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Brussels to open Pompidou Centre art museum at a former Citroen garage

Pompidou Center President Serge Lasvignes (R) and Brussels region President Rudi Vervoordt unveil a project to transform the former Citroen car garage into a museum for modern and contemporary art, at the Citroen garage in Brussels on September 29, 2016. The Brussels government purchased the building in 2015 and unveiled on September 29, 2016 that the 16,000 square-metre garage featuring large windows of art nouveau architecture from the 1930s will house a new Pompidou Center by 2020. Citroen, who still actively use the building, will move their operations to the suburbs. EMMANUEL DUNAND / AFP.

BRUSSELS (AFP).- The European "capital" of Brussels is going to get its own version of the Pompidou Centre, the contemporary art gallery in Paris that has become one of world's biggest cultural attractions. The new Pompidou branch will be housed in a landmark building which residents of Brussels more closely associate with grease and grime, a 16,000 square-metre car garage on the banks of the city's rustbelt canal. "The Brussels region and the Pompidou Centre have signed a deal for the creation of a Pompidou Centre Brussels at the heart of a cultural hub," the Paris-based museum said in a tweet. Brussels has a somewhat grey reputation as home to the headquarters of the European Union and NATO and it is hoped that the new gallery will promote the city as a destination for the arts. The regional government of Brussels bought the vast location from French car manufacturer Citroen in 2015 for 20.5 million euros ($23.0 million) with the ambition of creating a cultural site to rival the MOMA in New York or t ... More

The Best Photos of the Day
Best Photos of the Day
A woman looks at the realistic sculpture by Brazilian Giovani Cramello, during the pre-event of the international art fair ArtRio 2016, at Pier Maua in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on September 28, 2016. The international art fair exhibits works from more than 70 galleries from September 29 to October 2. YASUYOSHI CHIBA / AFP



US-France court battle tied to Picasso comes to a head   Gagosian exhibits works by Duane Hanson and Olivier Mosset   The Morgan opens retrospective of drawings by Jean Dubuffet


This file photo taken on April 20, 2016 shows visitors as they enter Pablo Picasso's exhibition, the 'Transfiguration', in the Hungarian National Gallery in Budapest. ATTILA KISBENEDEK / AFP.

WASHINGTON (AFP).- A French family holding rights to photographs of Pablo Picasso's artwork won a major victory against an American art editor in US federal court this week, in a 20-year legal battle that has outlived the plaintiff. A lawyer for American art publisher and dealer Alan Wofsy, who reproduced the photographs in volumes he sold, told AFP on Wednesday he would seek to have the court hear the case again, so the court fight may not be over. Plaintiff Yves Sicre de Fontbrune never saw his hard-fought victory come to fruition. He died last year, leaving his wife and three children to continue the battle with Wofsy. The saga has its roots in the strong ties between the celebrated Spanish painter, sculptor and printmaker with art critic Christian Zervos, who founded the prestigious Cahiers d'art journal. The Greek-born Zervos, who died in 1970 in Paris, produced a massive catalogue of more than 16,000 photographs of Picasso's artwork, which Cahiers d'art published as 33 volumes between 1932 and 1978 ... More
 

Duane Hanson, Housepainter I, 1984-1988 Autobody filler, polychromed, mixed media, with accessories 86 x 24 x 26 inches. © The Estate of Duane Hanson. / Olivier Mosset, Untitled, 2016 Sprayed polyurethane on canvas 120 x 120 inches. © Olivier Mosset, photography by Robert McKeever. Courtesy Gagosian Gallery.

PARIS.- Gagosian is presenting an exhibition of works by Duane Hanson and Olivier Mosset. The hyperrealistic sculptures of Duane Hanson and the minimalist paintings of Olivier Mosset are brought together in this exhibition for the first time. The two artists, radically different and equally extreme in their respective lines of inquiry, seek, each in his own way, to test the boundaries of human perception. For Duane Hanson, highly detailed and precisely realized figuration became tools through which to resist objectivity and neutrality. Hanson’s startlingly lifelike human figures that portray people, with an emphasis on the American working class, distinguished his oeuvre over forty years. At the beginning of his career, Hanson created tableaux of traumatic and violent social upheaval, such as Abortion (1966) and Race Riot (1969–71), many of which he destroyed later, wishing to be remembered for ... More
 

Jean Dubuffet, Le Métro, March 1943, Gouache. Centre national d’art et de culture Georges Pompidou, Paris. Musee national d’art moderne / Centre de creation industrielle. Photography by Philippe Migeat. © 2016 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.

NEW YORK, NY.- In the mid-1940s, French artist Jean Dubuffet (1901–1985) shocked the art establishment with his paintings inspired by children’s drawings, graffiti, and the art of psychiatric patients. Rejecting conventional notions of beauty and good taste, Dubuffet asserted that invention and creativity could only be found outside traditional cultural channels. In his efforts to emulate the immediacy of the untrained and untutored, he often turned to drawing, a medium in which he could indulge his passion for research and experimentation. Opening at the Morgan Library & Museum on September 30, Dubuffet Drawings, 1935–1962 is the first museum retrospective of the artist’s works on paper. The exhibition includes approximately one hundred drawings from Dubuffet’s most innovative decades and features rarely seen works borrowed from private and public collections in France and the United States. His favorite subjects were ... More


Moscow gallery attack targets Ukrainian troop photos   US painter Shirley Jaffe, 93, dies in Paris   Tate acquires British Impressionist masterpiece


The Sakharov Centre, which promotes human rights, wrote on Facebook that the activists on Thursday were "people in camouflage and Cossacks. Photo: A.Savin.

MOSCOW (AFP).- Dozens of pro-Kremlin activists have attacked a Moscow exhibition of photographs of Ukrainian forces in the separatist conflict, defacing images, tearing down signs and forcing its temporary closure, organisers said on Thursday. A group of several dozen activists stormed into the Andrei Sakharov exhibition centre in protest at a display of documentary photographs of Kiev's troops in Donetsk, calling themselves defenders of the separatist region. The attacker targeted images shot by Sergei Loiko, a journalist who covered the conflict for the Los Angeles Times, and Belarusian Alexander Vasukovich, the centre said. The exhibition included Loiko's 2014 images of pro-Kiev fighters inside Donetsk's ravaged airport. The activists targeted the exhibition after a lone activist on Wednesday evening sprayed red paint on around a dozen pictures, ... More
 

Untitled, n. d., mixed media on paper, 25 5/8 x 19 ¾ inches (65 x 50 cm), Courtesy Tibor de Nagy Gallery, New York.

PARIS.- US artist Shirley Jaffe, an influential painter in contemporary abstract art, died on Thursday aged 93, after spending most of her life living and working in France, the gallery that represented her announced. Born in 1923 in New Jersey, Jaffe moved to Paris in 1949 after studying fine art in New York and Washington. A close friend of fellow Americans Sam Francis and James Bishop, both painters, the adopted daughter of Paris was represented for several decades by the prestigious art gallery Jean Fournier. Jaffe first came to be known in the art scene for her abstract expressionist work. She broke away from this style in the early 1960s, adopting instead a colourful, geometric style. "Considered one of the most influential painters in contemporary abstract art, she caught the attention of artists from younger generations, such as Jessica Stockholder and Bernard Piffaretti,". ... More
 

William Stott of Oldham, La Passeur (The Ferry), 1882 (detail) © Tate.

LONDON.- The painting has been bought with funds provided by Art Fund, Heritage Lottery Fund and The Hintze Family Charitable Foundation and will be on display at Tate Britain in April 2017. It will then tour to three other galleries, Gallery Oldham, Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museum and Southampton City Art Gallery. The majority of Stott’s work is in Gallery Oldham, in the artist’s home town. This work will join another piece, Girl in a Meadow from 1880 in Tate's collection. Stott was an important member of the group of British artists who were influenced by French naturalism in the late 19th century. After training at Manchester School of Art he went to Paris where he was taught by Léon Bonnat and Jean-Léon Gérôme. He exhibited a number of paintings at The Salon which were admired by French critics. Le Passeur demonstrated what British Impressionism could achieve and gave the movement international recognition. ... More


Mayor of London Sadiq Khan unveils David Shrigley's "Really Good" on Fourth Plinth   Lark Mason Associates announces Fall Sale of Asian, Ancient, and Ethnographic Works of Art   Leading Brazilian architect to receive United Kingdom's highest honour for architecture


Really Good by David Shrigley. © Gautier Deblonde.

LONDON.- The new commission for the Fourth Plinth, Really Good by artist David Shrigley, was unveiled by the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan this morning, Thursday 29 September, in London’s Trafalgar Square. Commissioned by the Mayor of London as part of the Fourth Plinth Programme, Really Good is the eleventh sculpture to stand on Trafalgar Square’s celebrated plinth. It is the first major public art commission to be unveiled by the new Mayor. Really Good sees a seven-metre-high hand giving a thumbs up. Cast in bronze, with the same dark patina as the other statues in Trafalgar Square, the thumb is disproportionately long. Shrigley’s ambition is that this simple gesture will become a self-fulfilling prophecy; that things considered ‘bad’ such as the economy, the weather and society, will benefit from a change of consensus towards positivity. Born in 1968 in Macclesfield, David Shrigley lives and works in ... More
 

Detail of an 18th century Chinese Hand Scroll, After Wen Peng, Colored Ink on Silk, Landscape.

NEW YORK, NY.- Lark Mason, founder and president of Lark Mason Associates,
announces that over 750 lots of Asian works of art will be up for bidding on iGavelAuctions.com, in a sale that goes live on October 4 through October 18. The works of art represent Asian periods and disciplines, from the Sui dynasty through the 21st century. One of the sale’s standouts is an important collection of Japanese Netsuke, which date from the 17th century to the Meji Period, with estimates ranging from $800,000 to $1.2 million. The majority of the pieces have extensive documentation including CITES (Convention for International Trade in Endangered Species) import documents from for the ivory pieces. Says Lark Mason, “We are delighted to present and preview this important sale of Asian, Ancient and Ethnographic Works of Art for Fall’s Asian Art ... More
 

Paulo Mendes da Rocha. ©Paulo Mendes da Rocha.

LONDON.- The Royal Institute of British Architects announced that Paulo Mendes da Rocha, Brazil’s most celebrated living architect, will receive the 2017 Royal Gold Medal. Given in recognition of a lifetime’s work, the Royal Gold Medal is approved by Her Majesty The Queen and is given to a person or group of people who have had a significant influence “either directly or indirectly on the advancement of architecture”. Awarded since 1848, past Royal Gold Medallists include Zaha Hadid (2016), Frank Gehry (2000), Norman Foster (1983), Frank Lloyd Wright (1941) and Sir George Gilbert Scott (1859); Oscar Niemeyer (1998) is the only other Brazilian architect to have received the honour. Born in Vitória, Brazil in 1928, Paulo Mendes da Rocha has received international acclaim for his significant contribution to architecture. Mendes da Rocha’s numerous notable cultural buildings, built in his particular Brazilian Brutali ... More


Myriad masterworks unveiled at Sotheby's biggest-ever Dubai exhibition   Phillips announces highlights from the October Auctions of Evening & Day Editions, including Works on Paper   Anne Mosseri-Marlio Galerie announces the death of artist Nils Erik Gjerdevik


Shakir Hassan Al-Said, The Boy Wearing a Hat, 1955. Oil on canvas. Estimate: £40,000-60,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

DUBAI.- Sotheby’s is presenting its biggest-ever public exhibition in Dubai, bringing together works from the broadest range of selling categories, ahead of the Dubai office opening. The exhibition, which is being held from 10am – 8pm at Level 1, Gate Village Building 3, Dubai International Financial Centre, UAE, stars highly sought-after masterpieces by celebrated artists from the region, alongside treasures of historical importance from the Islamic world. This is accompanied by a series of talks and guided tours to showcase these worldwide highlights. These works will then be offered for sale at Sotheby’s London, as part of a week dedicated to the Arts of the Middle East and India. Born in 1976, the work of internationally acclaimed artist Ali Banisadr is heavily influenced by his childhood experiences as a refugee of the Iran-Iraq war. His intoxicating ... More
 

Frank Stella (b. 1936), Waves I, 1985-89. Estimate: $50,000-70,000. Image courtesy of Phillips.

NEW YORK, NY.- Phillips announces highlights from the upcoming sale of Evening & Day Editions, including Works on Paper. Comprised of over 400 lots that span the 20th and 21st centuries, the day session will be held on 26 October at 10am and 2pm, with the evening session following at 6pm on the same day. Modern highlights include Käthe Kollwitz’s Selbstbildnis (Self - Portrait) , Egon Schiele’s Das Graphische Werk von Egon Schiele , and Joseph Albers’ portfolio of 12 screenprints, entitled SP . Contemporary lots include several works by Andy Warhol, notably his 1981 Mickey Mouse and 1985 Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom , Roy Lichtenstein’s Ten Landscapes, Richard Artschwager’s Exclamation Point , and Jasper Johns’ Skin with O'Hara Poem . Over 35 lots of unique works on paper and prints from the Schulhof Collection will also be included in the sale, featuring pieces by Pablo Picasso, Morris ... More
 

Nils Erik Gjerdevik's works are in numerous collections throughout Europe, North and South America.

BASEL.- It is with great sadness that that I write to you today as my dear friend, great artist and champion of the arts Nils Erik Gjerdevik has died unexpectedly. Born in Norway (1962) but living since early childhood in Denmark, he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague (CZ) and taught at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen. He had a very firm knowledge and respect for art history, contemporary art as well as deep knowledge of color, architecture and design. Aside from his professional qualities, he had an insatiable curiosity for culture of all kinds that he shared with his fellow colleagues, friends and acquaintances. He was always ready with a big smile, good humor, a bear hug, enthusiasm and contagious lust for life. Since the first day we met I sensed that he was a gentleman and someone who cared for others. Over the past three decades he has mastered ... More


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Anger, Anxiety and the Apocalypse -- Henry Hudson at S|2


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Moscow-based artist Amanita opens exhibition at Dadiani Fine Art
LONDON.- Dadiani Fine Art presents an exhibition by the Moscow-based artist Amanita, entitled Russian Alphabet or ABC of the USSR and co-curated by Eleesa Dadiani and Sasha Markvo. The show is comprised of two series that make up a major part of Amanita’s oeuvre, the Russian Alphabet and the Chiefs series. Each series reveals the artist’s highly idiosyncratic engagement with the world, which is simultaneously fantastical, surreal and darkly satirical. At first glance the drawings look like medieval illuminated manuscripts. This is no accident, for just as those artists inveigled hidden meanings into their work, so does Amanita. His images form a unique world – replete with elements of Soviet and post-Soviet cultures. The Alphabet series consists of 29 sheets (33 being the number of letters in the Cyrillic alphabet, however some letters have been united in the same sheet) and ... More

Major show for artist who helped kick-start Glasgow's emergence as a centre for contemporary art
GLASGOW.- Painter, radical and formative figure of the 60s Glasgow arts scene – John Taylor is marking 55 years as a professional artist with a major retrospective. Now aged 80 he is showing around 200 paintings and original prints that follow the sweep of his career through changing styles and times from landscapes to abstract works and back to landscapes. Among them are scenes from Glasgow, his adopted home where he came to study at the school of art in the 50s and has remained most of his life, one exception being a period in Cornwall dealing in scrap metal when he rejected National Service on political grounds. John Taylor: 55 Years takes place from 3 to 28 October in the huge 1873 Hall of The Briggait, in The Merchant City, the HQ of Wasps Artists’ Studios, an organisation with which he has a long involvement. ... More

A set of rare late Renaissance allegories of the months of the year surpasses the high estimate at Koller
ZURICH.- The Old Masters auction on 23 September was led by a very rare series of five allegorical paintings representing the months of February, March, April, October and December by Abel Grimmer (ca. 1570 – ca. 1620). The paintings had been conserved in the same private collection for over 300 years, and their rarity and beauty convinced a private collector to part with CHF 745 000 in order to obtain the series (lots 3033A – 3033E, estimate CHF 500 000 – 700 000). Other highlights of the paintings auctions included a Madonna and Child by Tommaso di Credi (active in Florence circa 1490-1510) which sold for CHF 96 500 (lot 3012), and a Bathing Nymph by German artist Carl Spitzweg (1808 Munich 1885) that also changed hands for CHF 96 500 (lot 3232). Two works by Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo (1727 Venice 1804) sold well in the Drawings auction ... More

New exhibition explores the experimental energy of the Toronto art scene in the 70s and 80s
TORONTO.- Toronto in the 1970s and 1980s was a city growing into its international status. Along with the city’s boom came the social and political upheavals of the era; the Spadina Expressway protests, bath house raids and fights over pay equity, multiculturalism and social housing dominated the headlines. In the midst of this, a new generation of Toronto artists emerged, pushing the boundaries of sculpture, painting and photography and exploring new ways of art making including video, installation and performance. This fall, the Art Gallery of Ontario, revisits that complicated era with a wide-ranging display of artists and artwork. Toronto: Tributes + Tributaries, 1971-1989 opened on Sept. 29, 2016 and runs until May 2017, filling the entire fourth floor of the AGO’s Contemporary Tower. Initiated by Andrew Hunter, the AGO’s Frederik S. Eaton Curator of Canadian ... More

African wax prints tackle rivals for place in the sun
ABIDJAN (AFP).- In a bustling market in Abidjan, women browse through a bewildering array of intricately patterned wax-print fabrics, each of which has a unique and sometimes quirky name. "Eye of my rival" is one which has an eye-like motif, while another is known as "capable husband". Another bale of this brightly coloured fabric is labelled "jealousy". Each print has a name and comes in different colours, so you could have a "capable husband" in red, green or a white and the same for “Eye of my rival". Others have longer, more conversational names: "If you leave, so will I" or "If you divorce, I won't eat sand". Known as a "pagne", this strip of printed cotton cloth can be worn in a number of different ways, tailored into a garment or used to make any type of fashion accessory or household item. The name often reflects a key element in the pattern an ... More

Major exhibition of new work by London-based artist Helen Marten opens at The Serpentine
LONDON.- The Serpentine presents a major exhibition of new work by London-based artist Helen Marten (b. 1985, Macclesfield, UK) who has been nominated for both the 2016 Turner Prize and the inaugural Hepworth Sculpture Prize. Helen Marten: Drunk Brown House at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery brings together work never before presented in London with new work in an installation that has been conceived specifically in relation to the Gallery. Combining sculpture, text and screen-printed paintings, Marten’s practice comprises images and objects, often playing with two and three-dimensionality. Her installations employ visual and linguistic ambiguity in order to explore the potential for misinterpretation and misunderstanding. Marten’s sculptural installations often serve as repositories for disparate material combinations, resulting in an exhibition that calls into ... More

Philipp Demandt takes office as new Director in Frankfurt am Main
FRANKFURT.- The Städel Museum, Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt and Liebieghaus Skulpturensammlung have a new director. On 1 October 2016, Dr Philipp Demandt will begin his work at the head of the three cultural institutions of Frankfurt. The art historian was chosen within the framework of an intensive national and international search for a successor to Max Hollein. He was previously the director of the Alte Nationalgalerie, a museum of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin – Preussischer Kulturbesitz. At the press conference held today on the occasion of his assumption of office, Demandt (b. 1971) was introduced by Prof Dr Nikolaus Schweickart, chairman of the Städel Museum administration, and Dr Ina Hartwig, deputy mayor in charge of culture of the city of Frankfurt am Main. The chairman of the Städel Museum administration Prof Dr Nikolaus Schweickart, who ... More

Famous Hepworth sculpture takes a Trinity Walk
WAKEFIELD.- A famous Hepworth sculpture has moved to a new home just yards away from where the renowned sculptor was born. Trinity Walk shopping centre, in Wakefield, will play host to Barbara Hepworth’s sculpture Ascending Form (Gloria) – a first for an outdoor UK shopping centre – as part of a unique partnership with the now world-famous art gallery The Hepworth Wakefield. Both organisations opened their doors in Wakefield in May 2011 and the gallery has agreed to loan the piece to the shopping centre to celebrate their joint fifth birthdays. The sculpture was gifted to Wakefield in 2010 through the Eric and Jean Cass Gift via the Contemporary Art Society in 2010 and forms part of The Hepworth Wakefield’s ongoing acquisitions programme. Hepworth was born on the edge of Wakefield city centre on Duke of York Street – just a few minutes’ walk away from ... More

Swann Auction Galleries enjoy works on paper success with leading artists at $2m auction
NEW YORK, NY.- The latest sale at Swann Auction Galleries of New York shows that original works by leading artists dominate the print market. Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Salvador Dalí, Henri Matisse, Joan Miró and Edward Hopper were among those whose works attracted healthy five-figure sums in the 19th & 20th Century Prints & Drawings Auction of more than 600 lots that totaled over $2m. Buyers at this level were split equally between collectors and the trade. Director Todd Weyman said, “This sale saw increasingly competitive bidding for original works by influential printmakers, ranging from Camille Pissarro and Paul Signac to Salvador Dalí and George Grosz, underscoring consistently strong results for important prints.” Categories that did especially well included works by Latin American artists and 20th century urban scenes. The top lot of the ... More

Hoxton Gallery opens survey of works in oil by the late Keith Cunningham
LONDON.- Hoxton Gallery is presenting The Unseen Paintings, 1954-1960, a survey of works in oil by the late Keith Cunningham. Cunningham, who died in 2014 aged 85, was a contemporary of Frank Auerbach and Leon Kossoff at the Royal College of Art in the mid-1950s. Auerbach recently recalled his 'outstanding talent,' and his tutor, John Minton (1917 – 1957), described him as ‘one of the most gifted painters to have worked at the Royal College’. On graduating from the college in 1956, Cunningham exhibited at the Royal Academy and the Beaux Arts Gallery – then one of the most influential galleries in London – at the invitation of its director, Helen Lessore (1907 – 1994). His work was shown twice with the prestigious London Group, where it was singled out by The Times art critic for its power and suggestive presence; meanwhile, The Jewish Chronicle spoke of the intense ... More

Yinka Shonibare MBE's '...and the wall fell away' on view at Stephen Friedman Gallery
LONDON.- Opening for Frieze week in October 2016, Yinka Shonibare MBE presents his sixth solo exhibition at Stephen Friedman Gallery titled ‘...and the wall fell away’. The show marks a pivotal moment in the artist’s practice with the complete absence of the Dutch wax batik textiles for which he is known. Shonibare removes the fabric altogether and uses the batik designs in new forms; mural painting, screen prints on canvas and bronze and classical sculpture. Shonibare uses the patterns as a device to interrupt the canon of classical and renaissance art and Western religious iconography. He indicates his intention to challenge and dismantle the boundaries of Western understanding in the title of the show. By leaving the ‘trace’ of his trademark batik motifs, Shonibare gives a personal insight into the complexities of identity, nationality and colonial history. The exhibition ... More

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Flashback
On a day like today, Film star James Dean dies in a road accident aged 24
September 30, 1955. James Byron Dean (February 8, 1931 - September 30, 1955) was an American film actor. He is a cultural icon, best embodied in the title of his most celebrated film, Rebel Without a Cause (1955), in which he starred as troubled Los Angeles teenager Jim Stark. The other two roles that defined his stardom were as loner Cal Trask in East of Eden (1955), and as the surly ranch hand, Jett Rink, in Giant (1956). Dean's enduring fame and popularity rests on his performances in only these three films, all leading roles. His premature death in a car crash cemented his legendary status. In this image: Actor James Dean is seen in a scene from the Warner Bros. 1956 epic, "Giant." Years after the making of the movie, teenagers are still trying for the cool that was James Dean, the poster boy for the tortured netherworld between child and adult.



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