| The First Art Newspaper on the Net | | Established in 1996 | Tuesday, June 11, 2019 |
| The symphonic effect of antique Oriental carpets in the home | |
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This immersive 175-year-old Hadji Jallili Tabriz is an example of the one-of-a-kindkind antique Persian weavings that become even more enjoyable when experienced within todays modern home environment. This oversize 19th century Persian Hadji Jallili Tabriz Court carpet is part of a collection of High-Collectible and Connoisseur-Caliber rugs throughout this reinterpreted traditional English country home. Surrounded by understated contemporary furniture and the typical technological accessories of a family room, this luxurious floor covering embraces the old and the new. OAKLAND, CA.- Speaking from 39 years of experience guiding his clients to integrate antique carpets into their homes, Jan David Winitz, president and founder of Claremont Rug Company, explains his approach. An analogy that I often use is that of a symphony orchestra, he says. Rugs, antiques and other art forms are employed much in the same way that musicians perform in an orchestra. Each instrument makes its own unique contribution to create a unified sound. Working with the home owner, my role is that of the conductor to create the harmony of the symphony in the residence. Whether architecturally traditional, contemporary or transitional, a homes features and the homeowners vision help to dictate the choice of antique Persian and tribal rugs for Winitz. Among the considerations are the height of ceilings, the amount of natural light as well as the furniture and other art. Large residences often ha ... More |
The Best Photos of the Day (L-R) Switzerland's President Ueli Maurer, Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg, King Philippe of Belgium, Austria's President Alexander Van der Bellen, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Hereditary Prince Alois of Liechtenstein, pose on June 4, 2019, as they visit the Lentos Art Museum in Linz, Austria, on the sidelines of an informal meeting of German speaking heads of State. HELMUT FOHRINGER / APA / AFP
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| Egypt asks UK to halt auction of Tutankhamun sculpture | | Missing for over 80 years lost Moholy-Nagy experimental short film ABC IN SOUND rediscovered | | National Portrait Gallery announces the winner of the BP Portrait Award 2019 | An Egyptian brown quartzite head of Tutankhamen as the God Amen. Estimate on request. © Christie's Images Ltd 2019. CAIRO (AFP).- The Egyptian embassy in London requested that Britain prevent the planned sale by Christie's of an ancient sculpture representing King Tutankhamun's head and return it to Egypt, Cairo said. "The Egyptian embassy in London requested the British foreign affairs ministry and the auction hall to stop the sale," Egypt's foreign ministry said. Christie's has announced that the brown quartzite head of the pharaoh -- measuring 28.5 centimetres high and more than 3,000 years old -- would take place on July 4. It said it expected the sale, from the Resandro Collection -- one of the world's "most renowned private collections of Egyptian art" -- to fetch more than four million pounds (4.5 million euros, $5.1 million). The foreign ministry also requested the sale of all Egyptian items planned by Christie's during auctions on July 3 and July 4 be stopped, stressing the importance of securing valid ... More | | Newly scanned at 4K the restoration of Tönendes ABC /ABC in Sound (1933) will receive its world premiere at BFI Southbank on 18 June. LONDON.- The BFI announced the rediscovery of Bauhaus teacher and artist László Moholy-Nagys long lost optical sound film, Tönendes ABC / ABC in Sound (1933), missing for over 80 years. The experimental film, from one of the most influential figures of the avant-garde, was found at the BFI National Archive and correctly identified by BFI Curators. László Moholy-Nagy (1895-1946) was a tenacious, restless creative who associated with various early twentieth century vanguard art movements. Teaching at the legendary Bauhaus school, which this year sees its centenary, his early optical sound films experimented with the formal properties of film and blurred the lines between sound and image and the act of hearing and seeing sound. Newly scanned at 4K the restoration of Tönendes ABC /ABC in Sound (1933) will receive its world premiere at BFI Southbank on 18 June before being made available to view online ... More | | First Prize Winner Charlie Schaffer with his portrait Imara in her Winter Coat. Photograph by Jorge Herrera. LONDON.- The winner of the BP Portrait Award 2019 was announced this evening at the National Portrait Gallery, London. The prestigious first prize was won by Brighton based artist, Charlie Schaffer for Imara in her Winter Coat, a portrait of his close friend. The winning portrait was selected from 2,538 submissions from 84 countries. The judges admired the mannerist style of this portrait, which has a strong sense of a living presence in Schaffers composition. The judges went on to say, the skilful depiction of a combination of several different textures including faux-fur, hair and skin are revealed by prolonged looking and together these produce an image that is traditional, but clearly contemporary. Sandi Toksvig presented Charlie Schaffer with £35,000 and a commission, at the National Portrait Gallery Trustees discretion, worth £7,000 (agreed between the National Portrait Gallery and the artist). Born in Londo ... More |
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| Goodman Gallery announces opening in London | | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston acquires rare silver from Sotheby's $2.7 million Important Judaica auction | | Almine Rech now represents Allen Jones | Liza Essers. Courtesy Goodman Gallery and Anthea Pokroy. LONDON.- Goodman Gallery announced the opening of a London gallery in Autumn 2019. Globally renowned as the pre-eminent art gallery on the African continent, Goodman Gallerys new location at 26 Cork Street will complement its two existing spaces in Cape Town and Johannesburg, South Africa. Goodman Gallery will be the first permanent gallery to activate the Cork Street redevelopment in W1S. The historic street which brought exhibitions by Francis Bacon and Joan Miró to London for the first time, will be enlivened by the gallerys cutting-edge programme. Goodman Gallerys roster of top artists from South Africa and beyond includes Candice Breitz, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Shirin Neshat and the late David Goldblatt. They also bring to London a new generation of core contemporary names from Africa and the Diaspora, such as Nolan Oswald Dennis, Kiluanji Kia Henda, Grada Kilomba, Kapwani Kiwanga, and Tabita Rezaire. ... More | | A Pair of German Parcel-Gilt Silver Torah Finials Jurgen Richels, Hamburg, circa 1688-9. Sold for $500,000. Courtesy Sotheby's. NEW YORK, NY.- Driven by demand from private collectors and cultural institutions, Sothebys Important Judaica auction totaled $2.7 million in New York. From ceremonial silver to important manuscripts and fine art, below is a look at some of the exceptional items that drove these results. The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston acquired two of sales top offerings of silver a Pair of German Parcel-Gilt Silver Torah Finials from Hamburg circa 1688-89 which sold for $500,000 and A Pair of Large English Parcel-Gilt Silver Torah Finials by British Silversmith Edward Aldridge from 1764 sold for $187,500. Both pair of finials stand out for their exceptional rarity and notable provenance, the latter of which were sold to benefit The Central Synagogue, London and were formerly in the famed collection of Philip Salomons brother of the first Jewish Lord Mayor of London who was one of the first collectors of antique Judaica in ... More | | British artist Allen Jones poses next to his his work of art entitled "Enchanteresse" on display at the Royal Academy of Arts in London on October 2, 2012. AFP PHOTO / JUSTIN TALLIS. LONDON.- Almine Rech announced the representation of iconic British pop artist Allen Jones in France, Belgium and China. His first exhibition with the gallery will take place at Almine Rech Paris from October 12 to November 16, 2019. Almine Rech will also present works by Allen Jones on the occasion of Art Basel, from June 11 to 16, 2019 - Booth F6. Allen Jones is one of Britains most distinguished artists from the pioneering Pop Movement, with paintings and sculptures in many important international collections, including the Tate Gallery and the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington DC, the Museum of 20th-Century Art in Vienna, the Wallraf-Richartz Museum in Cologne, the Moderna Museet in Stockholm and the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. He1 ... More |
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| Seattle Art Museum appoints Amada Cruz as new Director and CEO | | Grapevine timeline: DNA shows France's oldest grape varieties | | Stunning Pre-Columbian, Tribal art from private collections offered in Heritage Auctions' Ethnographic Art auction | Since February 2015, Ms. Cruz has served as the Sybil Harrington Director and CEO of the Phoenix Art Museum in Arizona. Photo: Airi Katsuta. SEATTLE, WA.- The Board of Trustees of the Seattle Art Museum announced today that Amada Cruz has been chosen as the museums new Illsley Ball Nordstrom Director and CEO following an extensive international search. Since February 2015, Ms. Cruz has served as the Sybil Harrington Director and CEO of the Phoenix Art Museum in Arizona, the largest art museum in the Southwestern United States. She will assume her position at SAM in September, succeeding Kimerly Rorschach who will be retiring. In her role at SAMcomprising the downtown Seattle Art Museum, the Asian Art Museum in Volunteer Park, and the Olympic Sculpture Park on the downtown waterfrontCruz will oversee the institutions wide-ranging artistic and education programs and manage a staff of more than 300. I am so excited about moving to one of the most progressive, innovative, and fastest-growing ... More | | Waterlogged Roman grape seeds like these were genetically tested to investigate grape varieties in the past. PARIS (AFP).- Grape varieties brought to France by the Romans are identical to those grown for wine in some of the most famous appellations today, a new analysis of ancient vine DNA showed Monday. Researchers unearthed evidence that one grape -- from which well-known varieties such as chenin and riesling are derived -- had been grown continuously for 900 years, long enough for a good many vintages. Unlike many agricultural crops, which grow annually from seed, grapevines are normally propagated by replanting trimmings from an existing vine. This saves both time and the risk of producing an inferior wine, and the new plants are genetically identical to their predecessors. This means that a single generation of a grape variety can last for hundreds of years. Written records suggest viniculture in France dates back to the sixth century BCE, introduced by the ... More | | The Important Olmec Mask (estimate: $50,000-75,000) comes from the Robert and Carolyn Nelson Collection. Estimate: $50,000 - $75,000. DALLAS, TX.- A rare, Olmec mask headlines a trove of Pre-Columbian art featured in Heritage Auctions Ethnographic Art: American Indian, Pre-Columbian and Tribal Auction June 25 in Dallas, Texas. The Important Olmec Mask (estimate: $50,000-75,000) comes from the Robert and Carolyn Nelson Collection, and is life-sized, with finely carved facial features in high relief. The Olmecs were the earliest known major civilization in Mesoamerica, living in 1,200-400 B.C. in south-central Mexico, in the region that stretches over modern states of Veracruz and Tabasco. This is an extraordinary piece from Robert and Carolyn Nelson, who have assembled a world-class collection, Heritage Auctions Senior Ethnographic Art Specialist Delia Sullivan said. Olmec art is very distinctive and in high demand among collectors. The Olmecs often worked in stone, specifically ... More |
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| Toomey & Co. Auctioneers sells painting for $35,000 to help local resale shop | | Exhibition at Sims Reed Gallery showcases 31 vibrant drawings by Aaron Kasmin | | David Hill Gallery opens first exhibition dedicated to Werner Bischof's USA series | Proceeds from the sale of a Charles Courtney Curran work will increase funding for the Oak Park-based Economy Shops six partner agencies. OAK PARK, IL.- On June 9, Toomey & Co. Auctioneers held its second successful Art & Design sale of 2019. One of the highlights of the auction was an oil on canvas by American Impressionist Charles Courtney Curran, Three Women on Hilltop, 1919 (image attached below), which had a $10,000-15,000 estimate. With active competition among telephone and online bidders, the lot achieved $35,000 including buyers premium. This Curran painting was originally donated to the Economy Shop, a charity reseller in Oak Park, Illinois celebrating its 100th anniversary this year. Given Toomey & Co.s impressive result for the Curran, the Economy Shop will be able to offer additional bonuses to each of its six partner agencies in the area: Animal Care League, Children's Clinic of Infant Welfare Society, Oak Park River Forest Day Nursery, ... More | | Aaron Kasmin, Fish and Chips. LONDON.- Aaron Kasmin returns to Sims Reed Gallery with his third exhibition inspired by American feature matchbooks. Bold. Dynamic. Energetic. Nostalgic. Showtime! Is the British artists largest show to date, showcasing 31 vibrant drawings that depict a more diverse range of subject matter than his earlier work, transporting viewers back to the dynamism of a bygone America. After the success of Up in Smoke, 2017 and Lucky Strike, 2016, Kasmin is hosting an exhibition of new works that take a look at themes ranging from restaurants and nightlife to sports and travel, nostalgically shedding light on early to mid-twentieth century American life. Celebrating both the every day and glitz and glamour of the time, his drawings hark back to the post-prohibition era, a period filled with movie stars and opulent parties as described in the novels of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Raymond Chandler. Kasmin began collecting Lion Match Companys ... More | | Werner Bischof, Painter of the Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco, USA 1953. LONDON.- Renowned Magnum photographer Werner Bischof brought early 1950s America vividly to life through his series of enigmatic and expansively composed images, yet his tragic death at the age of 38 meant that this work was never printed in his lifetime. A true innovator, Bischof was one of the first documentary photographers to approach colour seriously. At the time most of his celebrated contemporaries were still predominantly working in monochrome and would continue to do so until the mid 1960s. Now this fascinating collection of both black and white and colour images, taken during his travels around America, many shown here for the first time, will be unveiled in a landmark exhibition that celebrates the legendary photographers work. Werner Bischof is recognised as one of historys most influential photographers. During his lifetime ... More |
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Richard Bell - 'My Art is an Act of Protest' | Artist Interview | Tate
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| More News | Wanrooij Gallery in Amsterdam presents 'Evolution' by Christian Voigt AMSTERDAM.- Wanrooij Gallery in Amsterdam presents from 6 June until 24 August 2019 an exhibition of German photographer Christian Voigt. For his new series Evolution the fine art photographer has portrayed prehistoric skeletons against a black backdrop. Huge dinosaurs, three-dimensional, almost alive. Fantasy fiction becomes reality. The gallery shows an intriguing selection of large-format photographs. Christian Voigt has received international recognition for his monumental, hyper-realistic landscape and architectural photography, in particular interiors of museums and libraries. His life motive is the search for beauty, underpinned by perfectionism. With Evolution, the artist has radically expanded both his visual vocabulary and his portfolio of photographic techniques. The idea for the new series came to him in 2017 when he was photographing ... More Faith Ringgold's first European institutional exhibition opens at the Serpentine Galleries LONDON.- The ground-breaking work of Faith Ringgold (b. 1930, Harlem, New York) is celebrated in this exhibition at the Serpentine Galleries, her first in a European institution. For more than five decades, Ringgold has consistently challenged perceptions of African American identity and gender inequality through the lenses of the feminist and the civil rights movements. As cultural assumptions and prejudices persist, her work retains its contemporary resonance. Focusing on different series that she has created over the past 50 years, this survey of her work includes paintings, story quilts and political posters made during the Black Power movement including one to free activist Angela Davis. Growing up in the creative and intellectual context of the Harlem Renaissance, Ringgold has worked prolifically since the early 1960s, and is widely recognised ... More Joslyn Art Museum opens 'The Art of Seating: 200 Years of American Design' OMAHA, NEB.- Few works tell the history of modern design as eloquently as the chair. The Art of Seating: 200 Years of American Design pulls this most familiar of everyday objects out from under the desk and dining room table to surprise visitors with the exceptional style and creativity to be found in this seemingly humble piece of furniture. Drawn from the Jacobsen Collection of American Art and organized by The Museum of Contemporary Art, Jacksonville, Florida, the exhibition presents an exploration of American design from the early nineteenth century to the present day. The Art of Seating is on view at Joslyn Art Museum from June 1 through September 8. Considering the chair not only as an everyday item but also as functional sculpture, each of the forty chairs in the exhibition reflect important artistic, social, economic, political and cultural influences. ... More The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography presents the work of Sheila Metzner in Russia MOSCOW.- The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography presents a retrospective by Sheila Metzneran outstanding American photographer whose works are being presented in Russia for the first time. During her 50-year career, Sheila has built up an impressive portfolio: from celebrity portraits, including Uma Thurman, David Lynch, Milla Jovovich, Tilda Swinton and Kim Basinger, and photographs for fashion magazines such as Vogue, Tatler and Vanity Fair, to still life and landscapes. Despite such a variety of genres, Metzners works all have an easily recognizable trademark style. Sheila finds inspiration in life itself: in people and subjects around her, her family, fleeting impressions and feelings. Sheila creates deeply personal, sensual, graceful and fascinating images. In the poses of the models, saturated deep colors and soft ... More The Albertina exhibits the latest series of works by Sean Scully VIENNA.- The Albertina is presenting the latest series of works by Sean Scully, one of todays leading practitioners of abstraction. His compositions are mostly built of plain strips and bands whose balance derives solely from intuition and not from rational construction. The new series, named after the island resort of Eleuthera in the Caribbean , stands out for its surprising figuration, which seems to represent Scullys radical break with an artistic approach he has consistently pursued since the 1970s. But in fact Scully worked simultaneously and independently on both the figurative pictures of his eight-year-old son OisÃn and his abstract geometric paintings. Products based on either one of these two forms of expression were created virtually side by side, in the same studio: on the one hand, the many variations of a picture composed of vertical and horizontal ... More Exhibition features Joan Miró's sculptures in dialogue with Joaquim Gomis' photographs of Gaudà BARCELONA.- Joan Miró and Antoni Gaudà both attended the drawing classes held at the Cercle ArtÃstic de Sant Lluc in Barcelona around the 1910s, when Miró was just beginning his art studies and Gaudà was already a renowned architect. Although they never met personally, they have many features in common. The Miró-GaudÃ-Gomis exhibition maps these affinities through the gaze of Joaquim Gomis, a personal friend of Mirós and an avid promoter of GaudÃ's work. His photographs captured the precursory character of both artists and provided a new interpretation of their work that highlighted the significant coincidences between the two. Miró was particularly drawn to the rhythm and structure of GaudÃ's architecture, and also shared his urge to push the boundaries of existing procedures and materials. Both viewed nature as the generating ... More Anne Frank's step-sister launches Anne Frank exhibition with anti-prejudice message for modern audience GLASGOW.- A thought-provoking exhibition which explores the life and modern legacy of Anne Frank launched last week (6 June) at St Mungo Museum of Religious Life and Art in Glasgow with Annes step-sister Eva Schloss, MBE as guest speaker. It is on display until 30 June 2019. Anne Frank + You, delivered by anti-prejudice education charity Anne Frank Scotland, in partnership with Glasgow Museums, presents facsimile artefacts from Annes life and the Holocaust including a life-size replica of her bedroom in the secret annexe where she and her family hid for more than two years in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam. Historical content is juxtaposed with a contemporary section which highlights themes from Annes diary, such as racial hatred and the value of freedom and education. The event also sees the charitys Scottish launch of ... More James R. Wehn joins Chazen Museum of Art's curatorial staff MADISON, WIS.- James R. Wehn, Ph.D. has been named the Van Vleck Curator of Works on Paper at the Chazen Museum of Art at the University of WisconsinMadison. He will begin his tenure on June 24, and will be responsible for the study, conservation and exhibition of the Chazens collection of prints, drawings and photographs, including the museums notable E. B. Van Vleck Collection of Japanese prints. Wehn, who grew up in Wisconsin, received his Doctorate from Case Western Reserve University in 2019, where he studied Early Modern printmaking in Northern Europe and Italy, with special interest in the development and use of intaglio techniques. His research also focused on the development of print markets, collecting and the history of print connoisseurship. We are delighted to welcome Dr. Wehn to the Chazen, said Amy ... More rosenfeld porcini opens 'Contemplating the Spiritual in Contemporary Art' LONDON.- rosenfeld porcini is presenting Contemplating the Spiritual in Contemporary Art which was born out of wishing to look at the distinction between Western and Oriental approaches to spirituality and what it can tell us about the different ways we try to find meaning in our lives. The gallery has be divided into three separate sections. The first room examines the responses of a group of artists to the stories in the Old and New testaments and their roots in human drama. Benitha Perciyals two figures staring at each other both express a purity in their faces which make them feel Christlike. Moreover they are made from materials like myrrh, frankincense, cloves, cinnamon, lemongrass, bark and cedar wood, all either related to the specific story of Christ or timeless, natural elements that would have existed at the same time as when Christ ... More Gray's auction will be led by a portrait painting by Janos Vaszary CLEVELAND, OH.- A portrait painting by the Hungarian artist János Vaszary (1867-1939) of his wife Maria, and an oil on canvas nude rendering by the Scottish painter Duncan Grant (1885-1978), are two expected top lots in a Fine Art, Furniture & Decorative Art auction planned for Wednesday, June 26th, by Grays Auctioneers, online and in the gallery at 10717 Detroit Avenue. In all, 443 lots will come up for bid, beginning at 10 am Eastern time. The full catalog is up now and pre-bidding is open at www.GraysAuctioneers.com. Bidding is also available on LiveAuctioneers.com and Invaluable.com. Phone and absentee bids will also be accepted. Previews will be held Thursday thru Wednesday, June 20-26, from 10 am to 5 pm, and on Saturday, June 22, from 12 noon until 4 pm. All lots will be available for in-person examination during the previews. ... More |
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Flashback On a day like today, English painter John Constable was born June 11, 1776. John Constable, RA (11 June 1776 - 31 March 1837) was an English landscape painter in the naturalistic tradition. Born in Suffolk, he is known principally for his landscape paintings of Dedham Vale, the area surrounding his home -- now known as "Constable Country" -- which he invested with an intensity of affection. In this image: A Sea Beach - Brighton estimated at £400,000 - 600,000. Photo: Bonhams.
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