| The First Art Newspaper on the Net | | Established in 1996 | Sunday, June 9, 2024 |
| In a film camera resurgence, negatives are left languishing | |
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Carl Saytor, founder and owner of Luxlab, assess negatives for print in Manhattan on April 18, 2022. Film cameras are seeing another renaissance. But some new photographers are leaving something behind: the tea-colored originals that determine the life of pictures. (Maansi Srivastava/The New York Times) NEW YORK, NY.- Silvio Cohen has been doing this for years. Soak, rinse, soak, dry, repeat. Thirty-five millimeter, medium format, old cameras, new film. Analog work in a digital age. When I tell my friends that we still do developing, they laugh, Cohen said. Its a different feel. The finish is a different finish. Cohen works at 42nd Street Photo, one of a handful of legacy shops in New York City that still develop film. They have been at it for a century, riding the mediums ebbs and flows from films first plummet in the 2000s, to its resilient return in ... More |
The Best Photos of the Day Fotografiska New York is presenting the first major retrospective in the United States showcasing the work of the late photographer Vivian Maier.
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Can big art make it in Las Vegas? Urs Fischer weighs in. | | Bartha_contemporary presents the group exhibition RED | | Sigmund Rolat, who used his wealth to memorialize Polish Jews, dies at 93 | Theres more to see here thats interesting than some other newer places, said Fischer. Its artificial, but in a good way. (Cody Cobb/The New York Times) LAS VEGAS, NEV.- Swiss artist Urs Fischer suggests beginning our day together with coffee in the Village. Not New York Citys Greenwich Village on the edge of which he lived from the mid-aughts until several years ago, commuting to giant studios in Brooklyn and Queens though if you squint, theres a resemblance to its earlier era. ... More | | Jill Baroff, Tide Drawing, Hurricane Laura, 2021. Ink on Japanese gampi mounted on cotton rag, 81.0 Ã 81.0 cm. 31 ⅓ Ã 31 ⅓ in. LONDON.- Bartha_contemporary is presenting the group exhibition RED on view until June 29, 2024. The exhibition showcases works by Jill Baroff, Stefana McClure, Giulia Ricci, Winston Roeth, and Ignacio Uriarte. RED constitutes a monochrome survey of works featuring the colour red. Associated with myriad idioms, red commands a strong ... More | | The Polin Museum of the History of Polish Jews, in Warsaw, Poland, on Sept. 15, 2014. (Maciek Nabrdalik/The New York Times) NEW YORK, NY.- Sigmund Rolat, a Polish Holocaust survivor who tapped the wealth he accumulated as a businessperson in the United States to support cultural projects in his homeland, most notably a museum devoted to the history of Jews in Poland that stands on the grounds of the Warsaw Ghetto, died May 19 at his home in Alpine, New Jersey. ... More |
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Fotografiska New York presents the work of photographer Vivian Maier | | The Napoleon of your living room | | Closure of Philadelphia Art School spurs review by state attorney general | Untitled, 1958. NEW YORK, NY.- Fotografiska New York is presenting the first major retrospective in the United States showcasing the work of the late photographer Vivian Maier. Unseen Work runs from May 31 through September 29, 2024 at Fotografiska New York and features approximately 230 works from the early 1950s to the late 1990s, including vintage and modern prints, color, black and white, ... More | | Friedman is nicknamed The Sun by some executives: he gives off a warm glow on good days and burns you on bad ones. (Cayce Clifford/The New York Times) NEW YORK, NY.- Gary Friedman hates meetings. A 66-year-old with apparently limitless energy and a perpetual tan, Friedman is the CEO of RH, one of the countrys largest high-end furniture sellers, and he never holds meetings. Instead, he convenes ... More | | The University of Arts main building in Philadelphia, June 2, 2024. (Hannah Yoon/The New York Times) NEW YORK, NY.- The Pennsylvania attorney generals office and state lawmakers said Friday that they were reviewing the abrupt closure of the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, which blindsided students and faculty members. We are very concerned by the sudden closure of the University of the Arts, said Brett Hambright, ... More |
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English-language books are filling Europe's bookstores. Mon Dieu! | | Hauser & Wirth exhibits Jennifer Rochlin's most recent series of large-scale hand-built terra cotta vessels | | The 7 grueling months to reclaim the bookstore dream a fire stole | Shoppers browse the selection of English-language books at Scheltema, a bookstore in Amsterdam, on June 1, 2024. (Ilvy Njiokiktjien/The New York Times) AMSTERDAM.- When Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jennifer Egan was in the Netherlands a few years ago promoting her most recent novel, The Candy House, she noticed something unexpected. Most of the people who asked her to sign books at author events were not presenting her with copies in Dutch. The majority of the books I was selling were in English, Egan said. Her ... More | | Jennifer Rochlin, Late Afternoons, 2023. Ceramic with glaze, 61 x 45.7 x 45.7 cm / 24 x 18 x 18 in. © Jennifer Rochlin. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Photo: Keith Lubow. NEW YORK, NY.- Los Angeles-based painter Jennifer Rochlin embarked upon a shift toward three-dimensionality sixteen years ago when an unexpected teaching opportunity brought her into close contact with clay for the first time. Enchanted by its tactility and unpredictability, she discovered in the material a new channel for expression. ... More | | Lucy Yu in her Manhattan bookstore, Yu & Me Books, on Mulberry Street on Aug. 10, 2023, weeks after a fire destroyed it. (Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times). NEW YORK, NY.- Lucy Yu wasnt sure if she had smoke in her lungs or was having an anxiety attack. She needed fresh air. Five days earlier, on the Fourth of July, she had raced out of her bookstore in Manhattans Chinatown as it filled with smoke. A fire had broken out in an upstairs apartment, threatening to destroy all she had built. Now Yu was back and had to face it. She had assembled ... More |
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Exhibition revisits new and early material from 2001-03 by Anne Imhof | | Premiere Props to offer Sports & Olympics Memorabilia, June 22nd | | Francis Ford Coppola: 'You can't be an artist and be safe' | Anne Imhof, Untitled, 2024. Installation view second floor Kunsthaus Bregenz, 2024. Photo: Markus Tretter. Courtesy of the artist, Galerie Buchholz, Sprüth Magers © Anne Imhof, Kunsthaus Bregenz. BREGENZ.- Kunsthaus Bregenz is presenting Wish You Were Gay by Anne Imhof. Wish You Were Gay is a deeply personal survey presenting several new bodies of work that reflect on and further develop a number of core elements that have constituted Imhofs repertoire from the outset. ... More | | Relay torch from the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles with a leather-covered handle and metal ring with the caption, Games of the XXIII Olympiad Los Angeles 1984 (est. $5,000-$8,000). EL SEGUNDO, CALIF.- An outstanding single-owner collection of sports memorabilia featuring basketballs signed by legends Kobe Bryant, Magic Johnson and James Worthy; signed and graded Mickey Mantle baseball cards; actual Olympic torches from the 1984, 1996 and 2002 Games; and a ... More | | Francis Ford Coppola in Napa, Calif., Nov. 20, 2020. (Mark Mahaney/The New York Times). CANNES.- The first time that Francis Ford Coppola had a movie in competition at the Cannes Film Festival was in 1967. He was 28, and the movie was Youre a Big Boy Now, a neo-screwball studio comedy about a young guy trying to cut loose from his parents. Coppola made it while he was in film school at the University of California, Los Angeles, and it became his masters thesis ... More |
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Luca Giordano Exhibition at Robert Simon Fine Art
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More News | Gone in a 6-year flash: Farewell to the New York Phil's maestro NEW YORK, NY.- Jaap, we hardly knew ye. On Thursday at David Geffen Hall, Jaap van Zweden, the music director of the New York Philharmonic, conducted a lean, driven rendition of Mahlers sprawling Second Symphony. After two more performances through Saturday, he will leave his Lincoln Center podium, a mere six years after stepping onto it. No Philharmonic artistic leader has been less present in front of its players and audience since Mahler himself, who died two years into his tenure, in 1911. There was barely enough time to meet van Zweden, let alone get a full sense of him, as man or maestro. He had no signature initiatives, and his choice of works revealed little personal stamp. His interpretations of the classics only occasionally relaxed from a tense punchiness. And though I wasnt always displeased after hearing him lead ... More Jeannette Charles, who doubled for the Queen, is dead at 96 NEW YORK, NY.- Jeannette Charles, who transformed a portrait rejected by a royal art show into a career as a Queen Elizabeth II look-alike in movies and on television, died on Tuesday in Great Baddow, England. She was 96 the same age as the monarch when she died two years ago. Mum was a real character and a force of nature, her daughter, Carol Christophi, said in announcing Charles death, in a hospice. She had an amazing life. Charles first acted in small repertory roles in regional theater. But her uncanny resemblance to the queen distracted audiences, who giggled and guffawed when she appeared onstage. That led to her playing the queen professionally and for laughs launching her on a career that lasted decades (until she retired in 2014 because of arthritis), if not quite as long as Elizabeths. ... More Bauhaus powerhouse couple stars at the National Gallery of Australia CANBERRA.- The National Gallery of Australia announces the first Australian exhibition dedicated to legendary figures of the Bauhaus art movement Anni and Josef Albers. An art world power couple, the Alberses were at the forefront of artistic innovation throughout the twentieth century and leading pioneers of modernism. On display from 8 June to 22 September 2024, Anni and Josef Albers showcases how the Bauhaus art movement ignited artistic expression across Europe and set the foundation for the Alberses' ground-breaking work across weaving, painting and printmaking. Guided by Josefs explosive use of colour and Annis command of pattern making and weaving, the exhibition brings together 119 works by the artists and their contemporaries, sourced from the National Gallerys collection and a number of ... More Laura Jones wins Archibald Prize 2024 for portrait of Tim Winton SYDNEY.- Kurrajong-based artist Laura Jones has won the Archibald Prize 2024 and $100,000 for her portrait of Australian author and conservationist Tim Winton. Jones win marks the 14th time the Archibald Prize has been awarded to a woman and she becomes the 12th woman to win since its inception in 1921. A four-time Archibald Prize finalist, Jones said her heart was racing when Art Gallery of New South Wales director Michael Brand phoned this morning to deliver the news that she had won this years Archibald Prize. There is an array of brilliant finalists for the 2024 Archibald Prize. I am shocked and humbled to be chosen as the winner. This is a life-changing moment for me. I would like to thank my sitter, Tim Winton. Tim is one of the worlds greatest novelists and also a tireless advocate for the environment. He is an inspiration ... More First retrospective exhibition in Europe of JB Blunk's work opens at The Fondation d'entreprise Martell COGNAC.- The Fondation dentreprise Martell is presenting the first retrospective exhibition in Europe of the American sculptor JB Blunk (James Blain Blunk, 1926-2002), organized in collaboration with his daughter Mariah Nielson, director of the JB Blunk Estate, with contributions from Anne Dressen, curator at the Musée dArt Moderne de la Ville de Paris. The exhibition CONTINUUM offers an immersion into the work of JB Blunk, unknown to the general public but iconic for many artists, for whom he remains a source of inspiration. The exhibition presents a vast collection of pieces created by Blunk, allowing viewers to grasp his unique and unconventional approach: whether creating works of art or everyday objects, his work - in constant dialogue with his environment - is a powerful plea, placing creation at the heart of everyday life. Blunk ... More Luminous paintings by artist Raqib Shaw merge fable, history, and autobiography HOUSTON, TX.- The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston will present the nationally touring Raqib Shaw: Ballads of East and West, featuring intricate paintings of dream-like realms that deftly unite Eastern and Western artistic traditions. Organized by the Frist Art Museum, Nashville, and the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, it will be on view at the MFAH from June 9 through September 2, 2024. Raqib Shaw was born in Calcutta (now Kolkata), India, in 1974, and spent his childhood in the beautiful Valley of Kashmira long-disputed territory that has been marked by sectarian strife that peaked in the 1990s and continues today. Shaw relocated to New Delhi in 1992 and was immersed in his familys business of selling jewelry, textiles, and carpets. On a trip to London in 1993, he fell in love with the Italian and Northern Renaissance ... More Patricia Fleming Gallery opens 'Echoes' by Sooun Kim GLASGOW.- In the exhibition Echoes, Kims visual language is seen in his paintings and beautifully crafted films. Drawn from an image bank relating to popular culture and personal narratives, Kim offers a reflection on his past and present relationship to his home town of Jeju, and Scotland, the country where he now lives and works. Echoes Is an audio-visual portrait of the artist; experiencing two cultures, one of birth and one of choice, choosing to remain in Scotland following the completion of his Masters at The Glasgow School of Art. In this film Kim is exploring histories that collide with the present. In particular is the artist's own personal family story of anxiety and trauma related to the Jeju Uprising (Apr 3 1948-54) following WWII. Echoes is a reminder of how these events continue to impact on subsequent generations. By evoking ... More Thomas Dane Gallery presents a group of new works by Patricia Leite LONDON.- Like many Brazilian children, Patricia Leite (b.1955, Belo Horizonte, Brazil) was raised on the legends of the Tupi-Guarani indigenous people. These stories are embedded in the landscapes of Brazil, where the gods reside in the sun, the moon, the forest, the sea, the stars and the mountains, transforming these features of the landscape into lead characters to which a young Leite would look to shape her own world and imagination. For Paisagem de Lenda (Landscape of Legend), her second exhibition at Thomas Dane Gallery in London, Leite presents a group of new paintings and a floor-based tapestry that invoke these indigenous stories, deeply linked to the landscape and ecology of Brazil. As these natural environments are being eroded by climate change, industry, extraction and the destructive policies of neglectful governments, ... More 'No excuses anymore' for gender inequality in classical music VIENNA.- In the world of classical music, progress toward gender parity can seem incredibly slow. Recent big wins have included women of the New York Philharmonic being allowed to perform in pants, and the appointment of the second woman ever to a music director role at one of the 25 largest orchestras in the United States. The Berlin Philharmonic, one of the worlds great ensembles, hired its first female concertmaster last year. Frustrated by the stubborn gender imbalances in classical music, the directors of the Wiener Festwochen, a prestigious arts festival in Vienna, have this year formed the Academy Second Modernism, an initiative that will showcase works by 50 female and nonbinary composers over five years. This season, less than 8% of approximately 16,000 ... More "FRESH PAINT: Lauren Halsey" opens at the Parrish Art Museum WATER MILL, NY.- The FLAG Art Foundation and the Parrish Art Museum, Water Mill, NY, announced FRESH PAINT, a new rotating series of single-artwork exhibitions housed in the Parrishs Creativity Lounge. The inaugural installation features a multi-layered piece by Los Angeles-based artist Lauren Halsey. FRESH PAINT is an innovative exhibition program developed in collaboration with the Parrish Art Museum. The FRESH PAINT initiative is inspired by The FLAG Art Foundations Spotlight series, highlighting a new or never-before-exhibited artwork paired with a commissioned piece of writing, creating focused and thoughtful conversations between the visual arts and authors, critics, poets, scholars, and beyond. FRESH PAINT will continue this framework, spotlighting the latest works by both emerging and established artists, fostering a direct response to contemporary issues and cultural movements and building on the Parrish's legacy o ... More Latvian National Museum of Art opens Katrīna Neiburga's solo exhibition "Sologamy" RIGA.- Sologamy, a solo exhibition of Katrīna Neiburga, is on view in the Cupola Hall of the main building of the Latvian National Museum of Art in Riga (Jaņa Rozentāla laukums 1) from 8 June to 4 August 2024. In December 1993, the relatives and closest friends of Linda Baker from America received a peculiar invitation to a wedding with a non-existent groom. In a ceremony that took place on her 40th birthday in the presence of 75 guests and 7 bridesmaids, Linda got married to herself, stressing that this act was driven neither by regret nor feminism: Its about doing things for yourself and not waiting around for someone else to make it happen.* In nuptial history of the world, Linda Bakers wedding is mentioned as one of the first cases of sologamy in contemporary society. In 2003, this example was followed by Jennifer Hoes, while ... More |
| PhotoGalleries Gabriele Münter TARWUK Awol Erizku Leo Villareal Flashback On a day like today, American painter Jacob Lawrence died June 09, 2000. Jacob Lawrence (September 7, 1917 - June 9, 2000) was an African-American painter known for his portrayal of African-American life. As well as a painter, storyteller, and interpreter, he was an educator. Lawrence referred to his style as "dynamic cubism", though by his own account the primary influence was not so much French art as the shapes and colors of Harlem. In this image: Jacob Lawrence, âForward Together,â silkscreen on paper, 25.5â x 40.125â, 1997. © 2018 The Jacob and Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence Foundation, Seattle/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
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