Transactions
The Getty Research Institute announced the acquisition of the Emmett Williams archive, also known as the Berlin archive. The American-born Williams relocated to Europe to 1949 and rose to acclaim through his contributions to the Fluxus movement. The archive, which spans the late 1950s to 2007 when Williams died, features artwork, performance instructions, prints, correspondence, and more. Notable items include a group of Fluxus scrolls used in poetry performances; 100 letters that Williams wrote to his first wife Laura, which document early developments in Fluxus and his own work; and artwork by Williams and his circle, which included Charlotte Moorman, Seiichi Niikuni, Dieter Roth, and Daniel Spoerri. The archive will be available to researchers once it is catalogued.
The Hepworth Wakefield announced the acquisition of nearly 100 works from local Yorkshire collectors and patrons Terence Bacon and John Oldham. Bacon and Oldham, who have been collecting art since the 1930s, gifted pieces by British ceramicists such as Dame Lucie Rie, Angus Suttie, and Alison Britton, as well as an impressive 43 pots by John Ward. The donation also features works on paper and paintings by British artists including Sir Terry Frost RA, Rose Hilton, and Craigie Aitchison, who was also a friend of the couple.
Phillips just kicked off a series of online-only auctions with an Editions and Works on Paper sale, which features 50 work by well-known modern and contemporary artists including Alexander Calder and Takashi Murakami. Of personal interest is Yoshitomo Mara’s “Pup Cup” (2003), a plastic puppy in a teacup that rotates (caveat emptor: it requires two AA batteries). The Editions and Works on Paper sale will be followed by Current Mood, a sale of contemporary art, and Desktop, a sale of contemporary art, editions, and design (details to be announced). The auction series will run through May.
This Week in the Art World
The Leslie-Lohman Museum named Laura Raicovich as its interim director. | New York Times
Phoenix Art Museum (PhxArt) has named Tim Rodgers as the museum’s Sybil Harrington Director and CEO. | Press release
The Centre Pompidou re-appointed Serge Lasvignes as the museum’s president. | Artforum
The Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts at Washington University, St. Louis granted the 2020 Stone & DeGuire Contemporary Art Awards to Lyndon Barrois Jr. and Wyndi DeSouza. | Press release
The FHNW Academy of Art and Design appointed Claudia Perren as its director. | Artforum
Michigan’s Cranbrook Academy of Art and Art Museum selected the new heads of painting, Martha Mysko and Willie Wayne Smith, and the new head of photography, Chris Fraser. | Art Newspaper
In Memoriam
Helène Aylon (1931–2020), ecofeminist artist | ARTnews
Anne Bass (1941–2020), ballet philanthropist | Vogue
Honor Blackman (1925–2020), Pussy Galore actress | Guardian
Jeffery Camp (1923–2020), British painter | Artforum
Renato Danese (1944–2020), Chelsea gallerist | ARTnews
Kate Johnson (1969–2020), video artist and filmmaker | 18th Street
Michael McKinnell (1935–2020), Brutalist architect | New York Times
Marlo Pascual (1972–2020), found image artist | ARTnews
John Prine (1946–2020), country-folk singer | Rolling Stone
Suellen Rocca (1943–2020), Hairy Who cofounder | New York Times
Chynna Rogers (1994–2020), model and rapper | Pitchfork
Sergio Rossi (1935–2020), Italian shoe designer | Harper’s Bazaar
Bill Withers (1938–2020), singer-songwriter | Associated Press
Christina Monet Zilkha (1959–2020), new wave singer and art critic | NPR