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Carole Davenport exhibits works by Hiroyuki Asano during Asia Week New York

Then Now / Meet Hiroyuki Asano & his sculpture in a milieu of classic art at Tambaran gallery 5 East 82 St. New York City Suite 2. Through March 22.

NEW YORK, NY.- The renowned Japanese sculptor Hiroyuki Asano is appearing at this year’s Asia week as the guest of Carole Davenport. Asano, known for this precise forms and circular voids, brings a refined life to the soul of the stone representing time, space, and movement through the universe itself. He has recently surged in popularity in the east using his classical training in Italy and uniquely Japanese style to win numerous international sculpting awards, including at the 2016 Ningbo First International Sculpture Grand Prix in China, the 2014 Qingdao International Sculpture Competition, and his career defining victory at the Uminomierumori Sculpture Biennale. His works are in public and private collections around the globe, including Japan, China, Korea, Germany and the U.S. One large work is installed in the famed WuHu Sculpture Park in Anhui province, China. He has generously allowed four pieces to be displayed during Asia week t ... More


The Best Photos of the Day
Best Photos of the Day
A man looks at a painting titled " Un atelier aux Batignolles" (A Studio at Les Batignolles) painted in 1870 by French painter Henri Fantin-Latour and displayed during the retrospective exhibition "Fantin-Latour, A fleur de peau" at the Musee de Grenoble, on March 17, 2017. The exhibition will run from March 18 to 18 June 18 2017. JEAN-PIERRE CLATOT / AFP



Ancient, near-pristine Buddha to make Kabul museum debut   Colossus found in Egypt may have depicted Psammetich I   Rock n' Roll legend Chuck Berry dead at 90


Italian restoration expert Ermano Carbonara (L) poses with a statue of Buddha at the French Archaeological Delegation to Afghanistan. Wakil KOHSAR / AFP.

KABUL (AFP).- Having withstood time, the elements, looters and war, a spectacular Buddha restored and removed from one of Afghanistan's most dangerous regions is to make its public debut in the country's national museum. The statue, which depicts the sage in a purple shroud offering his hands to the heavens, had been hidden beneath layers of soil and silt since some time between the third and fifth centuries, according to the archeologists who discovered it. The exceptionally well-preserved piece, with its colours still vibrant, was found in 2012 at the Mes Aynak site about 40 kilometres (25 miles) southeast of Kabul, in the now Taliban-infested Logar province. Its discovery was made possible after a Chinese consortium began digging a massive copper mine that uncovered an ancient monastery complex ... More
 

A guest takes a picture of the statue believed to belong to King Psammetich I (Psamtik I), outside the Egyptian museum in Cairo. KHALED DESOUKI / AFP.

CAIRO (AFP).- An ancient colossus uncovered in Cairo last week may have depicted the famed pharaoh Psammetich I, Egypt's antiquities ministry said on Thursday. The fragments of the eight-metre (26-feet) tall quartzite statue were found by an excavation team in ground water at the site of an ancient temple for King Ramses II, now a working class district in Cairo. But hieroglyphs on the statue's fragments point to it having depicted Psammetich 1, who ruled from 664 to 610 BC, the statement said. Antiquities minister Khaled el-Enany told a news conference that the hieroglyphs said "Strong Arm" -- one of the names of the 26th Dynasty pharaoh. But "we don't confirm 100 percent that it belongs to Psammetich 1" he told reporters at the Cairo Museum, where the fragments were taken. It would require more study to find ... More
 

This file photo taken on January 11, 2005 shows veteran US rocker Chuck Berry performing at the Olympia in Paris, France. Bertrand GUAY / AFP.

NEW YORK (AFP).- Chuck Berry, one of the creators of rock 'n' roll whose dance-ready rhythms and energetic stage performances helped define modern youth culture, died Saturday. He was 90. Police in the St. Louis area, where Berry was born and lived most of his life, said that first responders found the guitar legend unresponsive when they responded to an emergency call at his home. "The St. Charles County Police Department sadly confirms the death of Charles Edward Anderson Berry Sr., better known as legendary musician Chuck Berry," the department said on Facebook. Berry became a sensation in the years after World War II as he brought together rhythm and blues, country guitar and a consummate stage showmanship. His 1958 hit "Johnny B. Goode" was so influential and recognizable that the US space ... More


2,500 years on, replica of sunken ship sets sail from Israel   Sierra Leone pastor unearths 706-carat diamond   First fluorescent frog found in Argentina


Members of the University of Haifa and the Israel Antiquities Authority sail an identical replica of a 2,500 year-old Hellenic merchant vessel. JACK GUEZ / AFP.

JERUSALEM (AFP).- An identical replica of a 2,500-year-old merchant vessel that ran aground off the coast of present-day Israel set sail from the port of Haifa on Friday. The original ship ran aground 500 years before Christ's birth, but was discovered in 1985 south of the northern Israeli city. The small vessel was pulled from the depths three years later, a statement from the University of Haifa and the Israel Antiquities Authority said. It had been exceptionally conserved as it was buried under sand for two millennia and was therefore protected from erosion, archaeologist Avner Hilman of the Antiquities Authority said. "The ship was loaded with a very heavy cargo of shale coming from Cyprus, and following a navigation error it ran aground on a sandbank near the coast and was buried," he told AFP. He said the wreck's state was "exceptional" considering its age. ... More
 

A 706-carat diamond is pictured on March 16, 2017 in Freetown, Sierra Leone. SAIDU BAH / AFP.

FREETOWN (AFP).- A pastor working in the mines of eastern Sierra Leone has unearthed a 706-carat diamond, a discovery that experts said Thursday could be the 10th largest stone ever found. The huge rock was extracted by Emmanuel Momoh, one of thousands who seek their fortunes in the informal mining sector that dominates the diamond-rich Kono region. As a self-employed miner with a valid government permit, Momoh is entitled to the proceeds of any future sale, except four percent the government takes for valuation and export, according to the law, plus an undetermined level of income tax. Mines Minister Minkailu Mansaray told AFP the government's stake would be used to fund development projects nationwide. The diamond was presented to President Ernest Bai Koroma late Wednesday before being locked in Freetown's central bank vault. It awaits an official valuation under the Kimberley Process, which certifies ... More
 

A fluorescent polka-dot tree frog (Hypsiboas punctatus) that lives in South America. C.TABOADA-J.FAIVOVICH / MACN-CONICET / AFP.

BUENOS AIRES (AFP).- The first naturally fluorescent frog was discovered recently in Argentina -- almost by chance, a member of the team of researchers told AFP Thursday. Argentine and Brazilian scientists at the Bernardino Rivadaiva Natural Sciences Museum made the discovery while studying the metabolic origin of pigments in a tree-frog species common to South America. Under normal light the frog's translucent skin is a muted yellowish-brown color with red dots, but when the scientists shone an ultraviolet light on it, it turned a celestial green. According to one of them, Carlos Taboada, the case is "the first scientific record of a fluorescent frog." "We were very excited," said his fellow researcher Julian Faivovich. "It was quite disconcerting." He said the discovery "radically modifies what is known about fluorescence in terrestrial environments, allowing the discovery ... More


Major new retrospective exhibition of Rodney Graham opens at BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art   Nouveau Musée National de Monaco introduces Hercule Florence for the first time to the European public   Dazzling success for the Givaudan Collection at Piguet Auction House's Spring 2017 Sale


Rodeny Graham, Basement Camera Shop circa 1937, 2011 © Rodney Graham. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth.

GATESHEAD.- BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead is presenting a major retrospective of renowned Canadian artist Rodney Graham. Rodney Graham - That’s Not Me is the artist’s first major UK exhibition since his solo show 15 years ago at the Whitechapel (2002). Spanning BALTIC’s two largest galleries, the exhibition include retrospective highlights from Graham’s established career. A ‘shapeshifter’, Graham’s diverse practice encompasses the artist in many guises—a painter, photographer, sculptor, video-maker, actor, performer, producer, historian, writer, poet, sound engineer and musician. He is a master of many disciplines creating multi-layered and complex art through photography, film, video, sculpture, performance and music. With influences as diverse as Sigmund Freud, Alfred Hitchcock, the Brothers Grimm, Black Sabbath and Kurt Cobain, he creates works brimming with references to art hist ... More
 

Hercule Florence, Jovem Guana’ et Guanita’, capitao-mor dos Guanas, ca 1828. Watercolor and China ink on paper, 22,6 x 20,1 cm. Collection C. H. Florence- Leila et Silvia Florence São Paulo, Brésil. Photo: Jorge Bastos.

MONACO.- This exhibition presents a five year-long research on the work of the Monegasque-Brazilian inventor and artist Hercule Florence (1804–79), introducing him for the first time to the European public. The show is curated by Linda Fregni Nagler and Cristiano Raimondi and is followed by a publication with international contributions. The inventor of Zoophonia, a system for the musical notation of bird songs, and of Polygraphia, a printing method based on the principles of photography, in 1833 Hercule Florence invented in Brazil a photographic process, independently from the contemporary research being carried out in Europe, and was the first to use the word “ Photographie ”. This exhibition shows about 400 works, most of them being Hercule Florence’s drawings and manuscripts coming mainly from Collection C. H. Florence - Leila and Silvia Florence (São ... More
 

Louis Léopold Boilly (1761-1845), La tendresse conjugale (Conjugal tenderness). Estimate: CHF 60,000-80,000). Sold for: CHF 121,600.

GENEVA.- The prices for the Givaudan collection literally soared this week in Geneva. A red chalk drawing by Jean-Honoré Fragonard (1732-1806) sold for six times its low estimate fetching CHF 267,500, the highest price seen at auction for the last decade (lot 794 estimated at CHF 40,000-60,000). This result is the third best price ever achieved for a red chalk drawing by this artist worldwide, the first and second being for works sold at Sotheby’s before the economic downturn of 2008 (one fetching € 391,063 in 2007 and the other € 286,534 in 1998). Another star lot from this collection, the spectacular pair of Louis XV Meissen porcelain candelabras, sold for CHF 158,000 at five times its low estimate (lot 586 estimated at CHF 30,000-50,000). The paintings, furniture, silver and works of art from the collection totalled 55 lots altogether and fetched over one million Swiss francs (CHF 1,095,000). “It was a huge privilege to sell such a prestigious collection at auction ... More


New traveling exhibit showcases 100 masterpieces from one of the greatest artists in exile   Aya Takano presents preparatory studies for a 186-page manga at Galerie Perrotin   Sotheby's announces Made in Britain, starring the art of the swinging sixties


Músicos tocando un órgano (Musicians Playing an Organ), 1949, oil on wood, 72 x 48″, ​Dominic and Cristian Veloso Collection.

BOSTON, MASS.- An unprecedented retrospective on works of a highly acclaimed exiled painter is crossing the United States. Rafael Soriano: The Artist as Mystic, is currently featured at The McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College. Following its debut at The McMullen (through June 4, 2017), the exhibition will travel to the Long Beach Museum of Art (June 29–October 1, 2017) and the Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum in Miami (October 28, 2017–January 28, 2018). From there, a selection of the exhibition has been approved for display at the Museo de Bellas Artes in Havana, Cuba, representing a real socio-political break-through. Born in Matanzas, Cuba in 1920, Rafael Soriano fled the island shortly after Castro’s takeover. One of the preeminent Latin American artists of his generation, this traveling show is ... More
 

Ashina Awaits, 2017. Oil on canvas, 116,7 × 91 cm. 45 15/16 × 35 13/16 in.

PARIS.- Perrotin Paris presenting Aya Takano’s personal exhibition, “The Jelly Civilization Chronicle”, from 16 March to 13 May 2017. The artist exhibits a selection of 23 paintings and several drawings on celluloid, all preparatory studies for a 186-page manga, unveiled here in its entirety. A painter, illustrator, sci-fi writer and manga artist, Aya Takano belongs to Kaikai Kiki, the artistic production studio created in 2001 by Takashi Murakami. Inspired by all art forms, from erotic stamps of the Edo Period to impressionism, from Osamu Tezuka to Gustav Klimt, the artist has built a universe all her own. A universe made of infinite worlds, all means of escaping reality, gravity and its restraints, to attain a certain form of transcendence imagined from the youngest age: “When I was a kid, I daydreamed and stayed in my fantasy land by reading books and mangas all the ... More
 

Chris Levine, Lightness of Being, 2004 (est. £50,000-70,000). Photo: Sotheby's.

LONDON.- A sale dedicated to capturing the diversity and innovative spirit of British art in the twentieth century, Sotheby’s Made in Britain auction on 5 April will offer a snapshot into the zeitgeist of a generation of artists, printmakers, sculptors, designers, photographers and ceramicists. April’s edition will comprise just under 300 lots and with estimates starting at £400, the auction is the perfect opportunity for a new buyer’s first foray into collecting works by some of the most sought-after names in British art. The exhibition opens to the public on Friday 31 March, and will be highlighted by three free gallery talks on Sunday 2 April – with photographer to the stars Terry O’Neill, Pop Art pioneer Patrick Hughes and author Gerard Hastings. Photographer Chris Levine seeks to illuminate the power inherent in stillness and, although his subjects are among the most photographed people in the ... More

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Chuck Berry - Johnny B. Goode (Live 1958)


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New exhibition at the Parrish Art Museum features work never before seen at the museum
WATER MILL, NY.- The Parrish Art Museum’s new exhibition, Parrish Perspectives: New Works in Context, showcases more than 70 works from the more than 300 acquisitions added to the Museum’s collection since the opening of the Water Mill building in 2012. The exhibition, on view from March 12 through April 23, 2017, features paintings, sculpture, and works on paper dating from 1925 to 2016 by established collection artists as well artists new to the collection within the last four and a half years. On Friday, March 24, 6 pm, Alicia Longwell, the Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Chief Curator, Art and Education, will discuss the exhibition’sartists and themes in the program The Curator’s View. “Parrish Perspectives:New Works in Context reflects the curatorial decision-making involved in the process of building a collection, and demonstrates the Museum’s commitment to bringing ... More

Original ink drawing by van Gogh will be part of The Woodshed Gallery's online-only fine art auction
FRANKLIN, MASS.- An original ink drawing by Vincent van Gogh, an untitled 1967 gouache study by Adolph Gottlieb, a work by Fernand Leger titled Composition with Three Women and a paint and ink on cardboard attributed to Jean-Michel Basquiat will all be part of a tidy, 97-lot online-only Master Artworks Discovery sale planned for March 29th by The Woodshed Gallery. “I decided to keep this auction small, in order to focus on the bigger-name items,” said Bruce Wood of The Woodshed Gallery, adding that the sale will also be a showcase for exciting and emerging talent, such as Juta Barbara Bender (Swiss, 1944-2016), a self-reverential artist who will be represented with five original oil on canvas paintings, expected to bring $1,000-$2,000. In addition to the abovenamed works, the sale will also feature paintings by Latin American artists, rare posters by SEPO, ... More

Exhibition gives a complete overview of design during the Bauhaus period
BRUSSELS.- With the major exhibition The Bauhaus #itsalldesign the Art & Design Atomium Museum presents for the first time an exhibition of the Vitra Design Museum. It gives a complete overview of design during the Bauhaus period. The exhibition encompasses a multiplicity of rare, in some cases never-before-seen exhibits from the fields of design, architecture, art, film and photography. At the same time, it confronts the design of the Bauhaus with current debates and tendencies in design and with the works of contemporary designers, artists and architects. In this way, The Bauhaus #itsalldesign reveals the surprising present-day relevance of a legendary cultural institution. Bauhaus artists and designers featured in the exhibition include Marianne Brandt, Marcel Breuer, Lyonel Feininger, Walter Gropius, Wassily Kandinsky and many more. Contemporary ... More

Lunds konsthall presents portraits of 100 inspiring persons
LUND.- Come and meet more than 100 inspiring persons who have followed their dream! What encouraged them to do so, and how were they feeling as they did it? See their portraits and read the stories of Dalai Lama, Zara Larsson and many others. This project was started in Lund several years ago by two friends, equipped with a simple camera and a Hotmail address. Having a dream is a strong motivation. The purpose of the exhibition and the book We Have a Dream is to inspire everyone to dare follow their dreams: big or small, now or later in life. Dreaming gives us power and courage. Lunds konsthall now shows a selection from 114 portraits, taken all over the world between 2002 and 2016. Each portrait is accompanied by a story, and together they want us to realise that nothing is impossible. The exhibition is a document of our time, showing some of the most ... More

Exhibition chronicles rise of the Ebony Fashion Fair, empowerment of African-Americans through fashion
WASHINGTON, DC.- For 50 years, the Ebony Fashion Fair shaped a new vision of black America through contemporary fashion. Founded by Eunice Walker Johnson in 1958, the traveling fashion show broke the color barrier to bring the pinnacle of global fashion to communities that were eager to celebrate black accomplishment, aspiration and success. The George Washington University Museum and The Textile Museum present the story of the Ebony Fashion Fair and its cultural impact with the new exhibition “Inspiring Beauty: 50 Years of Ebony Fashion Fair.” Forty garments selected from a collection of thousands are at the center of this dynamic show—including stunning gowns, feathered coats and statement designs by Christian Dior, Vivienne Westwood and burgeoning designer Naeem Khan, who would go on to dress first lady Michelle Obama. ... More

The Bronx looks to capitalize as hip-hop's birthplace
NEW YORK (AFP).- In the 1970s, DJs, dancers, graffiti artists and the first rappers came together in the burned-out buildings of The Bronx, giving birth to hip-hop. Today, hip-hop is a multibillion-dollar industry and The Bronx is on the mend, but New York's northernmost borough is struggling to capitalize on its heritage. Hip-hop began at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue on the two-tone linoleum floor of a ground-floor room in an anonymous brick house, under an impromptu neon light. There on August 11, 1973, Clive Campbell -- nicknamed Kool Herc -- mashed together snippets of recordings on two turntables and, without knowing it, became the first hip-hop DJ. Coke La Rock became the first MC as he delivered spoken-word lyrics over the music. Hip-hop culture -- with its mix of DJing, rapping, graffiti and dance -- has gone on to become a global phenomenon. The Bronx has ... More

FIFA museum to remain open despite new cuts - official
ZURICH (AFP).- FIFA's World Football Museum in Zurich, a landmark project of disgraced former president Sepp Blatter, is not under threat of closure despite a new round of redundancies according to its director. A total of 36 jobs will be cut at the museum by June in the latest round of redundancies at the Zurich museum which only opened in February last year, but Marc Caprez insisted world football's governing body would find a way of making it "sustainable". "No, the museum is not struggling just to survive," he told AFP just as several sources have claimed that FIFA had already taken the decision to cut their losses and close the museum. Current president Gianni Infantino inaugurated the museum shortly after being elected to succeed the disgraced Blatter, who was suspended from football for six years over a two million Swiss franc ($2 million/1.8 million euro) payment ... More

Wendy Fisher elected President of the Board of Trustees of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
NEW YORK, NY.- The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation Board of Trustees announced that Guggenheim trustee, clinical psychologist, artist, and philanthropist Wendy Fisher has been elected to succeed Jennifer Blei Stockman, who has decided to step down as president of the board after 12 years. “It has been my great pleasure to serve the Guggenheim as President of the Board,” said Jennifer Stockman. “During that time, I am particularly gratified to have supported the development of a groundbreaking and critically acclaimed exhibition program in New York and abroad, strengthened the financial foundations of the institution, and continued the museum’s tradition of inspired leadership with the appointment of Richard Armstrong as director. As I pass the baton, I look forward to working closely with my friend and colleague Wendy Fisher and am confident that she ... More

FORMAT, the UK's largest photography festival will explore the theme of habitat
DERBY.- Rapidly accelerating changes in the biosphere caused by human impact on Earth has pushed us into a new geological epoch, often referred to as either ‘Anthropocene’ or ‘Capitalocene’. Ahead still lies our future brings together 10 international artists whose work encourages speculation on global imagined futures. This is the focal exhibition of FORMAT17, curated by Hester Keijser and Louise Clements, in response to the festival’s theme of HABITAT. Collectively, the artists in the exhibition explore the interconnected nature of the human spirit and the habitat that it encounters or creates. Their work looks broadly at landscape, environment, urbanisation, climate change, digital worlds, ideas of home and displacement, conflict and regeneration and all the spaces that we live in, at a time when the speculative sci-fi literature of the past seeps into our everyday ... More

Exhibition of recent works by Kirsten Reynolds opens at Lucy Bell Fine Art
ST LEONARDS ON SEA.- Lucy Bell Fine Art presents an exhibition of recent works by Kirsten Reynolds that includes photographic light drawings made in New Zealand, Greece and Norway as well as paintings from the on-going series The Illusion of Democracy. Reynolds’ practice includes drawing, sculpture, painting, photography and the creation of sound and light installations. The exhibition includes many of her new light drawings. The series Quantum Discord was made in and around the decaying structures of an abandoned 1970s holiday camp in Galatas, Greece. On a recent residency in Norway, Reynolds embraced the visual and historical resonances of the area working in and around disused defence bunkers. Another series Accelerating Stillness was made during a night spent alone on the island of Hjertøya, also in Norway, where the artist Kurt Schwitters ... More

Artemis Gallery revisits landmark museum exhibition with auction
BOULDER, COLO.- The 2003-4 “Windows Into Heaven” exhibition held at the Mint Museum of Art in Charlotte, N.C., celebrated a period that was the zenith of Russian art’s long and illustrious history. The stellar exhibition that drew international media attention featured 18th- and 19th-century Russian icons on loan from the Lilly and Francis Robicsek collection. It would be another 10 years before the fabled icons were exhibited again, at the North Carolina Museum of History. Now a select grouping of icons from those two exhibitions has been chosen to headline Artemis Gallery’s March 23 auction, with absentee and Internet live bidding through LiveAuctioneers. “Russian icons of this caliber are regarded as being at the pinnacle of devotiona ... More

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Flashback
On a day like today, French artist Georges de La Tour was born
March 19, 1593. Georges de La Tour (March 13, 1593 - January 30, 1652) was a French Baroque painter, who spent most of his working life in the Duchy of Lorraine, which was temporarily absorbed into France between 1641 and 1648. He painted mostly religious chiaroscuro scenes lit by candlelight. In this image: Harald Marx, left, director of the Old Masters Painting Gallery Dresden, and Stephane Loire, curator of the Louvre, inspect the oil painting "L' adoration des Bergers" (The admiration of the herdsmen) made by George de La Tour in the 17th century, in a studio of the Old Masters Painting Gallery in Dresden, Germany, Friday, Oct. 21, 2005.



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