• New Museum Announces “The Keeper,” a Major Multi-Floor Exhibition
    Featuring Efforts to Protect and Preserve Diverse Objects and Images
    Opens July 20, 2016

    New York, NY… This summer the New Museum presents The Keeper, an exhibition dedicated to
    the act of preserving and collecting objects, artworks, and images. A reflection on the impulse to save both the most precious and the apparently valueless, the exhibition brings together a variety of imaginary museums, personal collections, and unusual assemblages, revealing the devotion with which artists, collectors, scholars, and hoarders have created sanctuaries for endangered images and artifacts. In surveying varied techniques of display, the exhibition also reflects on the function and responsibility of museums within multiple economies of desire.

    The Keeper opens on July 20, 2016. The centerpiece of this exhibition is Partners (The Teddy Bear Project) (2002), a vast display conceived by Ydessa Hendeles. Composed of over 3,000 family-album photographs of people posing with teddy bears , and vitrines containing antique teddy bears, Hendeles’s project establishes the teddy bear as a metaphor for the consolatory power of artworks and images, and underscores the symbiotic relationship that ties people to their objects of affection.

    Through a series of studies and portraits that spans the twentieth century, The Keeper
    tells the stories of various individuals through the objects they chose to safeguard, exposing the
    diverse motivations that inspired them to endow both great and mundane things with exceptional significance. As responses to loss, chronicles of experience, subjective quests, and archives for the future, the unusual collections and personal museums presented range from staggeringly maximalist efforts to modest struggles charged with urgency.

    Some, such as Roger Caillois’s collection of rare stones or Harry Smith’s string figures, pursue a universal syntax. Other collections were not so much kept as withheld, such as Hilma af Klint’s suite of abstract paintings, which she kept hidden for decades after her death, venturing that they would be better appreciated beyond her own time. Shinro Ohtake’s feverishly collaged scrapbooks burst with found materials as free associations of images and everyday ephemera. In a ceremonious personal custom, Ye Jinglu had a studio portrait taken every year for decades. These photographs, preserved by Tong Bingxue, represent collecting as a mode of auto-ethnography that inadvertently also traces social and political changes over time.

    As a visual anthology of cut and pasted images, Henrik Olesen’s Some Gay-Lesbian Artists
    and/or Artists relevant to Homo-Social Culture Born between c. 1300–1870 (2007) mounts a provocative counter-narrative to the art historical canon by highlighting artists’ censored biographies as well as homoerotic depictions dating from the fourteenth to the nineteenth centuries. In a similar attempt to preserve histories that would otherwise be erased, Susan Hiller’s video The Last Silent Movie (2007–08) looks at sound, gathering the voices of speakers of 25 dying or lost languages to offer a meditation on the conditions that have led to their extinction. A selection of ancient artifacts from the National Museum of Beirut, melted together by shell fire during the Lebanese Civil War, speaks to the preservation of objects whose profound transformations make them even more powerful representatives of the past.

    Through this collection and others, the exhibition also emphasizes images and objects that testify to historical trauma or dramatic events, representing the act of preserving as a resolution to bear witness and to remember. Clandestine efforts to save or protect, often taken at great risk, attest to an indefatigable faith in the power of images to heal and comfort, and to a desire to honor what survives in spite of the effects of violence or time.

    As the specter of iconoclasm continues to resurface in current events, The Keeper presents the
    complex lives of images and objects that have escaped a tragic end alongside the existential
    adventures of individuals driven by unreasonable acts of iconophilia.

    The Keeper is curated by Massimiliano Gioni, Edlis Neeson Artistic Director; Natalie Bell,
    Assistant Curator; Helga Christoffersen, Assistant Curator; and Margot Norton, Associate
    Curator.

    The exhibition includes projects by:
    Hilma af Klint; Yuji Agematsu; Korbinian Aigner; Levi Fisher Ames; Ed Atkins; Hannelore Baron;
    Wilson Bentley; Tong Bingxue / Ye Jinglu; Arthur Bispo do Rosário; Carol Bove / Carlo Scarpa;
    Roger Caillois; Maurice Chehab; Oliver Croy / Oliver Elser / Peter Fritz; Howard Fried; Olga
    Fröbe-Kapteyn; Aurélien Froment; Richard Greaves / Mario Del Curto; Ydessa Hendeles; Susan
    Hiller; MM; Vladimir Nabokov; Shinro Ohtake; Henrik Olesen; Loretta Pettway; Missouri Pettway; Quinnie Pettway; Zofia Rydet; Harry Smith; and Vanda Vieira-Schmidt.


    Courtesy of  New Museum Of Contemporary Art.

     

     

    Matthew Metzger, The Nature of Color, Oil on MDF panel.

    Matthew Metzger, The Nature of Color, Oil on MDF panel.

    We are pleased to announce the opening of our summer show:
    Come as you are

    with:
    Maria Anwander, Fernanda Fragateiro, Matthew Metzger, Pablo Rasgado, Haleh Redjaian, Kateřina Šedá, Friedrich Teepe

    Come as you are
    July 14 – August 6, 2016

    Gallery hours:
    Tuesday – Saturday, 12 – 6pm


    ARRATIA BEER

    Potsdamer Str. 87
    D 10785 Berlin
    +49 30 23 63 08 05
    www.arratiabeer.com

    The Secretaria de Cultura, through the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes and the Museo Nacional de Arte, in collaboration with MALBA / Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires, present “Arte Brasileño en la Colección Fadel (1908- 1979). Antropofagia y Modernidad. (Brazilian Art in the Fadel Collection (1908-1979) Anthropophagy and Modernity)”

    The Museo Nacional de Arte and the MALBA / Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires come together to exhibit for the first time in México, a selection of more than 150 works from the Sérgio Fadel and Heclida Collections.

    “Antropofagia y Modernidad. Arte Brasileño en la Colección Fadel”. Tarsila do Amaral Un cubista ou O Modelo,  1923 Óleo sobre tela 55 x 46 cm 69.2 x 60.2 x 8 cm Exhibition organized by MALBA, Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires.

    “Antropofagia y Modernidad. Arte Brasileño en la Colección Fadel”.
    Tarsila do Amaral
    Un cubista ou O Modelo, 1923
    Óleo sobre tela
    55 x 46 cm
    69.2 x 60.2 x 8 cm
    Exhibition organized by MALBA, Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires.

    The exhibition includes Works of artists such as Belmiro de Almeida, Anita Malfatti, Tarsila do Amaral, Vicente do Rego Monteiro, Emiliano Di Cavalcanti, Cícero Dias, Cándido Portinari, Lasar Segall, Maria Martins, Waldemar Cordeiro, Lygia Clark, Hélio Oiticica, among many others.

    The Secretaría de Cultura, through the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes and the Museo Nacional de Arte, in collaboration with the Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires (MALBA), present the exhibition “Antropofagia y Modernidad. Arte Brasileño en la Colección Fadel (1908- 1981).” (Antropophagy and Modernity. Brazilian Art in the Fadel Collection (1908-1981) with a large selection of works which come from the Collection Heclida y Sérgio Fadel, one of the most complete and important collections of Brazilian art ranging from the end of the XIX century to the present.

    “Antropofagia y Modernidad. Arte Brasileño en la Colección Fadel”. Di Cavalcanti, Emiliano Augusto Cavalcanti de Albuquerque Melo, dito Menina de Guaratinguetá, c. 1929 Óleo sobre tela 81.5 x 65 cm Exhibition organized by MALBA, Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires.

    “Antropofagia y Modernidad. Arte Brasileño en la Colección Fadel”.
    Di Cavalcanti, Emiliano Augusto Cavalcanti de Albuquerque Melo, dito
    Menina de Guaratinguetá, c. 1929
    Óleo sobre tela
    81.5 x 65 cm
    Exhibition organized by MALBA, Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires.

    The collection has a patrimony of more than 3000 pieces that address the history of art in Brazil and its relationship with the modern and contemporary international scene. Thanks to the generosity of the Fadel family, the pieces of the collection have been exhibited in important museums around the world.

    Victoria Giraudo (Curatorship Executive Coordinator of the MALBA) is in charge of the curatorship which has a selection of more than 150 pieces that represent the different modern movements bound to the cultural and artistic construction of Brazil, up to the beginnings of contemporary art. This will be the first time that such an important selection from the Colección Hecilda y Sérgio Fadel will be displayed in Mexico.

    “Antropofagia y Modernidad. Arte Brasileño en la Colección Fadel”. Candido Portinari Futebol,  1935 Óleo sobre tela 97 x 130 cm Exhibition organized by MALBA, Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires.

    “Antropofagia y Modernidad. Arte Brasileño en la Colección Fadel”.
    Candido Portinari
    Futebol, 1935
    Óleo sobre tela
    97 x 130 cm
    Exhibition organized by MALBA, Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires.

    Victoria Giraudo mentions that this exhibition “is about an international gaze, that is to say, from outside Brazil, from a neighbor country that shares many cultural heritage, sociological, political and commercial singularities with it, but that is at the same time completely different in its geography, history, people and language. To have a better knowledge and comprehension of its culture it’s necessary to better know the country, which seems to include many countries and diverse communities.”

    The exhibition, which includes painting, sculpture, graphic, drawing and installation, is chronologically articulated in 3 modules, which are also subdivided in different subjects: the first module begins with the first modernism in Brazil (until the thirties decade); the second one explores the autochthonous roots and international modernization (forties and fifties decade); and the last one, reviews the modern rupture including some experiences towards the contemporary (from the sixties decade forward).

    “Antropofagia y Modernidad. Arte Brasileño en la Colección Fadel”. Waldemar Cordeiro Sem título, 1958 Esmalte sobre aglomerado 51 x 51 cm 52.3 x 52.2 x 2 cm Exhibition organized by MALBA, Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires.

    “Antropofagia y Modernidad. Arte Brasileño en la Colección Fadel”.
    Waldemar Cordeiro
    Sem título, 1958
    Esmalte sobre aglomerado
    51 x 51 cm
    52.3 x 52.2 x 2 cm
    Exhibition organized by MALBA, Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires.

    Among the precursors of modernism we find characters like Castagneto Visconti, and the first abstract pieces of Belmiro de Almeida. Modernity is represented with pieces from Vicente do Rego Monteiro, Anita Malfatti, Tarsila do Amaral, Lasar Segall, Cícero Dias, Cándido Portinari, Emiliano Di Cavalcanti, and Ismael Ney; joined by expresionst engravings of Goeldi, Art Decó influences of Antonio Gomide,  pieces of John Graz, and nativist spirit sculptures of Victor Brecheret and Maria Martins.

    The Museo Nacional de Arte received in 1994 a major donation from Maria Asúnsolo that includes a portrait of the muse made by the Brazilian painter Emiliano Di Cavalcanti. This piece had not been shown until the exhibit Los modernos. This time the museum offers an exhibition dedicated to assessing the relevance of Brazilian art in the creation of modern languages ​​in the last century. As modern art occurred simultaneously in different geographies, it is pertinent to present not only the perspective of Mexico and Europe, but also the context in this part of South America.

    The exhibition will also include representative pieces of geometric abstraction, concretism and neoconcretistm pieces of artists such as Waldemar Cordeiro, Lothar Charoux, Anatol Wladislaw, Lygia Pape, Hélio Oiticica, and Lygia Clark.

    From the second generation of the sixties and seventies there are pieces from artists such as Mira Schendel, Sergio Camargo, Waltércio Caldas, and Wanda Pimentel, which reflect the big sociopolitical transformations that happened in Brazil.


    Courtesy of Museo Nacional de Arte

     

    unnamed

    Summer Dance!
    Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday
    11AM and 1PM
    July 12-14; 19-21; 26-28

    National Museum of the American Indian
    One Bowling Green
    New York, NY
    Diker Pavilion

    Free and Open to the Public

    Join us for storytelling and interactive Native dance sessions Tuesday to Thursday in July. Meet Ty Defoe (Giizhig), a multi-talented Native American artist, who integrates singing, storytelling, and hoop dancing in an engaging, interactive performance.


    Learn More

    MELODRAMA
    ACT II: NEW YORK
    JULY 14 – SEPTEMBER 16, 2016
    LUXEMBOURG & DAYAN
    64 EAST 77 STREET
    NEW YORK CITY

    MELODRAMA is an exhibition in two acts unfolding between Luxembourg & Dayan’s London and New York gallery spaces. The show includes six sculptures, a series of photographs, and one video that together function as characters in a melodramatic play, striking dramatic attitudes, radiating pathos, and eliciting heightened emotions.

    ACT II opens to the public at the gallery’s New York townhouse on Thursday, July 14, and will be on view through September 16th. ACT I opened to the public on June 24 in the gallery’s London space at 2 Savile Row, and will remain on view there through August 20th.

    Conceived in collaboration with curator Francesco Bonami, MELODRAMA aims to examine structures of exaggerated narratives and performance in the medium of sculpture. Following the gallery’s recent survey of Alberto Giacometti’s prewar sculptures in London, and a show of César’s works in New York, MELODRAMA is the third exhibition in Luxembourg & Dayan’s season of sculptural investigations, tracing the blurry line that between materiality and imagination in the realm of sculpture.

    In ACT II in New York, Vincenzo Gemito’s 19th century wax Portrait of Giuseppe Verdi will face off against Jeff Koons’ Italian Woman, a stainless steel rendering of the risqué character Lucia Mondella from Alessandro Manzoni’s 1827 novel The Betrothed. Engaged in silent dialogue, these silent busts suggest the lingering drama of an ancient tale; Verdi’s operatics and Mondella’s seduction are preserved. Another duet follows with Urs Fischer’s Untitled —a chair held by disembodied hands—playing foil to Richard Serra’s Hand Catching Lead, a film chronicling the artist’s repeated attempts to clasp pieces of lead as they plummet past him. In this pairing of two- and three-dimensional media, the uncanny, suspended stillness of Fischer’s sculpture is cut through by the gravitational momentum of Serra’s film, instigating a dialogue between the grounded and the uncertain.

    In ACT I in London, similar parings include Pino Pascali’s Coda di Delfino, suggesting a dolphin that has already nearly escaped the gallery through a wall while Maurizio Cattelan’s Untitled, a taxidermy horse, follows  with a leap of its own. Fischli & Weiss’ black rubber Heart expresses the impossibility of movement, and Franco Vimercati’s photographs of a soup terrine transform a familiar domestic object into a melancholic diva.

    Luxembourg & Dayan New York is open Monday to Friday 10am-5pm.


    Courtesy of Luxembourg & Dayan New York

    Untitled-1


    Become an Artist Member and Join Us for the Next Artist Member Open House

    It’s the perfect time to become an Artist Member, because on Wednesday, July 20, from 6:00 to 9:00 p.m., the entire Museum will be open after hours just for Artist Members at our next Open House. You’ll be able to explore new exhibitions focusing on contemporary artists, like BRUCE CONNER: IT’S ALL TRUE, without the crowds, and mingle with fellow creatives in the beautiful Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden, which features sculptures made in the 1960s by artists such as Alexander Calder and Ellsworth Kelly, as an extension of the exhibition From the Collection: 1960–1969.

    MoMA’s Artist Membership was created for artists working in areas represented in the Museum’s collection—painting, sculpture, drawing, prints, photography, filmmaking, architecture, design, and sound, media, and performance. It includes free admission, guest passes, Artist Member Open House evenings, and more, for only $35—don’t miss this incredible opportunity to join our community.

    To join, visit Member Services in the Museum lobby or e-mail artistmembership@moma.org. Applicants will be asked to share an exhibition announcement, website, or current CV listing exhibitions or projects. We look forward to welcoming you to the Museum!

    LEARN MORE


    NY Arts Newsletter

     

    Image caption from left: 1. Jerzy Kubina, Zamosc, 2012. 16″x16″m mixed media, .2, Stanislaw Mlodozeniec, Brooklyn, Oil on canvas, 2016.

    Image caption from left: 1. Jerzy Kubina, Zamosc, 2012. 16″x16″m mixed media, .2, Stanislaw Mlodozeniec, Brooklyn, Oil on canvas, 2016.

     Live Pop-Up Art Auction Preview on July 6th, 2016 – 6pm-9pm

    @ PL Trade and Investment Section in New York
    675 Third Avenue, 19 floor
    (betw. 42nd & 43rd St.)
    New York, New York 10017

    A great opportunity to enjoy original artworks of selected, established Polish and American contemporary artists on July 6th, 2016 @ PL Trade and Investment Section in New York. Exclusive reception and auction preview 6-9pm.

    Participating Artists:

    Amy Cohen Banker, Orin Buck, Fiorentina De Biasi, Denny Daniel, Hans Andre, Jeffrey Spencer Hargrave, Jerzy Kubina, Zibi Krygier, Abraham Lubelski, Stanislaw Mlodozeniec, Ibou Ndoye, Andrzej Piszczek, Yaro Zajac-Przybylski, Maria Sochaniewicz, Serge Ouri Strosberg, Joanna Tomczyk, Henryka Wojciechowska, Tristan Wolski and Arturo Toulinov.

    Curated by Jolanta Gora-Wita.

    The art auction will be live online at Art Auction Hub for 31 days starting July 5th. The money collected from the auction will be partially donated to children charities. Please, review the presented artists artworks @ Art Auction Hub: www.artauctionhub.com

    Art Auction Hub is the organizer of the auction.

    This Event was made possible by Trade and Investment Section of the Consulate General of Poland in New York in collaboration with Jarek Zajac from MIP Furniture.

    Please, RSVP your attendance on below link @ Eventribe:

    https://www.eventbrite.com/e/made-in-poland-furniture-presentation-art-auction-preview-tickets-26290180638


    Learn more

    The Sotheby’s Contemporary Art evening sale exceeded expectations, Judd Tully reported, easing concerns about the impact of Brexit on the art market. In fact, the weak pound might have spurred the enthusiastic bidding, which resulted in two artist records: one for Jenny Saville, whose “Shift” (1996-97) —the evening’s top lot — sold to the Long Museum for £6,813,000, almost three times its high estimate, and one for Keith Haring, whose 1989 “The Last Rainforest” went for £4,181,000. The final tally was £52,194,000, including buyer’s premium, above the high end of the presale estimate. Of the 46 lots on offer, 87 percent sold, and half were hammered down at prices above the mid-line estimate. The only minor upset involved the highly valued  Sigmar Polke, “Roter Fisch (Red Fish),” which failed to make its low estimate of £3.5 million, going for £3,117,000. There are indications that the house’s use of guarantees affected the quality of consignments.


    BY Meghana Reddy for www.blouinartinfo.com

    Read more

     

    “Untitled” (2009) by Adrian Ghenie. Credit via Phillips

    “Untitled” (2009) by Adrian Ghenie. Credit via Phillips

    LONDON — The art market on Monday night felt the first effects of Britain’s momentous “Brexit” vote when Phillips held an auction of 20th-century and contemporary art at its grand European headquarters in London.

    The event, the first in a week of bellwether contemporary art sales held by all three major international houses, raised 11.9 million British pounds with fees, or about $15.7 million, from 31 lots. (It had been estimated to take at least £10.2 million, or $13.5 million.) Thirty-two percent of the lots were unsold. The company’s equivalent contemporary auction last June, containing 50 lots, grossed £18.2 million with 16 percent failing to sell.


    Read more via NY Times

     

    Untitled-1

     

    SUMMER ART SHOW on Utica
    “THE KARTEL STUDIOS”, 172 Utica avenue, Brooklyn, NY.
    Art Opening: Friday July 1, 7 pm – 2 am.
    Artist Reception: Saturday July 2, 7 pm – 2 am.

    THE ART KARTEL is a multi-generational community of artists who challenge the conventions of live performance by producing original artwork for New York City’s residents, visitors and tourists alike. Balancing Street and Fine Art,with Culture. Celebrating their new Pop-Up Art Gallery and Tattoo parlor.

    KARTEL STUDIOS” focusing on promoting artists work that speak for a respected culture that is still trying to find its way commercially worldwide without being tainted.

    On July 1st & 2nd, “THE ART KARTEL” and Suave Rhoomes team up with curators Jeff Beler & Marika Maiorova to forever change the way Brooklyn will be looked at visually with their Pre-Independence Art show exhibit. Consisting of 27 of the most thought provoking mixed-media artists making their powerful statements in   THE KARTEL STUDIOS. Done in the vein of classic art trunk shows, the exhibit will emotionally guide art and music lovers on a visual ride of sound and senses thru live art, body painting, tattoos, black-light installations, and more.

    Participating artists: Alexander Pernhorst, Albertus Joseph, Badder Israel, Brian Corvery, Bns Bns, David Hollier, Dinkc, Elstabo, Eric Kt Loudly, Elena Sedov, Eric Orr, Jeff Henriquez, JT Liss, Jill Filino, Katya Zvereva, Kenlly Dillard, Marty Abrahams, Marcus Glitteris, Myztico Campo, Nmeoner, Rafael DeJesus, Sharif Makhale, Sienide, Stephan Fowlkes, Splaz Photography, Nic 707, Real Tres Burner.

    The exhibition will be on view open to public July 1-10, 1 pm – 8 pm every day.

    Special performances: Opera by Elsa Queron, Film by Shay Motion, Visuals by TWO-О and LOOS & KHLUN, Vocals by Dakota Day, DJ’s: REBEL, SLONE, KARTEL. Hosted by EKKO 7 and SCOTTY BAGS. BBQ by HOOD CHEF

     

    Untitled-1

    Marika Maiorova – Curator for “Loft In The Red Zone”, a conceptual multimedia art installation/group show: Tribute to 9/11 that was surrounded by the Occupy Wall Street actions and fenced with police barricades keeping the artistic tribute locked down from general public and press. Resulting in the “No Comment” Art show inspired by the Occupy Wall Street movement and the 9/11 aftermath.  The exhibit was hosted at the same iconic location on Wall Street,across from the New York Stock Exchange.

    Jeff Beler – Curator, Visual Artist, and Interior Designer.

    Successfully organized and curated 3 mural projects in Prospect Heights Brooklyn including the last fall’s with curator Frankie Velez “Whats your Sign?” A Zodiac theme wall for non profit, Love Heals/ HIV/AIDS Education. He aslo partnered with Sloke One from Austin for the 7 city traveling Art Show, “Pieced Together”.  

    “THE KARTEL STUDIOS”, 172 Utica avenue, Brooklyn, NY.

    www.theartkartelnyc.com                    https://www.facebook.com/TheArtKartel/?fref=ts

     

    News | Exhibitions