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| Exhibition positions the Polaroid at the crossroads between art and technology | |
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The exhibition reflects different artistic approaches and temperaments as well as the diverse characteristics of the materials and techniques of Polaroid photography. Photo: Michaela Hille. HAMBURG.- Polaroid! A brand that has long since become legendary. One look at Instagram is enough to show how instant photography transformed the medium in ways that are still pervasive today. The exhibition positions the Polaroid phenomenon at the crossroads between art and technology. Outstanding artists from Ansel Adams to Andy Warhol used the medium of the instant photo to blaze new trails with their art, leaving a lasting mark on the aesthetics of an entire era. Featuring some 240 photos by 120 artists, The Polaroid Project sheds light on the whole aesthetic spectrum of instant photography while also demonstrating based on 87 camera models and prototypes the innovative technology that made this visual revolution possible in the first place. The Polaroid works on view range from the early days of the company in 1955 through to 2015. The main focus is on art from the 1980s and 90s. Instant camera film, presented to the public for the first time in 1947 by Edwin H. Land in New York, shortened ... More |
The Best Photos of the Day Erik Thomsen is presenting lacquer works by Yoshio Okada and Washi screens by Kyoko Ibe during Asia Week New York 2018: In this image: Kyoko Ibe (b. 1941), Once upon a time, 2017, pair of 6-panel folding screens, washi paper, minerals, and ink, 63 x 142 inches each (160 x 360 cm)
Sotheby's unveils one of the greatest Rubens portraits to come to market | | Hauser & Wirth opens exhibition of new and recent work by Lorna Simpson | | Galerie Max Hetzler opens exhibition of new paintings by Albert Oehlen and Julian Schnabel | Sir Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640), Portrait of a Venetian Nobleman. Estimate: £3 million. Courtesy Sothebys. LONDON.- A rare portrait by Sir Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640), one of the all-time greats of Western Art will spearhead Sothebys Old Masters sale in London on 4 July 2018. Unseen on the market for 60 years, this remarkable depiction of a Venetian Nobleman was almost certainly cherished by the artist who kept it until his death in 1640. Acquired by the great Dutch collector Hans Wetzlar in the early 1950s, it has remained in the possession of his descendants ever since. One of only a few portraits by the artist to come on the market in recent years, it is estimated in the region of £3 million. George Gordon, Worldwide Co-Chairman of Sothebys Old Master Paintings Department, said: Rubens is known as the Prince of the painters and his legacy is far reaching. His timeless modernity and immediacy is evident in this painting which encapsulates several strands of his creative, emotional ... More | | Installation view, Lorna Simpson. Unanswerable, Hauser & Wirth London, 2018. Photo: Alex Delfanne. © Lorna Simpson. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth. LONDON.- Lorna Simpsons inaugural exhibition at Hauser & Wirth London, Unanswerable, features new and recent work across three different media: painting, photographic collage and sculpture. Simpson came to prominence in the 1980s through her pioneering approach to conceptual photography, which featured striking juxtapositions of text and staged images and raised questions about the nature of representation, identity, gender, race and history. These concerns are reflected throughout the exhibition to present the artists expanding and increasingly multi-disciplinary practice today. Simpson continues to develop the language of the found image as a source for her work, incorporating photographs from her collection of vintage Ebony and Jet magazines from the 1950s to the ... More | | Julian Schnabel, Untitled, 2017. Oil on found fabric, 274,3 x 201,9 x 5 cm. BERLIN.- Galerie Max Hetzler is presenting an exhibition with new paintings by Albert Oehlen and Julian Schnabel at GoethestraÃe 2/3. Both known as major protagonists of a constant exploration of the process of painting, Albert Oehlen and Julian Schnabel deeply influenced and defined the art field since the 1980s, provoking a departure from painting as conventionally understood. For the first time, Galerie Max Hetzler presents a duo exhibition of these artist companions and friends, focussing on their recent bodies of works. With a chromatic spectrum consisting mainly of subtle variations of grey, including highlights of green, yellow and pink, the canvas surface of Albert Oehlens latest paintings witnesses a complex and intriguing process of overpainting. The elaborated interplay of broadly applied brushstrokes and overlapping layers of paint build a dynamic impression of colour and movement. Shapes and compositional ... More |
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Scientists discover evidence of early human innovation, pushing back evolutionary timeline | | Sotheby\s Hong Kong announces highlights from its Important Watches Spring Auction | | Art Jameel and Delfina Foundation announce a significant new partnership | Alison Brooks, a professor of anthropology at George Washington Universitys Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology and an associate of the National Museum of Natural Historys Human Origins Program at the Smithsonian, is lead author on the paper. Human Origins Program, Smithsonian. WASHINGTON, DC.- Anthropologists at the Smithsonians National Museum of Natural History and an international team of collaborators have discovered that early humans in East Africa hadby about 320,000 years agobegun trading with distant groups, using color pigments and manufacturing more sophisticated tools than those of the Early Stone Age. These newly discovered activities approximately date to the oldest known fossil record of Homo sapiens and occur tens of thousands of years earlier than previous evidence has shown in eastern Africa. These behaviors, which are characteristic of humans who lived during the Middle Stone Age, replaced technologies and ways of life that had been in place for hundreds of thousands of years. Evidence for these milestones ... More | | A Very Important, Extremely Rare and Possibly Unique Stainless Steel Chronograph Wristwatch with Registers and Pulsation Dial Ref 1579 (estimate HK$6,200,000 12,000,000 / US$ 800,000 1,540,000). Courtesy Sothebys. HONG KONG.- Sothebys Hong Kong is unveiled highlights from its Spring 2018 Sale Series of Important Watches, taking place at Hong Kong Exhibition & Convention Centre on 2 April. The auction features unique and important timepieces from the leading names in horology, including Patek Philippe, Rolex, Piaget and Vacheron Constantin, as well as distinguished independent watch makers including Roger Smith and Greubel Forsey. With 420 lots from the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries, Important Watches carries a total estimate in excess of HK$100 million. Sam Hines, Sothebys Worldwide Head of Watches, comments: We are excited to have this fantastic auction of vintage and modern timepieces in Hong Kong for our first sale of the season. Featuring a strong line-up of highly sought-after vintage references, ... More | | Jameel Arts Centre, Entrance. Courtesy of Serie Architects. DUBAI.- Art Jameel and Delfina Foundation announced that they are entering into a significant new partnership, extending the international reach of both organisations, and developing new programming and residency initiatives. The collaboration marks a major new chapter for both organisations, with Art Jameel set to open two new art centres in 2018-2019 and Delfina Foundation looking to both secure and expand its current mandate more broadly. By aligning networks, both organisations will be able to maximise their reach and impact. Art Jameel will have access to Delfina Foundations expertise in running artists residencies, and its accompanying network; Delfina Foundation will be able to harness the strategic thinking behind Art Jameel and its sister organisation Community Jameel, to expand the London organisations work exploring the relationship between the arts and social change. The partnership entails sharing expertise and strategies across the two ... More |
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Iraqi enthusiasts search for relics of royal past | | Wagner + Partner opens new gallery space with thematic exhibition | | Galerie Rodolphe Janssen opens exhibition of new works by Sam Moyer | A man holds up a preserved coin specimen during a historical relic auction at the Moudallal cafe, Arabic for "pampered", in the Iraqi capital Baghdad. SABAH ARAR / AFP. BAGHDAD (AFP).- At the heart of a Baghdad flea market, nostalgia for Iraq's royal past is on full display as collectors and investors gather to buy relics from a bygone era. Inside the Moudallal cafe, Arabic for "pampered", a hundred men from across the country carefully follow the auction of momentos from the nearly four decades of monarchic rule that ended with a bloody coup in 1958. "There is a feeling of nostalgia among the customers. Take the banknotes, their manufacture and quality were much better before, that's why the prices go up," says 52-year-old auctioneer Ali Hikmat. With a booming voice, the towering man who has worked in the covered market since 1992 offers his goods up for to the highest bidder. All sorts of keepsakes are up for grabs: banknotes, coins, stamps and decorations. Most date back to Iraq's royal era, but there are also a few items from the early ... More | | Erwin Olaf, Shanghai: Hangpu - The Journey (2017), archival print, 60,5 x 80,4 cm. Photo: Courtesy Wagner + Partner. BERLIN.- Wagner + Partner announced the opening of its new premises with the launch of the thematic exhibition, Die Dauer des Moments (The Moments Duration). As a crack in time, the moment, possesses unique qualities - it is exciting, unbearable, poetic, unpredictable and? it can also be instantaneously brief. Since its inception, photography has harnessed not only light but also the technical skills to capture one moment in time. Consequently, the exhibition looks to the 20th-century photographers André Kertész and Berenice Abbott, who address this fact in an exemplary manner with the bygone scenes they once captured from everyday life. These are complemented by the work of the renowned photographer Erwin Olaf, whose series Waiting addresses the insufferableness of waiting. Olaf also addresses the tremendous upheaval in Chinese society in his current series, Shanghai, which is exhibited for the fir ... More | | Sam Moyer, Same Game, 2018. Stone, hand painted canvas mounted to MDF panel, 192.4 x 142.2 x 1.9 cm 75 3/4 x 56 x 3/4 in (SMoy145). BRUSSELS.- Galerie Rodolphe Janssen is presenting an exhibition of new works by Sam Moyer. In the artists third solo exhibition with the gallery, Moyer continues her practice of combining found stone with hand painted canvas. The new works on view represent a synthesis of Moyers past material-conceptual studies, which mix medium-specific techniques like photography, painting, installation, and sculpture in order to engage their historical resonance. In these wall works salvaged stone scraps, including several marble Saarinen tabletops once homed in a private park in Manhattan, nestle amongst specially fitted segments of hand-painted canvas mounted to MDF panel. Moyer arranges the stone pieces according to an improvised geometry, allowing the pre-existing shapes to interact with each other as well as the prepared fabric, where the artists hand is evident to varying degrees in the delicate treatment of the ... More |
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Exhibition presents a little-known chapter of Olivetti history | | Masters of Spain exhibition opens at the Polk Museum of Art | | Women who photographed Dalà is the focus of this year's exhibition at The Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalà | Architect Alberto Galardi, Florence, 1971. Photo: Gabriele Basilico. Courtesy Studio Gabriele Basilico, Milan. © Studio Gabriele Basilico. FLORENCE.- The exhibition The Olivetti Idiom (1952-1979) curated by Caterina Toschi and produced by Ellyn Toscano, New York University Florence, opened on March 14, 2018 at Villa Sassetti, Florence. The exhibition seeks to reconstruct the history of the Olivetti image from 1952 to 1979 through photographs and documents linked to three places where Olivetti products were displayed (exhibitions, stores and the school), and in which narrative forms oral, written and visual of the Olivetti identity were progressively developed. Photographs by Aldo Ballo, Gabriele Basilico, Gianni Berengo Gardin, Walter Binder, Giorgio Colombo, Erich Hartmann, Wayne Miller, Paolo Monti, Ugo Mulas, Ezra Stoller document the interiors of Olivetti stores, designed by the most important avant-garde architects of the time (Gae Aulenti, Ignazio Gardella, Leo Lionni, Carlo Scarpa and BBPR Studio), as well as the ... More | | Francisco Goya, 'Termeridad de martincho en la plaza de Zaragoza,' 1815-16 (detail). LAKELAND, FLA.- Masters of Spain: Goya and Picasso opened March 17 at the Polk Museum of Art at Florida Southern College. The exhibition, which runs through June 17, includes more than 50 works of art and features the iconic Tauromaquia (Bullfighting) series of etchings by Francisco de Goya y Lucientes, as well as rare late-career works by Pablo Picasso in multiple media from ceramic to cardboard. The majority of the works in the show are on international loan from The Art Company, located in Pesaro, Italy. Goya was fascinated by the concept of the bullfight as emblematic of Spanish history, as was Picasso, and that theme is represented throughout the exhibition, said Dr. H. Alexander Rich, PMA Curator and FSC Art History Professor. Goya explores the artistry and the violence of the bullfight in the complete 40 prints of the Tauromaquia series. I believe it can be argued that Goya was trying, throug ... More | | Martha Holmes, Salvador Dalà with the oil painting The Servant of the Disciples of Emmaus and studio material, ca. 1960. Image rights of Salvador Dalà reserved. FIGUERES.- The Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalà announced that the temporary exhibition at Púbol Castle was officially inaugurated. This years temporary exhibition at Púbol, Women photograph DalÃ, seeks to increase the visibility of the work of fourteen modern, well-travelled and free-spirited women who chose photography as their form of expression and whose common denominator was Salvador DalÃ. The exhibition invites visitors to delve deeper into a representative part of DalÃs biography, and the inseparable binomials of life and work, persona and performance. The exhibition includes 48 photographs complemented by a documentary section with books, magazines and clippings connected with the photographers and the work on display. This section also contains an extract from an interview with Suzy Embo, in ... More |
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More News | Celebrated painter and printmaker Takao Tanabe creates new award for emerging Canadian artists OTTAWA.- Once a year, the National Gallery of Canada will receive $15,000 from artist Takao Tanabe to recognize an up and coming Canadian artist through the purchase of their work for the national collection.To date, the Takao Tanabe Purchase Prize in Painting for Young Artists has gifted $30,000, enabling the purchase of works from lessLIE, a multimedia Coast Salish artist of Cowichan, Penelakut, Esquimalt, Irish, Italian, and French descent, and Cynthia Girard-Renard, a visual artist and poet from Montreal, Quebec. Both artworks are currently on view at the National Gallery of Canada. We are honoured to partner with Takao Tanabe, among our most admirable painters, to help advance the careers of young Canadian artists, said National Gallery of Canada Director and CEO, Marc Mayer. Through this partnership, we will be including outstanding ... More Zidoun-Bossuyt gallery opens the first exhibition of British artist Danny Fox LUXEMBOURG.- The history of Skid Row in Downtown Los Angeles, where Danny Fox works and which informs Blood Spots on Apple Flesh, pivots on the stories of migrants. Formerly an agricultural center, the 54-block area was transformed by railroads in the 1870s, becoming a hub for recent arrivals with its brothels, bars, and seedy hotels.1 Throughout the twentieth century, the district welcomed those displaced by the currents of history. More than 10,000 homeless lived there during the Great Depression; in the 1960s, returning Vietnam veterans with addiction came to its treatment centers. Today, Skid Row has one of the countrys largest consistent homeless populations.2 Its character has been forged by newly arrived young men, often immigrants or travelers looking for a new start. Fox, a Cornwall native who arrived in Los Angeles in 2015 from England, on the chance ... More Galerie Fons Welters opens exhibition of works by David Jablonowski AMSTERDAM.- David Jablonowskis interest in industrial materials, infrastructure and the way material communicates and impacts the society it stems from, have formed the basis of his practice since its start at De Ateliers in 2008. In his two earlier solo shows at the gallery, Jablonowski proclaimed his interest in the consumer and producer side of digital technology. Jablonowskis second solo show in the gallery, Hype Cycle (2014) focused on the interrelations between elements on the Internet, digital marketing and data prediction. The hyperlink, a way to connect two elements online, formed the basis of several of his works, showing the complex ways and systems in which the distribution of information, and therewith global trading and production, had evolved in the last decades. A second concept that underlies Jablonowskis sculptural installations in this show is big data. Big ... More IBASHO opens a solo exhibition of Hong Kong artist Yan Kallen ANTWERP.- In his solo-exhibition 'In Between the Light and Darkness', Hong Kong artist YAN Kallen pays tribute to the passion and processes of the craftsmen and artisans in Kyoto. YAN has always been interested in the relationship between human and nature. After winning the KG+ Award from Kyotographie International Photography Festival in 2016 with his project on handcrafted brooms, he was given the opportunity to realise a project on the artisanal scene of Kyoto, a city known for its traditions in crafts and culture. YAN about his experiences while living amongst the Kyoto artisans for six months and visiting them as often as he could: It was fascinating to watch the artisans at work, making things in the traditional methods and using tools that are sometimes passed down for generations. In the process of observing them, I slowly recognise that it is not simply ... More Ubuntu Art Gallery presents a Samir Rafi retrospective at Art Dubai DUBAI.- In 2004 Samir Rafi died in Paris in abject solitude without family , foes or friends by his side. In spite of promising beginnings in his adolescent years in Cairo and encouraged by a coterie of Surrealist writers, critics and artists , all this was soon to change when he left for Paris at the age of twenty-eight after earning a scholarship to study Art history at the Sorbonne. Born in 1926 to a middle-class family in Cairo , he studied under the tutelage of Hussein Youssef Amin who had devised new ways of teaching art at The Farouk I School after his widely enriching exposure in Europe and Latin America. Rafi then went on to study decorative arts at The College of Fine Arts in Cairo where he would graduate and carry on teaching until 1953. In 1946 he joined The Contemporary Art Group ,founded by his first tutor Amin , through which he consequently met ... More 21st Biennale of Sydney launches across seven locations, presenting 70 artists and artist collectives SYDNEY.- The 21st Biennale of Sydney opened to the public Friday, 16 March, presenting the work of 70 artists and artist collectives from six continents, at seven locations around Sydney, in a free, three-month exhibition running until 11 June 2018. This year, Australias pre-eminent contemporary art event celebrates its 45th anniversary and has been curated by Artistic Director Mami Kataoka exploring the theme of SUPERPOSITION: Equilibrium & Engagement. The 21st Biennale of Sydney recognised for commissioning and showcasing innovative and thought-provoking Australian and international art is presented at seven of the citys most respected museums, galleries and non-traditional exhibition spaces: Art Gallery of NSW (AGNSW), Artspace, Carriageworks, Cockatoo Island, Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (MCA), Sydney Opera ... More Yinka Shonibare lends his support to new creative awards and advocacy group set up in reponse to Brexit LONDON.- Turner Prize-winning artist Yinka Shonibare, MBE RA, has lent his support to the recently created Emerge Awards, a UK-wide, open competition that champions emerging talent and diversity in the creative industries. Guy Armitage, the CEO of Zealous, a London-based digital submissions platform for the creative community, set up the awards in response to the changing nature of Britains relationship with Europe. Their ultimate aim is to promote and safeguard the interests of the talent engaged in all of the creative industries, and then for the organisation behind them to serve as an advocacy group, supporting national bodies such as the Creative Industries Federation. Shonibare, 55, will judge the art award, along with Kathleen Soriano, chair of the Liverpool Biennial, Mark Cass is Founder and CEO of leading art supplies retailer, Cass ... More Composer-in-Residence program at the Harn Museum of Art debuts art-inspired sound installation GAINESVILLE, FLA.- The Harn Museum of Art at the University of Florida recently launched a Composer-in-Residence program with the goal of offering university students in the School of Music the opportunity to develop original compositions inspired by the Harns collection. Through the study of specific art objects and independent research, the Composer-in-Residence not only creates an original composition but performs his or her work in the gallery providing new ways for Harn visitors to connect with the art on view. The first composition titled plis de temps by Robert Seaback recently debuted on March 8. Robert Seaback, a PhD candidate in music composition and technology at the University of Florida and electroacoustic composer spent six months creating a four channel audio sound installation, plis de temps, as a departure from the ceramic sculpture ... More Monumental Oneida Sculpture Enhanced With Light, Sound and Music WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonians National Museum of the American Indian dedicated new enhancements to Allies in War, Partners in Peace, a monumental bronze sculpturealready a visitor favoritethat commemorates the alliance between the Oneida Indian Nation and the United States during the American Revolution. With the Oneida Nations continued support, the museum has recently installed an interpretive surround, enhancing the storytelling of the historic alliance with light, sound and projected imagery. The Oneida Indian Nation donated the bronze statue to commemorate the opening of the museum. Created by Edward Hlavka from St. George, Utah, Allies in in War, Partners in Peace stands 20 feet tall and weighs 1,925 pounds. George Washington stands alongside the Oneida diplomat, Oskanondonha, or Skenandoah, and Polly ... More First U.S. exhibition devoted to the works of 16th century master Hasegawa Tōhaku NEW YORK, NY.- Japan Society Gallery is presenting its major Spring 2018 exhibition, A Giant Leap: The Transformation of Hasegawa Tōhaku, the first U.S. exhibition focused on the works and stylistic transformation of Hasegawa Tōhaku (15391610). A large, jagged pine tree, its branches wound with wisteria and its trunk edged with red azalea, a waterfall cascading into a deep blue stream, and dandelions and violets sprouting before a crab-apple tree; Hasegawa Tōhakus Flowers and Birds of Spring and Summer screen is one of the most important works on view in A Giant Leap and one of the most important in the study of Tōhaku at large, forming the missing link in the painters career. Widely recognized as one of Japans most beloved painters and artistic innovators, this exhibition marks a rare showing of his remarkable painted screens and scrolls ... More Chemould Prescott Gallery opens exhibition of works by Shakuntala Kulkarni MUMBAI.- Julus and other stories - Four projection synchronized video installation A multimedia project consisting of four synchronized videos, chalk drawings on board, prints of wiped-off chalk drawings and cane accessories. In 2012, Shakuntala Kulkarni did a body of work titled Of Bodies, Armour and Cages, which consisted of sculptures made to the body size of the artist, and head gears made to the size of her head. These cane works have over the years become a signature work of the artist since her early rendering of these sculptures. In a continuation of the work mentioned above, the film Julus is a declaration of the vision that each and every person has equal rights and freedom as an individual, and, as part of a community. Within the space of this declaration Shakuntala Kulkarni has addressed her concern, the violation of the female body, in public ... More
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| href=' Flashback On a day like today, German-American painter Josef Albers was born March 19, 1888. Josef Albers (March 19, 1888 - March 25, 1976) was a German-born American artist and educator whose work, both in Europe and in the United States, formed the basis of modern art education programs of the twentieth century. In this image: Color Study. Gouache on paper, 7 1/16 x 10 3/16 inches (18 x 25.8 cm) © 2016 The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
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