| The First Art Newspaper on the Net | | Established in 1996 | Friday, July 3, 2020 |
| Exhibition looks at the different roles and functions of art in domestic spaces | |
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Left: Alessandro Rondoni, Bust of Cardinal Domenico Maria Corsi (1633  1697), 1686. Marble, 77.5 x 0 cm (30 ¹/₂ x 0 inches) Right: Alessandro Rondoni, Bust of Marquess Giovanni di Jacopo Corsi (1600  1661), 1685. Marble, 72 x 0 cm (28 ³/₈ x 0 inches). LONDON.- For the Digital edition of London Art Week 2020, Trinity Fine Art presents an exhibition looking at the different roles and functions of art in domestic spaces of the past which will guide the modern viewer on a journey through the courtly home of the Renaissance and Baroque eras, retracing the steps of these objects, the families that commissioned them and the villas and palazzi in which they are recorded, and in doing so discover the ways in which art merged with the everyday life of these courtly homes. We have collectively been obliged to consider carefully the different spaces and uses of space within the home, and perhaps we can be guided in this by looking to the examples of the past. From the Renaissance onwards perhaps no other space was more intriguing and complex than that of the household interior in which a wide range of objects served key functions in the fashioning of familial, local and collective identities. ... More |
The Best Photos of the Day This picture taken on July 1, 2020 shows a general view of (R to L) the Great Great Pyramid of Khufu (Cheops), the Pyramid of Khafre (Chephren), and the Pyramid of Menkaure (Menkheres) at the Giza Pyramids necropolis on the southwestern outskirts of the Egyptian capital Cairo, as the archaeological site reopens while the country eases restrictions put in place due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic. A spree of openings in Egypt comes after the country officially ended a three-month nighttime curfew a few days earlier. Cafes and shops have re-opened but public beaches and parks remain closed as part of measures to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus. Egypt has recorded more than 65,000 COVID-19 cases including over 2,700 deaths. Khaled DESOUKI / AFP
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| Egypt reopens pyramids to tourists after virus closure | | Bruce Silverstein Gallery welcomes The Bill Cunningham Foundation | | The best art in town - and open to all: Top ten works at London Art Week Digital, 3-10 July | Yemeni women residing in Egypt visit the Giza Pyramids necropolis on the southwestern outskirts of the Egyptian capital Cairo on July 1, 2020. Khaled DESOUKI / AFP. CAIRO (AFP).- Egypt reopened its famed Giza pyramids to the public on Wednesday after a three-month closure, seeking to restart a vital tourism industry battered by the novel coronavirus. Dozens of excited tourists snapped selfies as they wandered around Egypt's most iconic ancient site. The pyramids were the country's first tourist attraction to reopen, along with the Egyptian Museum next to Cairo's Tahrir Square, ground zero of the 2011 revolution. Authorities are hoping holidaymakers will brave flying and head to Egypt after international flights resumed on Tuesday under loosening travel restrictions. "We came to the Pyramids today because they opened up after they were closed for a long time," Ashiana Love, an Australian ... More | | Met Gala, 1993. NEW YORK, NY.- The Bruce Silverstein Gallery announced exclusive international representation of the Bill Cunningham Foundation photographic archive. Cunningham was a documentarian of fashion for over half a century, and his photographs are informed by a lifelong passion for style. Part of the fabric of the ever-changing metropolis of New York City, Cunningham was renowned for his ability to spot and photograph fashion trends at their inception. Singular in the history of fashion photography, Cunningham reinvented the genre and embraced straightforward images taken on the city streets, as opposed to the use of posed models. Due to his fastidious approach to image making, and devotion to his craft, Bill Cunningham created an extraordinary body of work that not only captured the history of fashion, but also the zeitgeist of his time. Born in 1929 and raised in ... More | | Sir Anthony Van Dyck (1599-1641), Portrait of a Young Girl in a White Apron, c. 1630 (detail). Oil on canvas, 39 x 32 ⅝ in (99 x 83 cm) LONDON.- From Rembrandt and Van Dyck to Gainsborough, Constable and Turner; Degas and Bonnard to Picasso and Freud; Edward Lear to LS Lowry; Rodin to Henry Moore; the roll-call of famous names for sale at London Art Week opening this Friday spans the arc of art history. Usually London Art Week takes place in galleries around St. James's and Mayfair, and although many exhibitions are now able to open by appointment, the event is available for all to enjoy online in a new digital format, involving art galleries from the USA, UK and Europe, at www.londonartweek.co.uk from Friday 3 to Friday 10 July 2020. The earliest works of art on offer date from ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome; also included are rare examples of early and medieval art, and of the Renaissance period. Great names can be found ... More |
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| New York City cuts arts spending by 11% to close budget gap | | Pallant House Gallery acquires paintings of first gay kiss in British theatre | | Fang-Betsi Ancestor Head leads $16 million Clyman Collection of African and Contemporary Art at Sotheby's in New York | File photo of Jimmy Van Bramer at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, April 1, 2014. NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- The New York City budget adopted early Wednesday cuts spending on cultural affairs by nearly 11%, a damaging blow after years where municipal spending on the arts had grown, but it was not as deep a gash as some had feared. The reductions came as the city responded to a roughly $9 billion loss in tax revenues because of the coronavirus shutdown. Last year, funding for the Department of Cultural Affairs, which coordinates grants to arts organizations across the city, climbed to an all-time high of $212 million. This year, the budget allocates around $189 million. Jimmy Van Bramer, a City Council member who chairs the cultural affairs committee, said that some budget negotiators wanted deeper cuts to the arts funding. I fight like an animal inside the budget negotiating team for those things, he said in a phone interview before the council budget vote. Van Bramer ultimately voted against the budget, in part because of a roughly $15 million cut to arts education services in ... More | | Leonard Rosoman, Portrait with Candelabra: George Devine as Baron von Epp, 1968, Acrylic on canvas, 101.2 x 76.2 cm, Courtesy of Roxanne Rosoman, Photography Dawkins Colour / John Bodkin © The Artists Estate. CHICHESTER.- Marking Pride Month 2020, Pallant House Gallery has today announced the acquisition of a series of paintings depicting the first gay kiss and drag ball in British theatre. The five works by British artist Leonard Rosoman R.A (1913-2012) have been acquired from the estate of the artists widow Roxanne Wruble Rosoman (1937-2018) through the Acceptance in Lieu Scheme. Pallant House Gallery Director Simon Martin has commented: We are thrilled to acquire Leonard Rosomans A Patriot for Me paintings. Not only are they among his finest works, but they have a particular significance to LGBTQ history, to the history of British theatre and visual art, representing a time when Britains social and cultural history was on the cusp of a pivotal shift. The five paintings created as part of Rosomans A Patriot for Me series are based on John Osbornes controversial play of the same name, which was first perf ... More | | Fang-Betsi Artist, Head of an Ancestor. The first work of Classical African art to be presented in any Contemporary Art Evening Sale achieves $3.5 million. Courtesy Sotheby's.
NEW YORK, NY.- Sales featuring property from the Collection of Sidney and Bernice Clyman concluded Tuesday, achieving $16 million across four auctions held during Sotheby's marquee auction week in New York. Leading the collection was a Fang-Betsi Ancestor Head, which sold for $3.5 million (estimate $2.5/4 million) in the Contemporary Art Evening Auction on Monday night during Sothebys global livestreamed auction event. One of the most important works of African Art ever to appear at auction, the reliquary sculpture marked the first time a work of classical African Art was presented in any contemporary art evening sale. The sale series finished on Tuesday with a dedicated auction of one of the finest groupings of African sculptures in the world, totaling $4.6 million and surpassing the high estimate by $1 million. A strong 97% of all lots sold with over 70% of sold lots making over their high ... More |
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| Tate to reopen all its galleries on 27 July | | Newfields transfers hundreds of Dines Carlsen drawings to the National Nordic Museum | | Museum or mosque? Top Turkey court to rule on Hagia Sophia | Tate Liverpool exterior. © Rachel Ryan Photography LONDON.- Tate announced that it plans to reopen all four of its galleries on 27 July 2020. People will once again be able to visit the national collection of art on display at Tate Britain, Tate Modern, Tate Liverpool and Tate St Ives, featuring hundreds of artworks from across the centuries and around the world. Guided by the latest official advice, Tate is currently working hard on its preparations to welcome the public back to its galleries. To manage numbers and ensure everyone can keep a safe distance from each other, all visitors, including Members, will need to book a timed ticket online in advance. Tickets will be available from next week at tate.org.uk alongside the latest information and guidance on how to visit. Visitors can follow Tates social media or register for email updates to hear details as and when they are confirmed. As well as the collection displays at all four Tate galleries, Tate Modern will ... More | | Dines Carlsen (American, 19011966), Ludwell, Paradise Garden, 19281966 (detail), conte crayon on bond paper, 8-1/2 x 11 in. (sheet). Former collection of the Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields. © Dines Carlsen. Image courtesy of Newfields. INDIANAPOLIS, IND.- This summer the Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields will transfer 943 Dines Carlsen drawings to the National Nordic Museum in Seattle, WA as part of the ongoing Collection Assessment Project. The Collection Assessment Project is a qualitative assessment of the approximately 41,000 works of art in the IMA collection. The project began in 2011 with a grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, which allowed the IMA to hire six outside specialists to provide oversite to collection areas in which IMA staff was seeking additional expertise. Beginning October 2015, IMA curators formally began the Collection Assessment Project, which included physically and critically reviewing each item in their collection and ranking each ... More | | A security officer stands guard inside the Hagia Sophia museum in Istanbul, on July 2, 2020. Ozan KOSE / AFP. by Gokan Gunes with Raziye Akkoc in Ankara ISTANBUL (AFP).- Turkey's top court considered Thursday whether Istanbul's emblematic landmark and former cathedral Hagia Sophia can be redesignated as a mosque, a ruling which could inflame tensions with the West. The Council of State was looking at a case brought by a Turkish NGO, the Association for the Protection of Historic Monuments and the Environment, during a short hearing. It will announce its decision on the fate of the UNESCO World Heritage site within 15 days, state broadcaster TRT reported. The sixth-century edifice -- a magnet for tourists worldwide with its stunning architecture -- has been a museum since 1935, open to believers of all faiths. Despite occasional protests outside ... More |
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| Stephen Friedman Gallery presents a new installation by British artist Jonathan Baldock | | Only known drawing of extinct giant sloth lemur found in cave | | Cultural life is back in Europe. In the U.K., they talk of collapse. | Jonathan Baldock, Facecrime (suspect), 2020. Ceramic, steel, hand-spun yarn. Dimensions variable. Installed at Stephen Friedman Gallery, London (2020). Copyright Jonathan Baldock. Courtesy the artist and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London. Photo by Todd-White Art Photography. LONDON.- Stephen Friedman Gallery is presenting a new installation Facecrime (suspect) by British artist Jonathan Baldock in Gallery Two. Accompanying the installation is a solo exhibition of Andreas Erikssons tapestries in Gallery One and Yinka Shonibare CBEs profound new sculpture Justice For All in the Viewing Room. Originally commissioned for Art Basel Hong Kong 2020 before the fairs cancellation, 'Facecrime (suspect) is a monumental installation comprising precariously stacked ceramic columns. Evoking both ancient ruins and a surreal vision of the future, these hand-crafted forms reflect the artist's interest in myth, folklore and narratives associated with outsider' practices. Baldocks use of cobalt blue makes the work shimmer and glow with a spiritual, alchemical quality. Protruding from the columns' vibra ... More | | The cave art showing the only known image of a giant sloth lemur, in a hunting scene with dogs to the right © Burney et al. 2020. LONDON.- Madagascar used to be home to a range of species that no longer survive today. These included not only the giant elephant birds, but also giant lemurs, some of which were the size of gorillas. Apart from the bones of these animals and possible eye-witness accounts passed down through the generations, there has been little evidence of what these animals looked like in real life. But the discovery of new cave art may change this. Julian Hume is a researcher at the Museum who works on the extinct animals of the Indian Ocean. In a new paper published in the Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology, Julian and his colleagues have described what is thought to be the only known drawing of a giant sloth lemur from caves in western Madagascar. The team have shown the images to multiple experts, who all agree that the only thing it could represent is the now extinct giant sloth lemurs © Burney et al. 2020 'There are scenes of what we perceive as the hunting ... More | | A photo provided by Edward Borlase shows the auditorium of the Theater Royal Plymouth, viewed from backstage, in Plymouth, England. Edward Borlase via The New York Times. by Alex Marshall LONDON (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Adrian Vinken, chief executive of the Theater Royal in Plymouth, England, steeled himself on June 22 and then loaded up Zoom. About 240 of the theaters staff members were waiting online, he recalled in a telephone interview. Those included people whod worked for us 30 years and given us everything, Vinken said, as well as young workers who had only recently nabbed a job at the three-stage venue, one of Britains largest outside London. He then said that almost a third of the theaters jobs were at risk, and that many employees would soon be laid off. With the theater closed because of the coronavirus pandemic, it had lost more than 90% of its income. It hurt like hell, Vinken said. For weeks, prominent actors, including Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Judi Dench, had been warning the government ... More |
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In the Street, 1948---A Film by Helen Levitt
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| More News | V&A virtual exhibition using gaming technology launched for Prix Pictet LONDON.- Prix Pictet, the worlds leading prize for photography and sustainability, today launches a virtual exhibition featuring 12 leading photographers from 8 nations shortlisted for Prix Pictet Hope. Designed by the young digital artist Gabriel Stones using gaming technology, the exhibition is a recreation of the exhibition that took place at Londons Victoria and Albert Museum between 14 November and 8 December 2019. The fully interactive experience allows viewers to navigate freely in a new 3D rendering of the V&As Porter Gallery and zoom into high-resolution photographs accompanied by artist interviews. The photographers on show are: Shahidul Alam, born 1955 Bangladesh, based in Dhaka Joana Choumali, born 1974 Côte dIvoire, based in Abidjan Margaret Courtny-Clarke, born 1949 Namibia, based in Swakopmund Rena Effendi, born 1977 Azerbaijan, based in Istanbul ... More 'A conflicted cultural force': What it's like to be black in publishing NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- The nationwide protests against police brutality and racial injustice have set off conversations in nearly every industry about the treatment of Black workers, and book publishing is no exception. The industry has long been criticized for hiring and retaining so few employees of color according to a survey of the workforce released this year by the childrens book publisher Lee & Low Books, only 5% are Black. But the calls to diversify have intensified in recent weeks, as Black professionals have publicly shared long-suppressed frustrations about how racial prejudice has affected their work. In publishing, that has included discussions of hiring practices, workplace microaggressions and publishing companies treatment of books by Black writers. Publishers say they are listening. They are seeing books about ... More Wysing Arts Centre launches an interactive digital platform for new commissions and live events CAMBRIDGE.- Wysing Arts Centre presents wysingbroadcasts.art, a digital platform for new sound, video and text commissions by artists working within and around Wysings 2020 programme. The platform launches with new work by Catalina Barroso-Luque & Ferronia Wennborg, Rebecca Jagoe, Abi Palmer, Morgan Quaintance and Victoria Sin. Commissions will be launched each month, by artists Ruth Angel Edwards, Sonya Dyer, Juliet Jacques and many others. The site will also host Wysings annual Polyphonic art and music festival, Open Studios, interactions with residency artists and their works in progress, and other streamed events. Curator at Wysing Arts Centre, John Bloomfield, said Originally conceived as a platform for our residency artists, our new digital platform has taken on a special importance during the Covid-19 crisis, enabling ... More The exhibition Pär Engsheden and Sara Danius's Nobel gowns opens at Nationalmuseum STOCKHOLM.- On June 26, the exhibition featuring the Nobel gowns that Pär Engsheden created for Sara Danius opened in Stockholm. The iconic garments are on display together with the accessories that was worn with them and Carl Bengtsson's photographs of Sara Danius wearing the gowns. The exhibition will remain on show until February 21. Sara Danius is wearing the most courageous choice of the evening! An eye-popping cerise cape paired with a cognac-coloured gown. 25 metres of gorgeous silk taffeta were used for this Pär Engsheden creation, reported Cia Jansson, Editor-in-Chief of the fashion magazine Elle during SVT's live broadcast from the Nobel Banquet in 2018. Pär Engsheden is one of Sweden's foremost designers. Between 2015 and 2018 he created four notable dresses for Sara Danius, Permanent Secretary of the Swedish ... More Colnaghi reopens with "The Golden Age of Spanish Modern Art" LONDON.- Colnaghi, London presents a survey of painting by Spanish artists of the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, opening 3 July 2020. The Golden Age of Spanish Modern Art comes at a time of renewed interest in this period, and follows exhibitions appraising Catalan Modernisme at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Cleveland Museum of Art, and the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam. Many of the featured artists, amongst them Ramon Casas, Francesc Miralles and Joaquim Sunyer, moved from Barcelona to Paris, and the exhibition seeks not only to examine the impact of this on their work, but to also re-evaluate and acknowledge their contribution to the canon of Modern Art. To realise this presentation, Colnaghi, London (est. 1760), has collaborated with two of Barcelonas most influential and venerable galleries, ... More Toledo Museum of Art acquires major new work by contemporary artist Bisa Butler TOLEDO, OH.- The Toledo Museum of Art has added a monumental quilted portrait of the 19th-century abolitionist and social reformer Frederick Douglass by acclaimed contemporary artist Bisa Butler to its collection. The new work, The Storm, the Whirlwind, and the Earthquake (2020) is a tour-de-force composition made entirely of quilted and appliqued cotton, silk, wool and velvet, depicting Douglass at full-length human scale against a vibrant patterned background. Born in 1973 in Orange, New Jersey, and currently living and working in West Orange, Butler studied fine art at Howard University and subsequently earned a masters degree in art education from Montclair State University. Prior to turning to artmaking full time, Butler taught art in the South Orange and Maplewood, New Jersey public schools. Though her training focused on painting, ... More Pace opens its temporary gallery space in East Hampton with works by Yoshitomo Nara EAST HAMPTON, NY.- Pace Gallery inaugurates its temporary gallery space in East Hampton with After all Im cosmic dust, a solo exhibition of never-before-seen drawings by internationally renowned, Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara presented alongside personal items related to the artists process and inspiration. Following the exhibition at the East Hampton location this summer (July 319, 2020), the show will travel to Paces library space at 540 West 25th Street from September 17October 17, 2020, allowing audiences to view the intimate presentation in New York City this fall. This exhibition coincides with the release of the artists first substantial monograph, written by Yeewan Koon (Phaidon Press, 2020.) Nara rose to prominence in the late 1990s, becoming internationally known for his emotionally complex paintings of children set against ... More New York graffiti artists showcased in French chateau MARSEILLE (AFP).- When New York graffiti artists spray painted their colourful and subversive work on subways in the 1980s, it was an illegal activity done only in the dead of night. Three decades later, their work is on show in a lavish sixteenth century manor that belonged to a French aristocratic family in the Mediterranean port city of Marseille. The Chateau de Forbin is a grand mansion perched in a vast park filled with plane and olive trees on the eastern outskirts of the city. Now works by American street art legends Dondi White and Futura are on display in panelled cream-coloured rooms where chandeliers hang from the ceiling -- an intentional contrast. "People think the meeting of a French aristocratic family and American graffiti is impossible. And yet, this place allows them to meet," said co-curator of the new permanent exhibition Caroline Pozzo di Borgo, ... More Freddy Cole, performer who emerged from Nat's shadow, dies at 88 NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Freddy Cole, a pianist and vocalist who spent much of his musical life in the shadow of his brother Nat King Cole, but whose durable talents carried him through a triumphant late-career resurgence, died Saturday in Atlanta. He was 88. The cause was complications of a cardiovascular condition, his manager, Suzi Reynolds, said. Cole leaned toward a more explicitly bluesy style than his brother, who started out playing lively jump blues in the 1930s before mellowing out his sound and becoming one of the most popular crooners of the 20th century. Freddy Cole sang in a plain-spoken manner, always eye-to-eye with his audience, in a way that Nat whose voice was floating, mythic, serene never did. The title of Freddy Coles debut album, Waiter, Ask the Man to Play the Blues (1964), reflected the smoky barroom ... More Literary illustrations from children's classics shine in Illustration Art at Swann July 16 NEW YORK, NY.- Swann Galleries Thursday, July 16 sale of Illustration Art is set to feature a standout offering of works from literary classics, magazine story illustrations, original advertising designs, as well as vintage and contemporary New Yorker art. Original illustrations by enduring favorites lead a section of the auction dedicated to childrens literature. Among the cherished characters featured are Laurent de Brunhoffs Babar as he and his family take in the Notre Dame Cathedral, published in Babars World Tour, 2005 ($10,000-15,000); a 2014 Valentine illustration of Hilary Knights Eloise ($25,000-35,000); a group of six 1982 pencil studies of Max and the monsters from Maurice Sendaks Where the Wild Things Are ($20,000-30,000); three ink studies of Arnold Lobels Frog and Toad published in Frog and Toad Together, 1972 ($5,000-7,500); ... More New York City's gift of motion: A 1970s tale NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- One April evening in the depths of lockdown, I looked down from my buildings second-floor-terrace onto the intersection of Ninth Avenue and 42nd Street. No cars, just a bus rattling by with a shadowy driver in front and a lit-up passenger in back. A jolt of fear hit me for these two loners out there in a perilous world. Then a jolt of envy, that they were going somewhere anywhere. Such paradoxical feelings attached to the simple fact of mobility took me back in a rush to the 1970s New York of my youth. Everyone I knew in those days was moving fast: flying down streets, making instant friends, switching apartments on a whim. For me, speed was part of my profession. I was a dancer, or I wanted to be. There were a lot of young people using New York as a springboard to activate their bodies, even if the city itself ... More |
| PhotoGalleries Peter Lindbergh: Untold Stories Canova | Thorvaldsen POP Power Mia Photo Fair 2020 Flashback On a day like today, American painter John Singleton Copley was born July 03, 1738. John Singleton Copley RA (1738 - September 9, 1815) was an Anglo-American painter, active in both colonial America and England. He was probably born in Boston, Massachusetts, to Richard and Mary Singleton Copley, both Anglo-Irish. In this image: John Singleton Copley, The Fountaine Family, 1776. Tate.
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