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A winery and a Roman bathhouse found in Jerusalem's Schneller compound

A worker with the Israeli Antiquities Authority works at the site where a large roman winery was found in Jerusalem's Schneller Compound, in the heart of construction site for new residential houses, on March 2 2016. The finds of more than 1,600 years old includes as well a roman bathhouse. The Schneller Orphanage operated in Jerusalem from 1860 until the Second World War. During the British Mandate, its German inhabitants were expelled and a military base was established there. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.

JERUSALEM.- Unexpected finds more than 1,600 years old were uncovered during archaeological excavations financed by the Merom Yerushalayim Company, which the Israel Antiquities Authority is carrying out in Schneller Compound prior to the construction of residential buildings for Jerusalem’s ultra-orthodox population. Schneller Orphanage operated in Jerusalem from 1860 until the Second World War. During the British Mandate, its German inhabitants were expelled and a military base was established there. After the British withdrawal in 1948 the compound was turned over to the Hagana and later served as an army base used by the Israel Defense Force until 2008. Interesting and assorted finds from Jerusalem’s past were discovered in the archaeological excavation, most notably a large and impressive winery dating to the Roman or Byzantine period, some 1,600 ... More


The Best Photos of the Day
Best Photos of the Day
TEMPE.- Spencer Tunick and Stephane Janssen pose for a photo at the Arizona State University Art Museum. The museum recently opened the exhibition Participant: Photographs by Spencer Tunick from the Stephane Janssen Collection, which includes more than 20 photographs by Spencer Tunick from 1997 to 2013 drawn from the collection of Stephane Janssen.



Artemis Gallery to auction 325+ lots of exceptional antiquities, ancient and ethnographic art in no-reserve sale   BADA, Curator's Eye partnership heralds changes for art organizations and their member dealers   ADAA member galleries present ambitious solo exhibitions, group shows, and new works


Etruscan bucchero amphora, Nikosthenic style, ex-Charles Ede, est. $12,000-$18,000.

BOULDER, COLO.- Artemis Gallery, whose expert team is known for its uncompromising attention to authenticity and quality, will auction 325+ lots of classical antiquities plus ancient and ethnographic art on Tuesday, March 8th. No reserves will apply in this auction of unusual buying opportunities. Each piece will sell to the highest bidder regardless of price. Nearly all pieces are from long-established private collections; others have institutional or auction-house provenance. Each item in the sale is unconditionally guaranteed to be legal to buy/sell under the U.S. statute covering cultural patrimony and comes with a certificate of authenticity from Artemis Gallery. The sale is a virtual panorama of the world’s greatest cultures, including Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Etruscan, Near Eastern, Asian, Pre-Columbian and Spanish Colonial. Additionally, there will be a sections devoted to African and tribal art, as well as fossils and minerals. M ... More
 

TCE's strong history of innovation coupled with BADA's tradition of excellence will empower dealers to reach collectors globally through live online auctions.

BOSTON, MASS.- The Curator's Eye (TCE), a digital marketing firm for art dealers, galleries and trade organizations, recently announced a partnership with BADA (The British Antique Dealers' Association) to launch their entry into online auctions using proprietary software and a digital platform. TCE's strong history of innovation coupled with BADA's tradition of excellence will empower dealers to reach collectors globally through live online auctions. The new platform eliminates buyer's premiums, cataloguing and buy-in fees, whilst delivering cost savings to buyers and sellers. It was a chance meeting between Sarah Valelly and Rick Patzman, Co-Founders of TCE and Michael Cohen, Chairman of BADA, which spurred the partnership. Their joint visions of the future of the art market paralleled one another, and together they sought to enact transformational change and ... More
 

Henri Matisse, Femme à l’ombrelle, 1919, Oil on canvas board, Courtesy Acquavella Galleries, New York.

NEW YORK, NY.- The Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA) opened the 2016 edition of The Art Show. The nation’s most respected and longest-running art fair, takes place on March 2-6, 2016 at the Park Avenue Armory in New York. Organized by the ADAA, a nonprofit membership organization of art dealers from around the country, The Art Show offers collectors, arts professionals, and the public the opportunity to engage with artworks of the highest quality through intimately scaled and thoughtfully curated exhibitions that encourage close looking and active conversation with gallerists. As part of the ADAA’s philanthropic partnerships, admission from The Art Show and proceeds from the Gala Preview benefit the Henry Street Settlement, one of New York’s leading social service, arts and health care organizations. “Thoughtfully curated, high quality ... More


Vast unknown Bob Dylan archive knocks on University of Tulsa in Oklahoma's door   artnet Auctions offers an Edward Hopper watercolor "Trees, East Gloucester" from 1926   Dickinson to offer a museum-quality Renoir, Au Bord de l’Eau, at TEFAF 2016


This file photo taken on January 11, 2012 shows musician Bob Dylan. KEVIN WINTER / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP.

NEW YORK (AFP).- A trove of thousands of Bob Dylan notebooks and other artifacts -- mostly unknown except to the rock icon himself -- will head to a US university to be preserved for posterity. The University of Tulsa in Oklahoma announced Wednesday that it had acquired more than 6,000 items from the singer's six-decade career and would create the Bob Dylan Archive. The archive will eventually go on permanent display in Tulsa near a recently built museum to Woody Guthrie, the folk legend and Dylan influence who was born in Oklahoma, a Great Plains state that was once Indian territory. "I'm glad that my archives, which have been collected all these years, have finally found a home and are to be included with the works of Woody ... More
 

Edward Hopper (American, 1882–1967), Trees, East Gloucester, 1926. Watercolor on paper. Overall Size: 14 x 20 in. Estimate: 150,000—200,000 USD.

NEW YORK, NY.- Edward Hopper first painted Gloucester during a summer spent in the Massachusetts fishing town and artist’s haven in 1912. He returned to the area in the summer of 1924 and again in 1926 and 1928, before he began summering in Truro, on Cape Cod, in 1930. During his time spent in Gloucester and other parts of New England, Hopper was inspired by the towns, landscapes, and coast lines that surrounded him and portrayed these everyday scenes in his realist style with subtle, psycho-social undertones. Watercolor became an important media for Hopper beginning in 1923, and the translucent quality of the paint allowed him to better capture the effect of sunlight in his works. While many of his watercolors are ... More
 

Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Au Bord de l’Eau, 1885 (detail).

LONDON.- Dickinson gallery of London and New York will offer Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s 1885 Impressionist masterpiece Au Bord de l’Eau at TEFAF 2016. A museum-quality work of prestigious provenance, depicting one of the most popular Impressionist motifs, that has not been on the market for almost a century. Conceived en plein air along the banks of the Seine near Renoir’s residence at La Roche-Guyon, Au Bord de l’Eau demonstrates the rich, sensuous style and vibrant palette of Renoir’s most celebrated boating scenes of the 1880s. It betrays the lessons learned during his 1881 travels to Italy, his 1884 visit – together with Monet – to Cézanne’s home in L’Estaque; and of his admiration of the rococo fantasies of Watteau and Fragonard. Yet Renoir’s ultimate source of inspiration was the landscape itself; in his unpublished treatise entitled ... More


Last of the Mitford sisters' treasures soar to £1.8 million total; 3x pre-sale estimate   Exhibition of photographs by Ellsworth Kelly on view at Matthew Marks in New York   Exhibition of Swedish painter Hilma af Klint's work opens at the Serpentine Gallery


Duncan Grant, Portrait of the Duchess of Devonshire, seated in an interior, £2,000-3,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

LONDON (AFP).- Hundreds of personal items from the estate of an eccentric British duchess, the youngest of six sisters who scandalised 1930s British high society, were auctioned in London on Wednesday. A collection of insect brooches, 36 model hens and a phone topped with a foot-high figure of Elvis Presley that dances and sings when the phone rings were among the items belonging to Deborah, the late duchess of Devonshire and one of the Mitford sisters. "Together, the objects tell this amazing story about her taste, the choices she made about what to keep, the things from her childhood, the jewels from her husband, the things that made her smile," David MacDonald, a specialist overseeing the Sotheby's sale, told AFP. Raised in decaying aristocratic splendour in the English countryside, the Mitford sisters were close to the Kennedy US political dynasty and then British prime minister Winston Churchill, but courted tabloid infamy with their unorthodox lives and political views. ... More
 

Roof, Ghent, 1972. Gelatin silver print, 12 7/8 x 8 5/8 inches; 33 x 22 cm. © Ellsworth Kelly, Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery.

NEW YORK, NY.- Matthew Marks is presenting Ellsworth Kelly Photographs, on view in his gallery at 523 West 24th Street. Featuring over thirty gelatin silver prints of photos taken between 1950 and 1982, this exhibition is the first ever devoted to Kelly’s photography. Kelly finished preparing the prints and planning the exhibition shortly before his death, on December 27, at the age of ninety-two. Ellsworth Kelly is credited with inventing a new kind of painting, one inspired by nature and chance compositions encountered in the world. This artistic breakthrough took place in the late 1940s, while he was living in France: “Everywhere I looked, everything I saw became something to be made, and it had to be made exactly as it was, with nothing added. It was a new freedom; there was no longer the need to compose.” Kelly’s fascination with already-made compositions is clear in his ... More
 

Group X, No. 3. Altarpiece, 1915; Oil and metal leaf on canvas, 237.5 x 178.5 cm; Courtesy of Stiftelsen Hilma af Klints Verk; Photo: Moderna Museet / Stockholm.

LONDON.- Serpentine Galleries presents an exhibition of Swedish painter Hilma af Klint (1862–1944), who is now regarded as a pioneer of abstract art. While her paintings were not seen publicly until 1986, her work from the early 20th century pre-dates the first purely abstract paintings by Wassily Kandinsky, Piet Mondrian and Kazimir Malevich. This Serpentine exhibition focuses primarily on her body of work, The Paintings for the Temple, which dates from 1906–15. The sequential nature of af Klint’s work is highlighted by the inclusion in the exhibition of numerous paintings from key series, some neverbefore exhibited in the UK. After graduating from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Stockholm in 1887, af Klint took a studio in the city where she produced and exhibited traditional landscapes, botanical drawings and portraits. However, by 1886 she had abandoned the conventions she learned at the ... More


The Armory Show 2016 opens in New York with 205 galleries from 36 countries   Waddington Custot Galleries opens survey of works from the 1960s, 70s and 80s by Barry Flanagan   Throckmorton Fine Art presents early Chinese Buddhist sculpture from the Northern Dynasties


The fair is open to the public from Thursday, March 3 to Sunday, March 6, from 12-7pm daily. Image courtesy of Roberto Chamorro for The Armory Show.

NEW YORK, NY.- The Armory Show VIP Preview began Wednesday, March 2 for invited guests. The fair is open to the public from Thursday, March 3 to Sunday, March 6, from 12-7pm daily. The 2016 edition of the fair will welcome 205 exhibiting galleries from 36 countries worldwide, making this edition the most international in the fair’s history. In addition to a strong exhibitor list that welcomes important Latin American galleries such as Galeria Fortes Vilaça (Sao Paulo), Galeria Luisa Strina (Sao Paulo) and OMR (Mexico City) for the first time in several years, the fair will also welcome it’s first-ever Cuban gallery, Habana (Havana). Highlights of the galleries participating in the fair for the first time include: On Pier 94: Hezi Cohen Gallery (Tel Aviv), Vera Cortês Art Agency (Lisbon), Habana (Havana), Kadel Willborn (Dusseldorf), Meessen De Clercq (Brussels), Francesca Minini ... More
 

Barry Flanagan, Collage II 1968, 1968, red, yellow and blue paper on paper, 10 1/4 x 7 7/8 in / 26 x 20 cm. © The Estate of Barry Flanagan, 2015.

LONDON.- Waddington Custot Galleries presents Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, an exhibition curated by Dr Jo Melvin, focusing on the early career of the renowned late British sculptor. A survey of works from the 1960s, 70s and 80s, the exhibition includes a selection of Flanagan's key early explorations in material and form instrumental in shaping his later career, some having not been exhibited for over 30 years. The artist's use of unconventional materials and his central position in early British Conceptual Art is further informed by displays of contemporary material from the Estate archive, including examples of the artist's concrete poetry, working drawings, logbooks and photographs. The exhibition marks the 50th anniversary of Flanagan's first solo show, held at Rowan Gallery, London, in 1966; Animal, Vegetable, Mineral was the title American writer ... More
 

Head of Buddha, ca 500-534 CE Northern Wei 386-534. Limestone 16 inches.

NEW YORK, NY.- Sculpture from China’s Northern Dynasties dating from 386 to 577 A.D. will be the subject of the Asian art show at Throckmorton Fine Art from March 3 to April 23 at its New York gallery at 145 East 57th Street. According to gallery founder Spencer Throckmorton, “The focus of our 2016 Asian exhibition will be on sculpture from China’s Northern Dynasties including Northern Wei, Eastern Wei and Northern Qi examples, with an emphasis on artworks dating to the sixth century A.D. A detailed catalog will accompany the exhibition. “The nearly two hundred year period surrounding the sixth century was a particularly rich period of artistic production of Buddhist sculpture as Buddhism was adopted at the highest levels of Chinese society, and richly patronized by the Imperial courts of the successive dynasties. The quality and beauty of these examples can serve to illustrate the high artistic level of the sculpture o ... More

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Renoir - Au Bord de L'eau: Dickinson @ TEFAF Maastricht 2016


More News

Solo show by German photographer Carina Brandes opens at Team
NEW YORK, NY.- Team (gallery, inc.) announces a solo show by German photographer Carina Brandes. Entitled Blow Up, the exhibition runs from 03 March to 03 April 2016. Team (gallery, inc.) is located at 47 Wooster Street, between Grand and Broome, on the ground floor. Carina Brandes’ black and white photographs, which depict hypnogogic scenes of play, are the shadowy phantoms of their referent reality. Without the use of explicitly fantastical elements, she conceives and realizes a self-contained, subjective world; the camera serves the artist as a tool for invention and projection, rather than objective documentation. These images isolate ephemeral moments from insoluble, Delphic rituals: nude women (most often the artist herself) perform choreographed actions in otherwise unoccupied nature. The medium of the still image, and these pictures’ arcane but legible contents, ... More

The portrait in contemporary photography is focus of exhibition at Kunstmuseum Bonn
BONN.- For the first time Photographische Sammlung/SK Stiftung Kultur, Cologne, and Kunstmuseum Bonn simultaneously show two group exhibitions with the shared title “With Different Eyes. The Portrait in Contemporary Photography.” These exhibitions both deal with a topic that never gets out of date and that offers a diversity of reference points to us. Not only in the history of painting, but especially in the history of photography, the portrait has always been one of the most important and constantly re-innovated pictorial contents. The exhibitions present numerous artistic concepts that shed light on the genre from many different angles. The shows discuss aspects of individuality and identity, social and cultural contexts and social relations. Single photographs, photo sequences, room-filling installations and cinematic works show people in different living environments, examine ... More

Detroit Institute of Arts hires Eve Straussman-Pflanzer
DETROIT, MICH.- The Detroit Institute of Arts has hired Eve Straussman-Pflanzer as head of the European art department and Elizabeth and Allan Shelden curator of European paintings. Straussman-Pflanzer comes to the DIA from Wellesley College, where she is assistant director of curatorial affairs and senior curator of collections at Wellesley’s Davis Museum. She begins at the DIA on May 2, 2016. “Eve brings exceptional connoisseurship, scholarship and administrative skills to our curatorial team,” said Salvador Salort-Pons, DIA director. “Her leadership, community engagement and highly collaborative abilities will bring our prestigious European art department and collection to the next level of accomplishment and accessibility. Eve’s expertise includes southern Baroque art and women artists and patrons. Her interest in gender studies will provide a fresh perspective ... More

Missoula Art Museum exhibits works by artist Gennie DeWeese
MISSOULA, MT.- This exhibit of colorful and lively paintings from Missoula Art Museum’s Permanent This exhibit of colorful and lively paintings from MAM’s Permanent Collection features works that provide a glimpse into the extraordinary mind and talent of beloved Bozeman artist Gennie DeWeese. Selected from more than 30 DeWeese paintings in MAM’s collection, these nonobjective works, are a small but significant representation of the 60-year career of this important figure in Montana’s colorful art history. Creation: a synthesis, from the artist’s standpoint, of matter, space, and color. Creation is not a reproduction of o observed fact.” –Hans Hofmann, from Search for the Real and Other Essays DeWeese was part of the pioneering generation of Montana artists that challenged the looming presence of Charlie Russell’s romantic depictions of the West by working in ... More

Giles Moon joins Heritage Auctions as Consignment Director of Entertainment & Music Memorabilia
DALLAS, TX.- Heritage Auctions has announced that Giles Moon, regarded as one of the most knowledgeable and respected specialists with more than 25 years in the collectibles business, has joined the firm as a Consignment Director of Entertainment & Music Memorabilia based in its San Francisco office. “Giles has built a stellar reputation known throughout the world,” said Greg Rohan, President of Heritage Auctions. “His enthusiasm and knowledge will certainly bring a new dimension to the services in our growing San Francisco office.” Giles’ international experience within the auction industry began in 1988 at Christie’s South Kensington, London, where he spent his first three years as an assistant in the Antiquarian Book Dept. In 1991, Giles joined the Popular Entertainment department, where he specialized in Rock & Roll and Movie Memorabilia. He ... More

Carpenters Workshop Gallery presents Dutch designer Maarten Baas' latest collection 'Carapace'
NEW YORK, NY.- Dutch designer Maarten Baas presents his latest collection ‘Carapace’ at Carpenters Workshop Gallery’s recently opened New York space. The solo show takes place from Wednesday 2 March to 30 April 2016. Carapace is a scientific term for a protective, decorative or camouflaging shell found on the back of animals such as beetles and turtles. This idea of creating a ‘hard skin’ to protect the soft body is a key inspiration for this Maarten Baas’s newest series. Starting off in admiration of the 1950s refrigerator, this led him to the study of these curved, organic forms found in nature. The designer has created a series of furniture encompassed by a patchwork of bronze plating, dot-welded, piece-by-piece, to form the skin of the furniture, acting as a protective shield, similar to a turtle shell. The designer says, “I feel it’s important to have a hard layer under which ... More

A selection of new and recent paintings by Philip Hanson on view at James Cohan
NEW YORK, NY.- James Cohan is presenting the exhibition It is too difficult a Grace, the gallery’s first solo exhibition of paintings by Philip Hanson. The exhibition is on view from February 26 through April 3 at the gallery’s Lower East Side location. It is too difficult a Grace presents a selection of new and recent paintings that exemplify Hanson’s intersection of text and image, and his complex layering of dense, richly colored patterns with excerpts from Romantic era poets. Originally associated with the Chicago Imagists, Hanson’s approach to painting possesses the Imagists’ desire to capture the visceral and emotional aspects of what it means to be human, yet through the earnestness and sincerity that lives within the words of Emily Dickinson, William Blake, and William Shakespeare. Words in Hanson’s paintings glint across unfurling banners and pass through layers ... More

Exhibition of recent work by Seattle-based artist Ann Gale opens at Dolby Chadwick Gallery
SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- Dolby Chadwick Gallery announces the exhibition of recent work by Seattle-based artist Ann Gale, on view from March 3 to April 2, 2016. The artist will present oil paintings on canvas, linen-wrapped panel, and copper, as well as works in graphite on paper. In a day and age when our society seems obsessed with speed, and with viewing—and dismissing—multitudes of images streaming over the airwaves or bombarding us through the portals of social media, it is a revelation to contemplate the work of an artist such as Gale, who spends months, if not years, studying a single pose taken by one of her models. Gale's passion focuses on conducting an investigation into the nature of perception and the psychology of human interaction that transcends the purely visual. With a stillness, and an intimacy so profound that it becomes nearly unbearable, Gale's keen ... More

Blum & Poe presents an exhibition of work by Kazunori Hamana, Yuji Ueda, and Otani Workshop
NEW YORK, NY.- Blum & Poe presents an exhibition of Japanese ceramics featuring the work of Kazunori Hamana, Yuji Ueda, and Otani Workshop — organized and curated by Takashi Murakami. For this exhibition, Takashi Murakami assembles a new generation of Japanese ceramicists whose unique pottery methods merge a respect for lineage with improvisation, experimentation, and refinement. As with the artists’ previous exhibition at Blum & Poe Los Angeles (September 2015) — Hamana, Ueda, and Otani bring their unique wares and collective imagination to the New York gallery space to create a lucid and otherworldly environment. Central to both the artists' practices and lifestyles, an emphasis on the integrity of natural objects and processes drives this presentation of anthropomorphic clay forms; asymmetrical vessels; and singed, crackling, glazed surfaces. ... More

mumok exhibits works by two young artists: Kathi Hofer and Eloise Hawser
VIENNA.- From March 4, 2016, mumok is presenting two young artists who both reflect critically on contemporary concepts of nostalgia, re-evaluating these with new works made especially for this mumok show. Kathi Hofer (born 1981 in Hallein) draws on her own family history and an Austrian fashion icon—the artist comes from the Salzburg Hofer family that, up to the year 2000, produced the Austrian clothing brand Walkjanker. The timeless elegance of these clothes survived trends and technological innovation for fifty years, and they were included in the portfolios of top fashion houses and magazines and worn by international stars—including actress Grace Kelly, the writer Ernest Hemingway, and the Paris fashion designer Kenzo. Eloise Hawser (born 1985 in London) also works with objects that may seem to be long obsolete, bringing these under new conditions ... More

Second edition of Art on Paper features 65 new & returning galleries
BROOKLYN, NY.- Art on Paper returns to New York City’s Pier 36 this March 3 - 6, bringing the best in paper-based art, presented by 65 top galleries from around the world, to downtown Manhattan. The inaugural Art on Paper welcomed 20,000 visitors to the Lower East Side over the fair's four buzzing days. The fair was set apart by the quality of its exhibitions. The medium-driven focus lent itself to significant projects - unique moments that elevated Art on Paper, quickly shaping the fair into an important and influential New York City destination for modern and contemporary art. Art on Paper’s 2016 Exhibitors present an incredible selection of works on, about, by, and from paper. Purposeful exhibitions and highly curated projects speak to the fair’s focus, highlighting the special rage and diversity inherent to the medium. 101/EXHIBIT, in collaboration with the Larry ... More

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Flashback
On a day like today, fashion designer Perry Ellis, was born
March 03, 1940. Perry Ellis (March 3, 1940 - 8:15 AM May 30, 1986) was an American fashion designer who founded a sportswear house in the mid-1970s. In this image: The model in the center wears a white/lime stripe shirt, white cotton trouser, green snakeskin belt and aviator sunglasses, during the showing of the Perry Ellis menswear Spring 2005 Collection in New York, Wednesday, Sept 8, 2004.



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