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| Centre Pompidou opens major retrospective of the work of artist Cy Twombly | |
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This retrospective covers the artists entire career in a chronological circuit of some 140 paintings, sculptures, drawings and photographs. PARIS.- The Centre Pompidou is presenting a major retrospective of the work of American artist Cy Twombly. A key event of the fall 2016, this exceptionally vast exhibition will only be shown in Paris, and features remarkable loans from private and public collections from all over the world. Organized around three major cycles Nine Discourses on Commodus (1963), Fifty Days at Iliam (1978) and Coronation of Sesostris (2000) this retrospective covers the artists entire career in a chronological circuit of some 140 paintings, sculptures, drawings and photographs, providing a clear picture of an extraordinarily rich body of work which is both intellectual and sensual. The selection includes many of Twomblys iconic works, several of them never previously exhibited in France. Born in 1928 in Lexington, Virginia, Cy Twombly died in 2011 at the age of 83 in Rome, where he spent a large part of his life. Unanimously ac ... More |
The Best Photos of the Day A Roman sculpture representing the head of Julia Domna, Empress and wife of Roman Emperor Lucius Septimius Severus, is pictured during its handover by the Amsterdam police to the Commander of Italy's Archeology Section of the Carabinieri Tutela Patrimonio Culturale (TPC) in Amsterdam on December 2, 2016. The Italian artifact was seized after being offered for sale at Christie's auction house in North Holland. Remko de Waal / ANP / AFP
Robert Rauschenberg opens at Tate Modern | | "Picasso and Rivera: Conversations Across Time" opens at LACMA | | Exhibition explores the art and architecture of ancient and modern Rome | Robert Rauschenberg, Retroactive II, 1964. Oil and silk-screen ink print on canvas, 213.4 x 152.4 cm. Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. Partial gift of Stefan T. Edlis and H. Gael Neeson © Robert Rauschenberg Foundation, New York. Photo: Nathan Keay © MCA Chicago. LONDON.- Tate Moderns major exhibition of the work of Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008), organised in collaboration with The Museum of Modern Art in New York, is the first posthumous retrospective and the most comprehensive survey of the artists work for 20 years. From his early engagement with pop to his works produced at the dawn of the twenty-first century, Robert Rauschenberg blazed a new trail for art. Moving between painting, sculpture, photography, print-making, technology, stage design and performance, he refused to accept conventional boundaries in art and in life. The first US artist to win the Golden Lion for painting at the Venice Biennale in 1963, Rauschenbergs quest for ... More | | Pablo Picasso, Three Women at the Spring. Fontainebleau, summer 1921. Oil on canvas, 6' 8 1/4" x 68 1/2" (203.9 x 174 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, NY, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Allan D. Emil. © 2016 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Digital Image © The Museum of Modern Art/Licensed by SCALA / Art Resource, NY. LOS ANGELES, CA.- The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, with Museo del Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City, presents Picasso and Rivera: Conversations Across Time (December 4, 2016May 7, 2017), an exhibition that examines moments of intersection in the formation of modernism both in Europe and Latin America, and asks how Pablo Picasso and Diego Riveratowering figures of the 20th centuryboth exchanged ideas in Paris about avant-garde paintings and later engaged with their respective ancient Mediterranean and Pre-Columbian worlds. Cocurated and conceived by Diana Magaloni, deputy director and director of the ... More | | Claudia Cardinale. Photo: Olycom. MADRID.- The Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza is presenting Bulgari and Rome, an exhibition that looks at how the art and architecture of ancient and modern Rome have been a source of inspiration to the designers of this firm of Italian jewellers throughout its history. Founded in Rome in 1884, since its outset Bulgari has made use of the citys most characteristic features as the guiding symbolic and artistic thread of its creations. For decades the Colosseum, the Piazza San Pietro, the Spanish Steps, the fountains in the Piazza Navona and the Pantheon have given form to necklaces, bracelets, earrings and brooches made in gold or platinum and precious stones of every colour: cabochon cut gems that reproduce the typical domes of the Roman skyline; geometrical designs that reflect the pure lines of the ruins; and glints of gold that recall Baroque volutes are among the details that reveal Bulgaris homage to the ... More |
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Fidel Castro's dying wish: No monuments in his name | | Human ancestor Lucy spent much of her time in trees: study | | Stolen Dachau 'Work will set you free' gate found in Norway | A child is pictured in front of the portrait of the former Cuban president Fidel Castro. Albert Gonzalez Farran / AFP. SANTIAGO DE CUBA (AFP).- Cuba will respect Fidel Castro's dying wish that no statues be erected in his honor and no streets be named after him, President Raul Castro said Saturday. The national assembly will introduce legislation at its next session later this month so that "his wish is fulfilled," Raul Castro told a massive rally for his brother on the eve of his burial in the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba. While Castro was an omnipresent figure in the lives of Cubans for decades, the late communist leader always said he did not want any monuments in his honor on the island. Castro, who ruled from 1959 until an illness sidelined him in 2006, died on November 25 at age 90. "The leader of the revolution rejected any manifestation of a cult of personality," Raul Castro said. "His attitude was consistent until the final hours of his life, insisting that once he died, his name and his image would never be used to denominate institutions, plazas, parks, avenues, streets or other public ... More | | The study finds that Lucy had strong upper arms, suggesting she regularly climbed trees. WASHINGTON (AFP).- Lucy, the ancient ancestor of modern humans, probably spent at least a third of her day nesting in trees, according to new research unveiled Wednesday. Our 3.18 million-year-old relative, whose fossilized partial skeleton was discovered in Ethiopia in 1974, likely got around as much like a modern chimpanzee as a modern human, according to a new study published in the journal PLOS ONE by scientists at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland and the University of Texas at Austin. The beloved, 3-foot-6-inch (about one meter) bipedal Australopithecus afarensis has confounded paleontologists for years. They have been debating whether the 60-pound (27 kilogram) hominid spent most of her time on the ground, like modern humans, or in the trees, like chimpanzees. The study finds that Lucy had strong upper arms, suggesting she regularly climbed trees. She also had relatively week legs that were not used for climbing and were inefficient for ... More | | Police Attorney Kari Bjoerkhaug Trones is pictured on December 03, 2016 in Bergen, Norway, beside the iron gate from the former Nazi concentration camp in Dachau. Marit HOMMEDAL / NTB Scanpix / AFP. MUNICH (AFP).- An iron gate with the infamous slogan "Arbeit macht frei" ("Work will set you free") stolen from the former Nazi concentration camp Dachau in Germany two years ago has been found in Norway, police said Friday. The gate was recovered outside Bergen in southwestern Norway this week following an anonymous tip-off, Bergen police spokeswoman Margrethe Myrmehl Gudbrandsen told AFP. "It was found in the open air," she said. "You can tell that it's been outside but it's in good condition." Bergen police released several photos of the black gate, one of which showed it leaning against a low wall on a bed of autumnal leaves. In a statement, it added that the gate would be returned to the German authorities "as soon as possible". There was no mention of any arrests made in connection with the theft. Police in the southern German state of Bavaria, where Dachau is located, confirmed ... More |
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Israeli & International Art Sale at Sotheby's New York led by Marc Chagall's "Juif à la Thora" | | Fine Chinese ceramics, paintings and Buddhist art shine in Gianguan Auctions' Holiday Sale | | ROM's new gallery highlights its renowned collection of 20th century furniture and decorative arts | Marc Chagall, Juif à la Thora. Oil, tempera, and colored inks on canvas, 36 1/4 by 28 3/4 in. 92 by 73.2 cm. Painted circa 1968-1976. Est. $1.5/2 million. Photo: Sotheby's. NEW YORK, NY.- Sothebys annual New York auction of Israeli & International Art on 15 December 2016 spans a century of Israeli art, including significant examples from all major movements represented by this diverse collecting field. In addition to a rich selection of works by Reuven Rubin, Moshe Castel, and Mordecai Ardon, the sale includes significant examples by New Horizons artists Joseph Zaritsky and Avigdor Stematsky, as well as cutting-edge contemporary photography and video by artists like Ori Gersht and Ronen Sharabani. The auction is led by Marc Chagalls poignant painting Juif à la Thora (est. $1.5/2 million). The sale will be on view in Sotheeby's York Avenue galleries from 10 December through 15 December, alongside the auction of Important Judaica. Painted between 1968-78, Juif à la Thora is a ... More | | A two-tone copper red octagonal meiping which two phoenixes. $150,000-$200,000. NEW YORK, NY.- Gianguan Auctions final sale of the year is a well-curated affair populated with exceptional ceramics and Buddhist art, fine Chinese paintings and early dynastic works of art.. The sale is slated for Saturday, December 10 in New York City. It can also be accessed on LiveAuctioneers.com and invaluable.com. A collection of Chinese Ceramics of the Yuan, Qing and Ming dynasties are among the finest to come to the Gianguan podium in recent years. The selections epitomize the strength of the gallery to acquire fine properties of Famille-Rose, copper red, blue and white, as well as items with unique glazes. Lot 228 is a masterwork of the porcelain techniques practiced during the Ming Dynasty. Yellow glaze pops on a predominately blue and white dish with simulated heaping and piling depicting bouquets of flowers. At 17-inches in diameter, the spectacular dish is estimated at $200,000-$300,000. ... More | | Egg Lounge Chair Designed in 1957 by Arne Jacobsen. Fabric covered foam-rubber upholstery foundation on plastic shell, aluminum, steel, plastic glides, 987.77.1. Gift of Mr. Dean Shaldon. TORONTO.- The Royal Ontario Museum opened its new Gallery of Modern Design on Saturday, December 3, 2016. Featuring the iconic work of designers including Frank Lloyd Wright and Jacques-Ãmile Ruhlmann among others, the gallery traces the development of design in Europe and North America, highlighting six design movements from 1910 to 1965. On display are many objects from the ROM`s Bernard and Sylvia Ostry collection including furniture, glassware, ceramics, silver, and other metalwork, prized for their beauty, rarity, and cultural significance. Other objects are publicly displayed for the first time. The gallerys first section features French Art Deco designers including Jules Leleu and Jacques-Ãmile Ruhlmann whose finely crafted works demonstrate the movements full range of luxurious surface finishes. ... More |
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Just in Time: Sotheby's New York presents Important Watches Sale | | Dominique Lévy Gallery to represent Lee Seung-taek | | Artists of today who inspire artists of tomorrow featured at the Saatchi Gallery | Patek Philippe. A Unique And Extraordinary Massive Open-Faced Grande And Petite Sonnerie Minute Repeating Perpetual Calendar Split Second Chronograph Clock Watch Ref 942/2 Mvt 866783 Case 2837636 Made In 1993. Estimate $300/500,000. Photo: Sothebys. NEW YORK, NY.- Sothebys New York winter offerings of Important Watches will be held on 7 December 2016. The sale features an array of timepieces by the most respected brands in horology Patek Philippe, Rolex, Cartier and many more at price points appealing to both new and established collectors. The New York exhibition of Important Watches opened on 3 December, alongside Magnificent Jewels and Fine Jewels. The Important Watches sale is headlined by two important pocket watches by Patek Philippe: one modern and the other vintage. A Unique and Extraordinary Massive Open-Faced Grande and Petite Sonnerie Minute Repeating Perpetual Calendar Split-Second Chronograph Clock Watch is one of the most important time pieces created ... More | | Lee Seung-taek, Wind-Folk Amusement, 1971. NEW YORK, NY.- Dominique Lévy announced the gallerys representation of Lee Seung-taek (b. 1932) in the United States. Lees experimental practice holds an influential place in the history of Korean art; throughout his career, he has challenged traditionally held notions of identity and history, forging a new path for artistic exploration of environment, culture, and philosophy. Dominique Lévy will celebrate representation of Lee with a 2017 solo exhibition at its New York location, accompanied by a scholarly catalogue. Gallery Hyundai will continue to represent Lee in Asia. A pioneer of the Korean avant-garde and part of the first generation of experimental artists to embrace innovation and modernist influences after the end of the Korean War in 1953, Lee has continuously engaged political and cultural themes over the course of his six-decade career. His diverse and prolific oeuvre encompasses sculpture, installation, performance ... More | | Richard Aldrich, Future Portrait #49, 2003, Acrylic on panel, 30.5 x 30.5 cm. LONDON.- Saatchi Gallery presents its new exhibition Painters Painters: Artists of today who inspire artists of tomorrow, featuring the work of nine present-day painters ranging from their 30s to their 60s. In an age where painting has become one strand among many in contemporary art making, Painters Painters brings together a small group of distinctive figures in the field. In recent years, painting has been challenged by the myriad of other modern media and technologies embraced by contemporary art. It is less frequently seen in contemporary museums and galleries today and is seemingly out of favour with many curators. Painters Painters focuses on a group of artists who have been undeterred by the gradual decline in interest in this perennial art form. There is no discernible style or movement these artists belong to, and as an exhibition, it examines the very individualistic and nonconformist approaches explored by ... More |
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href=' href=' Pedro Almodóvar, Rossy de Palma at MoMA
More News | Artemis Gallery's Dec. 8 Holiday Sale presents beautiful, unusual gift ideas from dozens of ancient cultures BOULDER, COLO.- Artemis Gallerys Dec. 8 auction is the ideal place to find beautiful and unusual holiday gifts that have long withstood the test of time. The 330-lot sale of ancient, Asian and ethnographic art caters to all tastes and budgets with its carefully curated selection of classical antiquities from Egypt, Greece, Italy, the Near East and Far East, including China, Japan and Thailand. Not only will bidders find Thursdays auction to be a very pleasant and easy way to acquire pieces of great distinction, they will also be doing so with Artemis Gallerys ironclad guarantee that each and every item is authentic, as described, and legal to acquire according to federal guidelines. A certificate of authenticity will accompany each purchase. In addition, because the company handles all packing and shipping in-house to ensure quality control, co-owners Bob and Teresa Do ... More History buffs re-enact Napoleon's finest hour SLAVKOV U BRNA (AFP).- More than a thousand history buffs gathered in the Czech Republic on Saturday for a re-enactment of the Battle of Austerlitz, in which Napoleon crushed the Austrian and Russian armies in 1805. "We have soldiers from about twelve countries of the world, including Austria, France, Russia, but also Belgium, Italy or Poland," organiser Miroslav Jandora told AFP. On December 2, 1805, Napoleon's army took its rivals by surprise after feigning reluctance to fight the two armies near Austerlitz, modern day Slavkov, a town some 200 kilometres (125 miles) southeast of Prague. The 71,000 soldiers of Napoleon's "Grande Armee" beat the 91,000 men of the combined Russian and Austrian armies in less than six hours. Considered Napoleon's finest tactical masterpiece, the "Battle of the Three Emperors" left 28,000 dead. "Every year we re-enact a part ... More New York-based photographer Marc Hom opens exhibition at Paul Smith's flagship boutique LONDON.- Acclaimed New York-based photographer Marc Hom presents Profiles, an extraordinary collection of 27 colour, and black and white portraits of some of the most enigmatic icons in contemporary culture. The exhibition, which takes places at Paul Smiths flagship boutique on Albemarle Street in Mayfair, marks the release of Hom's latest book of the same title published by teNeues earlier this year. A combination of photographs from private sittings and editorial commissions, Profiles is a remarkable compilation of over two decades of intimate and striking portraiture of creative icons. Among them, award-winning film directors Quentin Tarantino and Sofia Coppola, celebrated actors Glenn Close, Johnny Depp, Vanessa Redgrave, Lauren Bacall and Mads Mikkelsen, and world-class musicians including Björk and Wiz Khalifa. Also featured is a portrait of the Danish ... More Major acquisitions of contemporary American art unveiled at Tate Modern LONDON.- Tate announced that works by three great American contemporary artists George Condo, Louise Lawler and Richard Tuttle have joined the collection displays at Tate Modern. These three new rooms open on Monday 5 December, featuring works which have all been recently acquired by Tate through the support of the Karpidas Family. The acquisitions include 43 drawings and a painting by George Condo, a widely recognised figure in American art who was not previously represented in Tates collection. Condo himself has specially curated this room of his works at Tate Modern. The arresting and intriguing images show the artists incredible range, as well as the influence of such figures from art history as Goya, Velásquez and Picasso. The drawings depict a cast of characters shown in a variety of figurative and abstract styles, each revealing different aspects ... More Newest Terra Foundation Essays release focuses on scale in art historical thinking CHICAGO, IL.- The Terra Foundation for American Art announced today the release of Scale, the second volume of the Terra Foundation Essays series, which explores fundamental ideas and concepts shaping American art and visual culture over the last three centuries. This new volume opens up a dialogue by proposing the concept of scale as an understudied category of analysis in American art history, explained Francesca Rose, Terra Foundation Publications Program Director. As the second release of the new Terra Foundation Essays, Scale exemplifies the open-ended approach of the series by emphasizing fresh terms and multiple perspectives in the study of American visual imagery. Undermined by the proliferation of photographic and digital reproduction and the unbridled expansions and contractions these technologies enable, the concept of scale has become ... More Recent photographs by Flor Garduño on view at Throckmorton Fine Art NEW YORK, NY.- Throckmorton Fine Art announces an exhibit of the photography of one of Latin Americas most celebrated contemporary artists, Flor Garduño. The exhibit presents 40 black-and-white images by Garduño, highlighting her most recent work, but also including some of the most iconic images from earlier in her prolific career. Garduño was born in Mexico City in 1957. She studied visual arts at the San Carlos Academy of the Arts at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Although she was first attracted to drawing, she was captivated by photography. In 1979, she began working as an assistant to Latin Americas greatest photographer, Manuel Ãlvarez Bravo (1902-2002). He had an indelible influence on Garduño, but she developed her own eyeand style. In his forward to the exhibition ... More Michael Hoppen Gallery opens exhibition of works by Chloe Sells LONDON.- There is a place on earth that can be seen from space like a white splash across the darker skin of the surrounding land. The albino mark looks like something that has been forgotten. There is no green of tree cover. There is no blue of water. There is no brown of soil. It is emptiness. This is the Makgadikgadi Salt Pan, a vast area in the heart of the Kalahari Desert of Botswana. Chloe Sells has been photographing there for the last two years. In her new body of work, Measuring Infinity, Sells interprets the sublime and mysterious nature of this area. These contemplative images consider the finite and the infinite. The horizon line, which scores the center of the photographs, is at once recognition of what is fixed and determinate while simultaneously portraying a feeling of what is deeply abiding. If one were to chase the horizon around ... More 50-metre long public mosaic artwork installed at Robin Hood's Bay CLOUGHTON.- A vast piece of art, The Story of Bay Footprints through Time, has been installed on the sea wall at Robin Hoods Bay. The artwork, comprising 50 mosaic panels, has been commissioned by the North York Moors National Park Authority, to cover a 125-metre stretch of parapet adjacent to a path that visitors follow to reach the popular village. In total, 50 square metres of mosaic have been created by artist Ruth Wilkinson in her North Yorkshire studio at Pateley Bridge and the panels took three days for the National Park to erect this week. This is the largest commission undertaken by Ruth who has spent 15 months designing and creating the panels using 300,000 tiles known as tesserae. Drawing on ideas contributed by residents of the village, visitors, local artists and historians, the mosaic storyboard leads visitors on a journey through the villages 190- ... More The Fundació Joan Miró presents the Nadala for 2016, an installation by Luis Bisbe BARCELONA.- In purehardillusion, a deconstructed Christmas tree shows, simultaneously but independently, the two stages of the artefact the fir tree and the lights as two superimposed moments of a deception. With this work, Luis Bisbe (Málaga, 1965) uses defamiliarisation and surprise to highlight the illusionistic dimension that shapes the meaning of Christmas as a time of beliefs and appearances. Bisbe likes to explore the dialogue between the public and the private sphere by taking everyday objects which he displaces slightly, destabilising our perception of them. In this vein, the artist has planted a fir tree in the Olive Tree Patio at the Foundation, while he has put up the Christmas lights in the adjacent gallery, on the other side of a glass wall. Thus the Foundation's ornamental tree emerges only as an illusion in the area that lies between the exterior and interior of the ... More mother's tankstation presents the work of Yuri Pattison DUBLIN.- Following Yuri Pattisons installation, user, space, at Chisenhale Gallery, London, his first solo exhibition in Ireland enacts a tangential second chapter, developing his evocative ideas which orbit a particularly vital aspect of the contemporaneous live-work experience: sleep. sunset provision springs from a longstanding examination of the refractive impact of automation on time, loneliness, and the demands of productivity housed in an emergent co-working culture driven by and contingent on technological success. If Chisenhale was a refraction of the loneliness of on-line automation, the installation for mothers tankstation limited reveals a growing niche that promises you will never need be lonely. Here, Pattison isolates a particularly curious strain of interest in conquering the loneliest hours of day, creating proxy companions to help consumers through ... More Archival exhibition on Isaac Julien's seminal poetic film Looking for Langston on view in Amsterdam AMSTERDAM.- Galerie Ron Mandos is presenting an important archival exhibition on Isaac Juliens seminal poetic film Looking for Langston (1989). The series is an homage by acclaimed artist Isaac Julien (1960, London) to Langston Hughes and the Harlem Renaissance. This award-winning film, shown in it's original 16 mm format, is accompanied by photographic work that explores the fractured narratives of memory and desire. Langston Hughes (1902-1967) was an American poet and writer. With his poems Hughes fought for awareness and empowerment in the African-American community, and against racism and discrimination. Although it was commonly presumed that he was gay, he never openly came out. Julien's film portrays Langston Hughes as an African-American cultural icon with a repressed gay desire. He explores the ambiguous sexual subtexts ... More
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| href=' Flashback On a day like today, French impressionist painter Claude Monet died December 05, 1926. Claude Monet (14 November 1840 - 5 December 1926) was a founder of French impressionist painting, and the most consistent and prolific practitioner of the movement's philosophy of expressing one's perceptions before nature, especially as applied to plein-air landscape painting. The term Impressionism is derived from the title of his painting Impression, Sunrise (Impression, soleil levant). In this image: A visitor looks on a painting by French artist Claude Monet (1840-1926) entitled Nympheas during a press preview in Hong Kong, China, 27 May 2011. The painting was expected to fetch in excess of 17 to 24 million GBP (19 to 27 million Euro), at auction at Christies London Impressionist Modern Paintings on 21 June 2011.
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