The First Art Newspaper on the Net | | Established in 1996 | Friday, May 26, 2017 |
| Exhibition reveals evidence of the last battle for Jerusalem from 2,000 years ago | |
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Moran Hgabi, from the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Nature and Parks Authority, shows artefacts found at the 2,000 year old "Second Temple Period Street" discovered in the David City located in the Palestinian neighbourhood of Silwan, outside the southern part of Jerusalem's Old City, on May 25, 2017. Israel Antiquities Authority and the Nature and Parks Authority are unveiling evidence from 2,000 year ago of the battle of Jerusalem following the destruction of the Second Temple, at the City of David in the Jerusalem Walls National Park. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP JERUSALEM.- On the occasion of Jerusalem Day and the jubilee celebrations commemorating the reunification of the city, the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Nature and Parks Authority are unveiling evidence from 2,000 year ago of the battle of Jerusalem on the eve of the destruction of the Second Temple, at the City of David in the Jerusalem Walls National Park. Arrowheads and stone ballista balls were discovered on the main street that ascended from the citys gates and the Pool of Siloam to the Temple, which was excavated in recent years with funding provided by the City of David Society (Elad). These finds tell the story of the last battle between the Roman forces and the Jewish rebels who had barricaded themselves in the city, a battle that resulted in the destruction of Jerusalem. This battle is described by the historian Flavius Josephus: "On the following day the Romans, having routed the brigands from the town, set the who ... More |
The Best Photos of the Day A man walks on the stage at the ancient Roman amphitheatre of Bosra al-Sham, which is listed as a UNESCO world heritage site, in the southern Syrian province of Daraa on May 21, 2017. Mohamad ABAZEED / AFP
Burne-Jones, Bacon, Freud, Jonas, Albers, Schiele and Léger join Picasso and Heron as Tate highlights in 2018 | | Christie's sale of Latin American art totals $19.1 million | | United States returns stolen artifacts to Italy | The new Tate Modern © Hayes Davidson and Herzog & de Meuron. LONDON.- Tate today announced the forthcoming highlights of its 2018 programme across all four galleries which include exhibitions of work by ground-breaking figures in painting, performance, textiles, film and photography. A retrospective of the Pre-Raphaelite Edward Burne-Jones and a major show of figurative painting by, among others, Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, R.B. Kitaj and Paula Rego, will be presented at Tate Britain. Joining Picasso at Tate Modern will be the work of two pioneering women: leading performance and video artist Joan Jonas, and one of the worlds most important exponents of textiles in art, Anni Albers. Two further giants of the 20th century will go on display at Tate Liverpool as part of the gallerys 30th anniversary celebrations: Egon Schiele and Fernand Léger. In St Ives, the newly-opened spaces will be filled with work by Patrick Heron and a group show of women artists explored through the lens of the life ... More | | Fernando Botero, Woman with an Umbrella and Man with a Cane Bronze. Executed circa 1977. $1,500,000-2,500,000 Price Realized: $1,807,500. © Christies Images Limited 2017. NEW YORK, NY.- The top lot of the sale was Francisco Zúñiga (1912-1998), Grupo de cuatro mujeres de pie from The Tuttleman Collection, which sold for $3,127,500, more than doubling its low estimate. Strong results were achieved for private collections including The Tuttleman Collection, which totaled $5,898,000, with all but one lot sold. Exceptional prices were realized for works by Claudio Bravo (1936-2011), with all works offered sold, totaling $1,420,000, and Fernando Botero (B. 1932), with all but one lot offered sold totaling $6,215,500. Notable results included Fernando Botero (b. 1932), Woman with an Umbrella and Man with a Cane, which realized $1,807,500 and Carmen Herrera (B. 1915), Verticals, which realized $751,500, more than doubling its low estimate. There were five world auction records set for artists including Nicolás GarcÃa Uriburu, ... More | | A Greek bronze Herakles holding the horn of Achelous, dating to the 3rd or 4th century B.C., and valued at $12,500. NEW YORK (AFP).- The United States on Thursday returned to Italy stolen artifacts worth at least $90,000, dating back as far as the 8th century BC but looted and trafficked overseas, officials said. The items include a Sardinian bronze ox and Sardinian bronze warrior from the 8th century BC, a Greek bronze Heracles from the 3rd or 4th century BC and a 4th-century BC drinking cup depicting two goats butting heads. There was also a wine jug decorated with rams and panthers dated 650 BC, a 340 BC oil flask depicting a man holding a plate of fruit and a similar flask decorated with a man holding a lyre, dating back to 430 BC. Six of the items were seized from a Manhattan gallery in April as part of an ongoing investigation into international antiquities trafficking. The seventh object was seized from a different gallery in another part of Midtown Manhattan, US officials said. The antiquities were stolen in the 1990s from ... More |
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Margate's Turner Contemporary to host Turner Prize 2019 | | Barnebys.com Design Report: Vintage furniture in demand despite rising prices, good values abound | | Hermann Historica spring sale is one of the most successful in the company's history | In 2019 the Turner Prize will be presented at Turner Contemporary. MARGATE.- It was announced today that the host venue for Turner Prize 2019 will be Turner Contemporary in Margate. One of the best known prizes for the visual arts in the world, the Turner Prize aims to promote public debate around new developments in contemporary British art. Every other year, the prize leaves Tate Britain and is presented at a venue outside London. In 2019 it will be presented at Turner Contemporary which, since opening in 2011, has had a catalytic effect on social and cultural regeneration in Kent, and has established an international reputation. Victoria Pomery OBE, Director of Turner Contemporary said: We are thrilled to host the Turner Prize here at Turner Contemporary in 2019. This is a truly transformative opportunity for Margate to be part of something which invites conversations on an international scale, connecting our audiences to ... More | | Bibliotheque Maison du Mexique, by Charlotte Perriand, 1953. Sothebys Paris. Design 22 November 2016. Estimate: $55,475 - $77,668 Sold for: $314,557. NEW YORK, NY.- Furniture design is hot. A new Online Auction Report from Barnebys, the leading search service for arts, antiques and collectibles, explains how vintage furniture now rivals art as a collectible investment, no matter what the price range. What is shaping new interest in the market? Buying design at auction is growing in popularity among interior designers and collectors, as well as in the mass market, says Pontus Silfverstolpe, co-founder of Barnebys, an international online service that helps people search for, compare and buy items from dealers and auction houses around the world. Whether it is about finding vintage pieces at affordable prices or a one-of-a-kind item, interest has never been greater. Silfverstolpe points to five key trends in the vintage furniture design market: Elevating design - With budding interest from a ... More | | A marble portrait of Emperor Hadrian (reigned from 117 - 138 A.D.). Sold for: 75000 Euros. © Hermann Historica oHG 2017. MUNICH.- All specialist areas represented by Hermann Historica antiquities, arms and armour, works of art, hunting antiques, orders and collectibles from all fields of history and military history reported excellent results, with some lots fetching many multiples of their estimated price. A total of approximately 6,000 collectors' items came under the hammer at the Spring Auction from 24 April to 6 May 2017. One of the highlights of the antiquities catalogue was an expressive marble portrait of Emperor Hadrian (who reigned between 117 138 A.D.). Crafted during the early years of his reign, the larger-than-life portrait revealed a slight inclination of the head towards the left, as is characteristic of most busts of Hadrian. Equally typical was the arrangement of the magnificent head of hair, with the wavy locks combed forward onto the forehead, ... More |
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New-York Historical Society explores artists' responses to World War I | | Howard Greenberg Gallery opens exhibition of photographs by Leslie Gill and Frances McLaughlin-Gill | | May Fine Art Sales at Leslie Hindman Auctioneers realize over 4.6 million | Childe Hassam (18591935), The Fourth of July, 1916 (The Greatest Display of the American Flag Ever Seen in New York, Climax of the Preparedness Parade in May), 1916. Oil on canvas, 36 x 26 1/8 in. Photography, Glenn Castellano. Courtesy of New-York Historical Society. NEW YORK, NY.- To honor the centennial of Americas involvement in World War I, the New-York Historical Society presents a special exhibition examining this monumental event through the eyes of American artists. On view May 26 through September 3, 2017, World War I Beyond the Trenches explores how artists across generations, aesthetic sensibilities, and the political spectrum used their work to depict, memorialize, promote, or oppose the divisive conflict. Featuring more than 55 artworks from the recent exhibition World War I and American Art organized by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the exhibition includes John Singer Sargents masterpiece Gassed, which has never traveled to New York before; Childe Hassams The Fourth of July, 1916, a recent gift from Chairman Emeritus Richard Gilder; and powerful works by George ... More | | Frances McLaughlin-Gill, Untitled (Lisa Fonssagrives-Penn),c.1950s. Gelatin silver print; printed c.1950s, 10 7/8 x 10 inches. © Leslie Gill. Courtesy Howard Greenberg Gallery. NEW YORK, NY.- Photographs by Leslie Gill and Frances McLaughlin-Gill are on view together for the first time at Howard Greenberg Gallery from May 25 July 7, 2017. The Gills shared a passion for photography at the intersection of fashion, design, and fine art in the 1940s and 1950s. With a circle of famous friends and colleagues, they led glamorous careers in the rarified worlds of Condé Nast and Hearst. The exhibition presents images by Leslie Gill who was active from 1935-1957 and Frances McLaughlin-Gill who produced work from 1943-1993, as well as work by their close contemporaries Erwin Blumenfeld, Louise Dahl-Wolfe, Paul Outerbridge, Gordon Parks, Norman Parkinson, Irving Penn, and Man Ray. Lives & Still Lives: Leslie Gill, Frances McLaughlin-Gill, and Their Circle is curated by Elisabeth Biondi, an independent curator and former Visuals Editor for The New Yorker. When they married in 1948 in New York ... More | | From a Missouri estate, Henri Le Sidaner's Vieilles maisons à Chartres, 1921, estimated at $200,000  400,000 realized $413,000 and sold to a buyer in London. CHICAGO, IL.- Leslie Hindman Auctioneers' May fine art sales featured highlights from numerous estates, which included three of the top selling lots by Rosemarie Trockel, Henri Le Sidaner and Thomas Hart Benton. The May 23 and 24 Post War and Contemporary Art, Fine Prints and American and European Art auctions realized over 4.6 million with nearly 25% of lots sold selling above high estimates. Top selling lots in the May 24 American and European Art auction agreed with the current uptick the Impressionist and Modern market has shown so far in 2017. Offered from an estate in St. Louis, Missouri was a Thomas Hart Benton still life from 1962 with a presale estimate of $100,000  200,000. With numerous bidders participating via phone, three bidders emerged who actively bid until the painting sold for $455,000. The winning bidder was from the Midwest, competing against bidders in California and New York. "Since the Benton still ... More |
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Christie's New York to offer fine wines and spirits featuring historic cognacs | | Freeman's announces highlights from its Sale of American Art & Pennsylvania Impressionists | | Taryn Simon's first exhibition in Hong Kong opens at Gagosian | Comandon & Co Reserve 1828 1 bottle per lot. Estimate: $4,500-5,500. © Christies Images Limited 2017. NEW YORK, NY.- Christies New York Wine Department announces Finest Wines and Spirits, Featuring Historic Cognacs from the Collection of Graycliff Hotel & Restaurant. Following the Finest and Rarest Wines: A Journey Through the Vinkelläre of Staffan Hansson Single-Owner Live Auction on June 22nd, Christies is delighted to further present a sale of Finest Wines and Spirits on June 23rd, which includes many exceptional collections including an offering of rare, historic wines and spirits from the world-renowned cellars of Graycliff Hotel and Restaurant. The highly sought-after cellar and spirits collection at Graycliff has been built by Enrico Garzaroli, during the course of half a century, with a cellar holding close to 250,000 bottles. Highlights from the cellar featured in this sale include mature Bordeaux, rare Burgundy from Joseph Drouhin, fine Italian wines from ... More | | George William Sotter, Carversville at Night. Estimate: $70,000-100,000. PHILADELPHIA, PA.- Freemans June 4 American Art & Pennsylvania Impressionists sale features historically significant works from a number of highly regarded American artists. Freemans is the only auction house with a specialty category in Pennsylvania Impressionism; as such, the well-curated group of important works by influential artists in this collecting genre should garner considerable attention. Perhaps one of the most significant pieces in the sale is Lone Sycamore (Lot 64) by leading Pennsylvania Impressionist, Daniel Garber. Lone Sycamore one of four works in the sale by Garber comes fresh to auction from a private Pennsylvania collection; it carries a pre-sale estimate of $400,000-600,000. The last in a series by Garber depicting the same tree, Lone Sycamore was exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art in 1945, where it received the shows Popular Prize; it was ... More | | Taryn Simon, Plastic guns with green BBs, Pocket Nine (illegal), 2010. Archival inkjet print © Taryn Simon. Courtesy Gagosian. HONG KONG.- Gagosian is presenting Portraits and Surrogates, Taryn Simons first exhibition in Hong Kong. Simon draws from three key bodies of recent work, as well as a video self-portrait made in collaboration with a Russian news program, to examine the reciprocity between portraits and their surrogates. The technical, physical, and aesthetic realization of Simons projects often reflects the control and authority that form the grist of her work. Simon is a multidisciplinary conceptual artist whose work has been the subject of many museum exhibitions across the world since her prescient debut with The Innocents in 2002 at MoMA PS1, New York. In 2013, her ambitious taxonomic series A Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters IXVIII (200811) was presented at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing. Simon's research-driven approach has ... More |
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More News | Cummer Museum receives $4 million gift to name and endow new director post JACKSONVILLE, FLA.- The Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens has received a $4 million gift to name and endow the position of Executive Director, providing an important stimulus as the Museum searches for a new chief executive. This, the second largest gift to the Museum since it was established in 1961, comes from The Disosway Foundation of New York, established by Dudley D. Johnson, a Jacksonville native who currently serves as a trustee of the Museum and whose grandfather, George W. Gibbs was influential in the development of Jacksonville during the first half of the twentieth century. The gift is named in honor of Johnson‟s grandparents. Mr. Gibbs, born in 1884, was both an inventor and pioneer shipbuilder. He started the Gibbs Gas Engine Company in 1908 to build gas engines to his designs. By 1910, it turned to building ships including U.S. Navy Sub ... More Phillips to host charity auction in Los Angeles to support rhino conservation initiatives LOS ANGELES, CA.- Phillips announced a charity auction in Los Angeles to benefit Elephant Action Leagues trailblazing efforts to save the rhinos. A selection of works by world-renowned photographer Thomas D. Mangelsen will be offered, with 100% of the proceeds to fund groundbreaking conservation initiatives. The auction will take place on Thursday, 1 June, at The Montage in Beverly Hills and will include special guest speakers Andrea Crosta (featured in the Netflix's documentary The Ivory Game), Jamie Joseph (Founder of Saving the Wild, a groundbreaking NGO working to eradicate wildlife poaching), and photographer Thomas D. Mangelsen, as well as famed Hollywood manager Joanne Horowitz, who is serving on the events host committee. Fifteen lots, including twelve unreleased images from Mangelsens Africa 2017 series with a limited edition print ... More Quinn's & Waverly to offer 800 lots of art, rare books, antiques on June 1 and 3 FALLS CHURCH, VA.- Quinns Auction Galleries will offer nearly 800 works of art, rare books and antiques in two days of auctions, June 1 and 3, 2017. The highlights of both sales tell the history of the United States through unique objects and stories. On June 1, Quinns Waverly Rare Books division will auction two extraordinary pieces of the American story. The first is a letter written in 1776 by Joseph Brant, a Mohawk war chief and interpreter (lot 69, estimated at $200-$300). It gives insight into the life a prominent revolutionary figure. The other, a musical score transcribed by John Quincy Adams in 1789, with an accompanying letter from his niece, E. C. Adams, offer a glimpse into the life of our sixth president while he was still just young man (lot 59, estimated at $800-$1,200). These one-of-a-kind pieces of history are part of a Thursday session that starts at ... More Landscapes by Avery, Glackens, Kleitsch & Marin in Swann Galleries' June 15 American Art Sale NEW YORK, NY.- Swann Galleries has announced highlights from their annual sale of American Art, featuring original works by masters from the nineteenth- through twenty-first centuries. Watercolors, paintings and sculptures by noted practitioners of American schools will be crossing the block on Thursday, June 15, marking the end of the houses successful spring season. The sale is replete with desirable landscape paintings, including William Glackens' vernal The Beach, Isle Adam, 1925-26. Across the bright canvas one of the artist's most significant works from the mid-1920s bathers relax at a popular locale outside of Paris. The rich, brilliantly lit colors, short brushstrokes, liveliness and motion showcase the artists distinctly American vein of Impressionism (estimate: $500,000 to $800,000). Further early twentieth-century landscapes include Joseph Kleitsch's ... More The Olympic Museum launches a new programme dedicated to the art of sports photography LAUSANNE.- The Olympic Museum in Lausanne is celebrating the 8th art from every angle. Highlights of the programme of events include: a major exhibition, Who Shot Sports: A Photographic History, 1843 to the present organised by the Brooklyn Museum; a retrospective of Rio 2016: through the lens of four photographers; a best of selection of 20 images from the IOCs collections; and finally, a weekend event dedicated to sports imagery. Who Shot Sports: A Photographic History, 1843 to the present is organised by the Brooklyn Museum in New York and curated by photography historian Gail Buckland. This retrospective of around 180 photos, dating from 1843 to the present day, pays tribute to the men and women who have captured the fleeting moment of sport. This exhibition is the first of its kind to put sports photographers at centre-stage. ... More Pavel Zoubok Gallery opens exhibition of works by Conrad Marca-Relli and Robert Nickle NEW YORK, NY.- Pavel Zoubok Gallery is presenting an intimate exhibition of works by Conrad Marca-Relli (1913-2000) and Robert Nickle (1919-1980), two American artists whose respective collage-based practices, both incorporating subtly hued and tactile materials, come directly out of the tradition of postwar American abstraction. As a first-generation abstract expressionist and member of the New York School, Marca-Relli was able to translate the same principles of scale, gesture and speed into his collages. Working strictly as a painter until 1953, Marca-Relli on a trip to Mexico ran out of paint and began to cut canvas and raw linen into strips to incorporate into his paintingsa decision that would shape the rest of his career. In the 1967 exhibition catalogue from University of California at Berkeley Art Museum, Nora Selz comments that this shift allowed him to ... More Museum Brandhorst opens exhibition of works by Kerstin Brätsch MUNICH.- Kerstin Brätsch. Innovation is the first comprehensive exhibition of the Hamburg-born and New York-based painter. In Brätschs work, the influences of the digital age are coupled, in a unique manner, with a reflection on art-historical traditions. Her complex and consistent work oscillates between a conceptual analysis of painting and a devotion to painterly processes. With around 60 large-scale paintings on paper and Mylar film, and in the marbling technique, more than 40 handmade glass works, numerous videos, two slide projections, a large installation, as well as several in situ interventions, the exhibition provides a first comprehensive overview of the artists painterly practice since 2006. Kerstin Brätschs pictures reflect the pressure to which the medium of painting is exposed by the increasing dominance of digital technologies. In the digital realm, ... More Nobel Prize medal of man who discovered cosmic rays and opened up the universe for sale at Bonhams NEW YORK, NY.- The Nobel Prize Medal for Physics awarded in 1936 to the Austrian scientist who discovered cosmic radiation, Victor Hess, will be offered at Bonhams Fine Books and Manuscripts sale in New York on Wednesday June 7th. The medal, accompanied by its elaborate award document in its blue leather portfolio, is estimated at $300,000 to $500,000. Before Hesss ground-breaking discovery, scientists had assumed that radiation was emanating from the earth. A series of hot air balloon flights made between 1911 and 1913, in which Hess ascended into the atmosphere and measured the ionization, enabled him to prove the opposite. He demonstrated that the effect was stronger at higher altitudes than at ground level, indicating that the radiation being measured was not coming from naturally occurring radioactive elements on earth. Further experiments ... More One-of-a-kind alligator and feather Hermès featured in Heritage Auctions Luxury Accessories Chicago Sale CHICAGO, IL.- A one-of-a-kind Hermès Shiny Cactus Alligator & Feather Stromboli Bag with Sterling Silver Hardware (est. $32,000-40,000) leads another impressive offering of sought-after designer accessories and handbags in Heritage Auctions' Luxury Accessories Auction June 27 in Chicago. While the Hermès brand continues to set the standard in luxury, this pristine condition handbag is finished in shiny cactus alligator and features amazing multi-color feather detailing. "We are elated to have curated a truly incomparable collection of luxury accessories, and are thrilled to be able to be hosting this auction in Chicago a world-class city rich in architectural history and design," Heritage Auctions Luxury Accessories Director Diane D'Amato said. A trio of the scarce and coveted Hermès So Black handbags also will be available to discerning collectors. Two Birkin handbags ... More Portraits bring viewers face-to-face with key figures in Miami's arts and cultural arenas MIAMI, FLA.- The eyes are the window of the soul. This aphorism implies a connection between the seen and the unseen, and speaks to the sometimes uneasy link between the visible and incorporeal. Connections such as these are laid bare in J. Tomás López: The Portrait Series, a new body of work by this well-established artist, which is on view at the Lowe from May 25 to September 17, 2017. Rendered in soft focus, Lopezs works are characterized by the hazy blending of the facial features, hair, and clothing of their sitters, who are set against abstracted tawny-amber backgrounds. Yet the subjects eyeswhether open or shutare revealed in intense, hyper-focused detail. The viewer is thus brought face-to-face with Lópezs sitters, key figures in Miamis arts and cultural arenas, in intimate moments that feel almost confessional in nature. Lopezs ... More New York Yankees memorabilia to be offered at Bonhams New York NEW YORK, NY.- On June 7, Bonhams Fine Books and Manuscripts sale will offer a fascinating collection of 42 objects and papers relating to the ownership and management of the New York Yankees Baseball Club. The collection, from the property of the former owner of the Yankees, Daniel Reid Topping, includes a variety of extraordinary Yankee material: the guestbook for the Owners box 1958-62, (estimate: $8,000-12,000), a trophy ball signed by legends of the game Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Goose Goslin, and Hank Aaron, (estimate: $9,000-12,000), contracts for George Weiss, Roy Hamey and Ralph Houk, Dans personalized Hamilton wristwatch issued to celebrate the 1947 World Series victory (estimate: $5,000-8,000), as well as numerous special Yankee Press pins, cufflinks, Old Timers Day and Christmas gifts. The Golden Age in Yankees folklore ... More
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| href=' Flashback On a day like today, American photographer Dorothea Lange was born May 26, 1895. Dorothea Lange was an influential American documentary photographer and photojournalist, best known for her Depression-era work for the Farm Security Administration (FSA). Lange's photographs humanized the tragic consequences of the Great Depression and profoundly influenced the development of documentary photography. In this image: Dorothea Lange in 1936.
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