HOME | TV | CURRENT | ARCHIVE | JOBS | WHAT'S ON | NEWSLETTER | SUBSCRIBE | FAIRS |

MONDAY, 12.5.08

    Advertising
 

Contemporary art “to connect” to China

Jeff Koons is lending his sculpture Tulips, an edition of which is shown here in the courtyard of the Nord/LB bank in Hanover, Germany, to the US embassy in Beijing for ten yearsNEW YORK. When the new American embassy opens in Beijing just before the start of the summer Olympics in August, it will display work by at least 18 American and Chinese contemporary artists, including Jeff Koons, Cai Guo-Qiang, Louise Bourgeois, Robert Rausch-enberg, Betty Woodman, Martin Puryear,... >>

Advertising

News

Alter ego to be laid to rest to mark end of “troubles”

LONDON. The artist Brian O’Doherty will mark the restoration of peace in Northern Ireland by laying to rest his alter ego at a ceremony at the Irish... >>

Democrats spend $200,000 on political art

NEW YORK. Could the Clinton/Obama fight to secure the presidential nomination be clinched by a Karaoke sing-a-long? For when Democratic delegates... >>

MoMA exhibit dies five weeks into show

One of the central works in the exhibition “Design and the Elastic Mind” at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (until 12 May), Victimless... >>

Advertising

Museums

Zurich, Strasbourg and Dresden refused to show Christian Flick’s collection; now Berlin gets it as a gift

BERLIN. The Swiss-based art collector and Mercedes heir, Friedrich Christian “Mick” Flick, has donated 166 works of contemporary art by 44 artists to... >>

Leopold Museum in Vienna accused over Nazi-looted art

BOSTON. The Leopold Museum in Vienna is holding art that was stolen by Nazis from Jewish owners, according to allegations by Austria’s Green Party... >>

Anthony d’Offay deal with Tate and Scotland sets tax precedent for UK philanthropy

LONDON. Dealer Anthony d’Offay’s partial donation of 725 contemporary works of art to the National Galleries of Scotland and Tate sets a precedent in... >>

Pompidou cancels Calder exhibition for lack of funds; renovations also delayed

PARIS. The Pompidou Centre, France’s flagship state contemporary art centre, has postponed a major temporary exhibition scheduled to open next month... >>

Advertising

Art Market

Can you trade your way through a recession?

The art trading company ArtPlus bought this Zhang Huan at auction in February for £16,100 LONDON. As confidence in the art market begins to wane amid growing fears of an economic downturn, two new companies have launched to buy art as an... >>

London dealer forced to return Souzas

LONDON. Aziz Kurtha, an Indian lawyer and art dealer based in London and Dubai, has regained ownership of two works by the late Indian artist Francis... >>

Row over resale right grows

LONDON. The Design and Artists Copyright Society (Dacs) and the Artists’ Collecting Society have disputed the findings of an independent report that... >>

More contemporary feel in Maastricht

Jan Steen’s Sacrifice of Iphigenia (detail), 1671, sold for $12m MAASTRICHT. This year’s European Fine Arts Fair in Maastricht (Tefaf, 7-16 March) had more than $1bn worth of art—ranging from Egyptian artefacts to... >>

Advertising

Conservation

Time-based art needs plenty of tender, loving care

Conservation challenge: Viola’s Catherine’s Room, 2001 Time waits for no one, which collectors of time-based media art can ill afford to forget. In the words of the US artist Bill Viola, “in the flick of... >>

Over $1m needed to keep developers away from the Lightning Field

NEW YORK. The Dia Art Foundation is hoping to raise $1.1m by the end of next month to protect 6,000 acres of land surrounding Walter De Maria’s land... >>

Past-Forward, from Thursday in London

Susanne Bürner, 50,000,000 Can't Be Wrong, digital video, 2006.

Vincent Honoré's year-long curatorial residency at the Zabludowicz Collection culminates with this..  >>

Curator Of European Glass, The Corning Museum of Glass
The Corning Museum of Glass is seeking a Curator of European Glass. Successful candidate will...

Current issue front page - PDF

 Hans Haacke wins fight with City of Munich

 Modigliani expert sentenced

 In the frame

Editorial & Commentary

This was demagoguery skilled in the manipulation of existing prejudices
Chris Bratton: “I see a new, pervasive and global condition of fundamentalist violence directed against dissident images and thought”

And also:

Death as a work of art - a reply

I am not trying to get the sort of publicity that detracts from the people involved and the subject of dying. I’ve been thinking about exhibiting a dying person since 1996. In Germany, the reality of... >>

Museums should beware of being used as marketing tools

Shown at the Louisiana Museum in Denmark and the Israel Museum in Jerusalem and on the block in Hong Kong this month: Zeng Fanzhi’s Chairman Mao with Us, estimate: US$347,000-$555,000

Decisions made by art museums about what objects to acquire and what to exhibit affect the prices that those works of art and others related to them can command in the market. In the case of... >>

An unexceptional collection puffed up to lever state sale and museum franchise

The “Baroness” Carmen (Tita) Thyssen-Bornemisza’s attempt to repeat her husband’s brilliant, if questionable, $350m art sale by selling the Spanish part of her collection to Spain and using the rest... >>

Advertising

Features

The recipe for a record price: auction house hype, media frenzy, and billionaire buyers

During the past 12 months, the record for the highest price ever paid for a work by a living artist at auction has been broken twice—first by Damien Hirst’s Lullaby Spring, then by Jeff... >>

Introducing the first identical twin painters in the history of art

Pieter Oyens, 1880, and, right, David Oyens, 1878

An exhibition of paintings by the first identical twins in art history will reveal the astonishing story of David and Pieter Oyens, who worked in the Low Countries in the late 19th century. Although... >>

Books—but not as you know them

Anthony Caro, Open Secret, 2004

These are not the type of books you find in your local library—one of them explodes, one of them is made with the artist’s own blood and one stands more than two metres high. The woman behind these... >>

The saving of the Irish country house (pity about the countryside)

Castletown, built around 1720 for William Connolly, Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. It was in grave danger from property developers until it was bought by the Irish Georgian Society in 1967 with money put up by Desmond Guinness himself

We would drive down rutted tracks to find a desolate space where once there had been a house, with perhaps the stables still standing. Or the house would be there, but the owners were retreating from... >>

Web exclusive

Revealed: $72.8m Rockefeller Rothko has gone to Qatar

Qatar’s ruling Al-Thani family is the mystery buyer of Mark Rothko’s White Center (Yellow, Pink and Lavender on Rose), 1950, which sold at Sotheby’s New York on 15 May 2007 for $72.8m—setting... >>

Agnew’s sells historic home in central London

One of Britain’s oldest art dealers, Agnew’s, which has a rich history of selling masterpieces from Rembrandt to Raphael, has sold its historic building in Bond Street, London. It is downsizing and... >>

Guggenheim Hermitage exhibition space in Las Vegas to close next month

The Art Newspaper can reveal that the Las Vegas exhibition space at the Venetian Resort Hotel Casino operated by the Guggenheim Foundation in New York and the State Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg... >>

Volta: big art for Big Apple debut

In the current economic climate, the launch of an art fair could be viewed as a risky venture. But few new fairs have a deep-pocketed backer like Volta, which opened on Thursday with 52 international... >>

Books

The man who turned everything into art

It is now widely accepted that the art history of the second half of the 20th century is no longer a history of artworks, but a history of exhibitions,” states—rather provocatively—the introduction... >>

The most comprehensive book on Freud

William Feaver begins his introduction to this impressive volume with a pointed and genuinely funny anecdote. A young Freud has been invited to pay his respects to the late Mr Page, a costermonger he... >>