aide close to South Korea's disgraced former president was sentenced to three years Thursday for blacklisting nearly 10,000 artists seen as critical of Park Geun-Hye's government. The ruling is seen as a blow to ex-leader Park, who has been separately standing trial after being impeached in March and indicted on 18 charges including bribery, coercion and abuse of power. The crackdown against more than 9,000 artists in music, literature, film, dance, fine arts and theatre is among the charges against her. In Thursday's ruling the Seoul Central District Court convicted Kim Ki-Choon, former chief of staff for the conservative president, of being behind the creation and enforcement of a blacklist of artists. The list reads like a Who's Who of Seoul's arts scene and was drawn up with the intent of starving many artists of government subsidies ... More

Queen's Daimler sells for £43,700 at H&H Classics sale
LONDON.- A Daimler Majestic once owned by the Queen sold today for £43,700 at the H&H Classics auction at Duxford, Imperial War Museum. "Royal cars do come to the market from time to time but fairly infrequently,” says Damian Jones, Head of Sales at H&H Classics. “So when they do come to auction they usually command a premium price.” In 2001 it was decided that a new car was needed for HM The Queen’s personal use and to serve as a Royal relief vehicle. It had to be luxurious yet understated. The answer was a 2001 Daimler Majestic 4.0 LWB built to bespoke specifications for the personal use of Her Majesty. This car was in Royal service from June 2001 to January 2007 and has done 1,400 miles since being retired from the Royal household and just 15,400 from new. Every British monarch has been chauffeured around in, or has driven if they so wished, ... More

Werkbundarchiv - Museum der Dinge opens "Cabinet of the Unknown"
BERLIN.- An object that never revealed itself to the curator before the project began evoked interest and many inquiries… Why would one have a key with two identical blades that mirror each other, rather than the usual single blade? Why one would use it, and what for? If this key is for a door, which parties does this door connect? After a period of research that took place with locksmiths and long-term residents of Berlin, the answer was revealed: the Berliner Key. A prominent topic for contemporary philosopher Bruno Latour, the Berliner Key is a two-sided-key that was designed to “force people to close and lock their doors (usually a main entrance door or gate leading into a common yard or tenement block)”, produced to replace the concierge, whose job it was to open the door all through the night. Acting as a tool for power mechanism, the key granted ... More

Second edition of Untitled, San Francisco to take place at the Palace of Fine Arts
SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- Untitled, Art announced today that the second edition of Untitled, San Francisco will take place at the iconic Palace of Fine Arts. The transition to a new venue reflects the fair’s growth and commitment to providing an outstanding experience for exhibitors and visitors. The next Untitled, San Francisco will take place January 12 – 14, 2018. Constructed as an exhibition space for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition, the Palace of Fine Arts is a monumental structure with an expansive interior that includes high ceilings, a light-filled atrium, and various on-site amenities including a 135-seat theater. Its vast indoor space is well suited to accommodate Untitled’s growing roster of international exhibitors and the fair’s robust programming, including Untitled, Monuments, a new sector that debuted at the 2017 fair in San Francisco and presents ... More

Hudson River Museum names Theodore Ward Barrow as Assistant Curator
YONKERS, NY.- The Hudson River Museum announced that Theodore Ward Barrow will join the staff as an Assistant Curator. Barrow joins the Museum following positions as an Adjunct Professor in art and architectural history at Baruch College, the College of Staten Island, and City College of New York (CUNY). He has also served as Professor in the Pre-College Program at Barnard College. Barrow received his B.A. in Art History from Occidental College; he is currently a PhD candidate in Art History at CUNY Graduate Center, New York City, and is completing his dissertation on Tropicality and Exoticism during the Gilded Age. Barrow has also lectured on the 19th-century collections at the Hudson River Museum. “Joining the dynamic team at the Hudson River Museum is a unique opportunity to explore, study, and re-frame the Museum's holdings to an expanding ... More

Three oil paintings by Ukrainian artist Mychajlo Moroz sell big at Bruneau & Co. auction
CRANSTON, RI.- A men’s Patek Philippe platinum perpetual calendar chronograph watch soared to $88,750, a ladies’ platinum 5.99-carat diamond engagement ring slipped onto a new finger for $33,750, and three oil on canvas paintings by the Ukrainian expressionist Mychajlo (“Mihal/Michal”) Moroz (1904-1992) sold for a combined $5,062 at an auction held July 22nd. They were just a few of the top lots at Bruneau & Co. Auctioneers’ 352-lot Fine Art & Jewelry Auction, held online and in the firm’s Cranston gallery. Around 125 people attended the auction in person, while 2,934 others registered to bid online, via Bidsquare.com, Invaluable.com and LiveAuctioneers.com, in addition to the Bruneau & Co. website, at Bidlive.Bruneauandco.com. The Patek Philippe wristwatch was the top lot of the auction, and bidders weren’t deterred at all by the watch’s condition report ... More

Omar Kholeif leads new Global Visions Initiative
CHICAGO, IL.- Launched as a pilot program in 2016, Madeleine Grynsztejn, Pritzker Director of the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, officially announces the launch of the Global Visions Initiative, a program to develop the museum's global reach by supporting exhibitions, acquisitions, and curatorial activities focused on contemporary artists from the Middle East, South Asia, Africa, and Latin America. In alignment with the Global Visions Initiative, Anne Kaplan, Chair of the MCA Board of Trustees, has announced the addition of Sheikh Sultan Sooud Al Qassemi (سلطان سعود القاسمي) to the MCA's Board of Trustees. Al Qassemi was elected at the June 26, 2017, MCA Board meeting. "We are thrilled to welcome Sultan Al Qassemi to the MCA Board," said Kaplan. "He brings an incredible expertise as a leader in global art, culture, and philanthropy and through h ... More

The Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College Chicago exhibits works from its collection
CHICAGO, IL.- The Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College Chicago opened re:collection, a celebration of the MoCP’s vast archive of photographs, and an exploration of how we perceive images. A stream of images runs through the galleries, spanning the history of photography and offering a diverse array of approaches. Each photograph speaks to its neighboring photograph in terms of content, form or other, more subtle, connecting factors waiting to be discovered. At certain junctures, groups of images pool related ideas to address some of the most pressing social issues of our time. Each installation of images starts with a camera-less photograph, a nod to the origins of the medium and its fundamental ability to record light and shadow. The gesture is also meant to underscore the unreliability of photographic representation, ... More

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Flashback
On a day like today, French painter Marcel Duchamp was born
July 28, 1887. Marcel Duchamp (28 July 1887 - 2 October 1968) was a French artist whose work is most often associated with the Dadaist and Surrealist movements. Considered by some to be one of the most important artists of the 20th century, Duchamp's output influenced the development of post-World War I Western art. He advised modern art collectors, such as Peggy Guggenheim and other prominent figures, thereby helping to shape the tastes of Western art during this period. In this image: Marcel Duchamp's wanted poster is seen as part of the exhibit, "Inventing Marcel Duchamp:The Dynamics of Portrature," at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, on Tuesday, March 24, 2009



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