Saturday, March 30, 2013

Busted: public art at the high line


"Maybe because I'm Italian, I kept thinking about of the High Line as a big boulevard or like a street of the Roman forum, and the public sculptures that dot that landscape," says Cecilia Alemani, curator of Busted, which opens at the High Line next month. The project, which plays with the conventions of official public art works, includes Goshka Macuga's bust of Colin Powell delivering his infamous 2003 speech at the United nations holding that vial of anthrax. Read more...
Image: Goshka Macuga's bust of Colin Powell

Friday, March 29, 2013

UK museums' ties with Qatar questioned by human rights organisation


Qatar's royal family is set on making Doha into an international art hub, hitting the headlines with news of the  world's biggest art buying spree that includes a world record $250m paid for Cezanne's The Card Players, and exhibitions by renowned artists like Louise Bourgeois, Takashi Murakami and Cai Guo Qiang. However, The Art Newspaper says a leading human rights organisation has warned British Museums collaborating with the Qatar Museums Authority on a cultural exchange programme to exercise "extreme caution" in their dealings with Qatar. The remarks come in response to the plight of Muhammad al-Ajami, a Qatari poet currently serving a 15-year sentence for reciting a poem in support of the Arab uprisings. He has also called for Arabs to rid themselves of "imposed regimes" comments which Qatari prosecutors claimed amounted to an incitement to overthrow the Emir. Read more...
Image: Anti-government protesters in Sanabis, Bahrain

Thursday, March 28, 2013

World's first online biennale to be launched in April


Over the past few years the art world's use of digital space has been on the rise with ventures such as VIP Art, the world's first online art fair. Next month we'll see a new development - the launch of the world's first online biennale. Directed by Jan Hoet, BiennaleOnline opens on 26 April and features artists selected by a team of international curators including: Daniel Birnbaum, director of Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Fulya Erdmci, curator Istanbul Biennale; Yuko Hasegawa, chief curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo and curator of the Sharjah Biennial; Adriano Pedrosa, independent curator, Sao Paulo; and Nancy Spector, Guggenheim Museum NY.

Hoet is also curating a a separate exhibition for the biennale including 25 artists and entitled Reflection and Imagination. You can view a video of Hoet talking about the exhibition here.
Image: Jan Hoet

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Q&A with Dorothy Vogel


A new documenntary on legenday collectors Herb and Dorothy Vogel premiered at the Whitney Museum last week. Herb & Dorothy 50x50 picks up where Herb & Dorothy left off. Previously the couple had donated thier collection to American Museums and planned to travel to the country to see the newly donated collections. However Herb Vogel died in 2102 and Dorothy has since stopped collecting, echoing her husband's earlier comment that "what we did then is now art history".

You can read an ARTINFO interview with Dorothy here and a review of the film here.
Image: Herb and Dorthy Vogel

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Christchurch Art Gallery launches new offsite gallery with Seung Yul Oh's space invaders


The Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu has launched a new offsite space at 209 Tuam Street with Seung Yul Oh's Huggong, two large red and yellow balloons that squeeze up against the ceiling, bulge around columns and force viewers back to the walls. Huggong runs to 24 April.
Image: Installation view of Seung Yul Oh's Huggong at 209 Tuam Street, Christchurch. Photo: Jonathan Collie, Christchurch Art Gallery

Monday, March 25, 2013

Sydney's new international art fair on track to launch at Carriageworks in September


An upbeat Tim Etchells hosted a function last week to promote the launch of Sydney Contemporary. Directed by well-known Australian gallerist Barry Kedoulis, the first edition of the fair will take place September in a refurbished train shed at Sydney's historic Carriageworks. Etchells says the fair will feature 65 galleries and that it has already secured the participation of 48 galleries, including 20 from overseas. He is also confident the fair will attract art buyers despite tougher market conditions that saw last year's Melbourne Art Fair report sales of $8 million, down from $11 million in 2010.
Image: Tim Etchells at ART HK

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Roberta Smith on LA MOCA, a museum that has achieved greatness without ever quite figuring out how to pay for it


The trustees of LA MOCA say they will not hand over their institution to others - notably the Los Angeles County Museum of Art - and will instead raise the funds required for the museum to remain independent. The announcement has fueled speculation on billionaire collector Eli Broad's part in the saga. Broad is reported to have a special interest in the success of MOCA because he is building his own museum right across the street. Roberta Smith picks up the story in the New York Times. Read more...
Image: Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art

Friday, March 22, 2013

Action/Response: exploring the crossover between dance and visual arts


This year's Dance Massive Biennial includes Action/Response, a project exploring the crossover between dance and visual arts. Staged over two evenings at North Melbourne's Errol Street precinct, it brings together a selection of works curated by Hannah Mathews and inspired by writers Ramon Koval and Chris Johnston. Read more... 

You can see the programme here, which includes a screening of Alicia Frankovich's Sempre Meno, Sempre Peggio, Sempre Piu (2008) at 6:50pm tonight at the Arts House Foyer
Image from the DANCEMASSIVE website: Laresa Kosloff, New Diagonal, Production Still: Alex Martinis Roe, Digital Video (3 mins), 2007

Museumfication of China continues at a surreal pace


As museum building and expansion slows to a crawl in the United States and state-financed institutions go begging for cash in Europe, the fiscal sun is shining in China where museums are opening on a surreal scale. The NYT reports on the museumification of China. Read more...
Image: Shanghai's China Art Palace 

Indonesia's Cemeti Art House celebrates 25 years of ground-breaking work


Twenty-five years ago a young artist started an independent art space in a modest house in a village in Yogyakarta. The arrival of the Cemeti Modern Art Gallery is one of the most important moments in the history of contemporary art in Indonesia but, as Alia Swastika notes, starting an independent art initiative was not easy during the authoritarian political regime of the late 1980s. Read more...
Image: Cemeti Art House, Indonesia

Thursday, March 21, 2013

A decade of conflict takes its toll on Iraq's cultural heritage


Ten years ago, on 19 March 2003, the US-led coalition force launched its second invasion of Iraq - an event that has had a profound effect on the country's archeology and museums as well as on its 34 million people. Museums have been ransacked, archeological sites plundered and the remains of the ancient city of Babylon have been damaged and contaminated by military action. Read more...
Image: US gunship over the Great Ziggurat of Ur

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

2013 Pritzker Prize winner announced




Japanese architect Toyo Ito has been awarded this year's prestigious Pritzker Prize. Along with Tadao Ando, the 1995 Pritzker laureate, Ito is a superstar of Japanese architecture. He is best known for his 2001 Sendai Mediatheque, a seven-story glass box that distills a series of complex technical break thoughs in its spare, even-keeled finish. His largest and most ambitious project, the 620,000 square-foot Taichung Metropolitan Opera House, is under construction in Taiwan and scheduled to open next year.
Images: Toyo Ito, 2013 Pritzker Prize laureate and his Sendai Mediatheque

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

21st-Century Collecting at the Adam Art Gallery




Billy Apple, Phil Dadson and Jae Hoon Lee are represented in 21st-Century Collecting at Wellington's Adam Art Gallery. Curated by Christina Barton, the exhibition raises questions about contemporary art practice and the challenges facing those who are its custodians.
Image top to bottom: Billy Apple, From the VUW Collection (2005), Phil Dadson, Aerial Farm (2006) video still, Jae Hoon Lee, Muriwai (2008), digitally manipulated photograph 

Thomas McEvilley: 13 July 1939 - 2 March 2013


Thomas McEvilley died on March 3 at Sloan Kettering Hospital in New York from complications from cancer. As one of the most influential and prolific commentators on the art of the late twentieth century he will be widely missed. Few art critics have arrived on the scene more spectacularly than McEvilley did with ‘Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief’, his relentless and withering attack on MoMa’s major exhibition, ‘Primitivism in Twentieth Century Art” in the November 1985 issue of Artforum. If postmodernism’s brief was the dismantling of Eurocentric formalism, McEvilley became its leading spokesperson more or less overnight. Though an academic—he taught art history at Rice University in Houston for over 30 years and subsequently established the MFA program in Art Criticism and Writing at the School of Visual Arts, New York—his intellectual allegiance was less to the Academy than to the City, New York where he lived.

That said, it was McEvilley’s training in Classical Philology that initially distinguished him from his fellow art critics and again recently, with the publication of his book on and translations of the poetry of Sappho (2008) and his magnum opus The Shape of Ancient Thought, A Comparative Study of Greek and Indian Philosophy (2002). This lifelong command of such disparate fields of knowledge, is a mark of extraordinary capaciousness of his mind. The independence and originality of his insights into the larger issues of modern and contemporary art are matched by those to be found in his numerous studies of individual artists, as various as Marcel Broodthaers, Denis Oppenheim, Marina Abramovic and Ulay, Leon Golub,  and Kara Walker.

McEvilley had friends and readers in New Zealand. A contributor to the first issue of Midwest, he was keynote speaker at the 1994 Wellington International Arts Festival Under Capricorn conference, Is Art a European Idea?, and more recently he wrote an  essay for The Brush of All Things, the catalogue of Max Gimblett’s 2004 retrospective at the Auckland Art Gallery. He was a close contemporary and a good friend of mine; I will miss the warmth and depth of his intelligence. 

Wystan Curnow.
Image: Thomas McEvilley reading from Sappho

Monday, March 18, 2013

This week at Starkwhite


Jin Jiangbo's Rules of Nature continues this week at Starkwhite.
Image: Jin Jiangbo's interactive projection Rules of Nature is presented in association with the Auckland Arts Festival 2013

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Chasing the Chinese Dragon


Lehmann Maupin is the latest international arrival on Hong Kong's burgeoning gallery scene joining Gagosian, White Cube and Galerie Perrotin. The Arts Newspaper reports on how things are panning out for galleries chasing the Chinese Dragon. Read more...

Friday, March 15, 2013

Artist list for The Encyclopedic Palace announced


The artist list has been announced for Massimiliano Gioni's Venice Biennale exhibition The Encyclopedic Palace. You can see the full list of artists here for which for the first time includes a New Zealand artist.
Image: Massimiliano Gioni curator of The Encyclopedic Palace, which includes Simon Denny who is represented in New Zealand by Michael Lett

The art prize the Australian art world loves to hate


Love it or hate it, the Archibald Prize is a permanent fixture on Sydney's exhibition calendar. Hosted by the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the $75,000 portrait prize attracts hundreds of entries from artists and, according to former AGNSW director Edmund Capon, attracts at least 150,000 fee-paying visitors a year, provides a financial windfall for the gallery and generates a huge amount of priceless press. But as the annual Archibald Prize-bashing begins with calls for it to be killed off, or at least changed, the famously unpredictable artbagger is singing off a new song sheet. "If it was judged by critics or curators it would have been deceased a long time ago," says Capon. "It would have died up its own backside."
Image: 2012 Archibald Prize winner Tim Storier with his dog Smudge

Thursday, March 14, 2013

MOCA merger plot twist


Last week the LA art world was debating the pros and cons of a possible merger between LA MOCA and LACMA. Now the NYT reports the financially-troubled museum may be close to working out a five year agreement with the National Gallery of Art in Washington to collaborate on programming, research and exhibitions. Any agreement would not include financial or fundraising assistance, leaving MOCA's fiscal problems unsolved, but an agreement could help lift its fundraising efforts and ward off a merger with LACMA.

The  approach to the National Gallery was made by Eli Broad, the billionaire collector who bailed out MOCA in 2008. He is reported to have a special interest in the success of MOCA because he is building his own museum right across the street. For the moment he appears to have derailed the possibility of a merger with LACMA. Read more...
Image: The Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art

Damien Hirst takes Tate Modern into second place on the list of Britain's most visited attractions


For the sixth consecutive year, the British Museum was the most visited attraction in the UK with 5.6 million visitors. The Tate Modern took second place with 5.3 million visitors, up by 9% on the previous year with a large share of the increase down to Damien Hirst. His exhibition became the best-attended solo show and second-most visited exhibition in the Tate Modern's history.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Ai Weiwei to release heavy-metal rock album


Following his Gangnam-style video, Ai Weiwei has written 9 metal-tinged tracks for his recording debut, with music by rock musician Zuoxiao Zuzhou, a friend who was questioned during the artist's 2011 detention. Two of the tracks are devoted to the blind activist Chen Guangcheng and another track is titled Climbing over the Wall, a reference to China's great firewall.

Ai told reuters that the idea for the album came when he was held in detention. "All I could sing was Chinese People's Liberation Army songs," he said. "After that I thought when I'm out I'd like to do something related to music." He also says Elton John has been an inspiration for making his own album and that he is already at work on a second album that is closer to John's oeuvre.
Image: Ai Weiwei

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Bazinga!


IMA Director Robert Leonard is curating an exhibition for Starkwhite to coincide with the opening of the Auckland Triennial in May. Titled Bazinga!—the notorious catchphrase of Dr Sheldon Cooper from the TV sitcom The Big Bang Theory—the show will explore a nerd sensibility in recent Australian art. It will feature work that touches on science (especially astrophysics) and science fiction (particularly Star Trek); mathematics and statistics; technology, computers, computer games, and the internet; and obsessive fandom, autistic behaviour, and inane pranks. The artists are Rebecca Baumann, Botborg, Antoinette J. Citizen, Gabrielle de Vietri, Danielle Freakley, Daniel McKewen, Ross Manning, Grant Stevens, and Stuart Ringholt. Bazinga! opens Saturday 11 May at 6pm, with a video/sound-feedback performance by Botborg, and runs until 8 June.
Image: Grant Stevens, Matter (2007), digital video

Art Fairs Australia announces new CEO


Australian gallerist Barry Keldoulis has been appointed CEO and Group Fairs Director of Art Fairs Australia Pty, the company behind the new Sydney Contemporary art fair and the Melbourne Art fair. Keldoulis takes up the reins from Francesca Valmorbida who laid the foundations for Sydney Contemporary, which launches in September.
Image: Barry Keldoulis

Monday, March 11, 2013

This week at Starkwhite


Jin Jiangbo's Rules of Nature continues this week at Starkwhite.
Image: Jin Jiangbo's interactive projection Rules of Nature is presented in association with the Auckland Arts Festival 2013

Saturday, March 9, 2013

LACMA announces plan to take over LA MOCA


The Los Angeles County Museum of Art has announced a plan to take over the financially troubled LA MOCA, but it may require the approval of billionaire collector Eli Broad. His $30m bailout of MOCA in 2008 was on condition that it may not be acquired by another museum within 100 miles within the next 10 years. You can read the merger proposal here.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Gioni and Obrist revisit 'do it'


Massimiliano Gioni and Hans Ulrich Obrist teamed up recently at the New Museum to discuss do it, the ongoing curatorial project of instructions by artists for artworks exhibited as manuals that began in Paris in 1993 as a conversation between Obrist and artists Christian Boltanski and Bertrand Lavier. "I think it's Richard Hamilton who once told me that we mainly remember exhibitions that invent new rules of the game," Obrist said on the panel. "And that's what Boltanski and Lavier and I said at the cafe, that we wanted to invent new rules." Read more...

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

The Armory Show's centennial edition


As the Armory Show prepares to launch its centennial edition in New York this week, Jerry Saltz revisits the 1913 Armory Show and the birth of modern America. Read more...
Image: 2013 edition of The Armory Show

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Hector Zamora's reflection on inner city living finds a home in quake-devastated city


Mexican artist Hector Zamora has recently completed the installation of Muegano, a multi-faceted structure hovering above a lake in Christchurch's Botanical Gardens. Originally commissioned for the 6th SCAPE Public Art Biennial in 2010, the installation of the work was postponed in 2011 after Christchurch was rocked by a devastating series of earthquakes that left much of the city and its architectural heritage in ruins. Having survived the 1986 Mexico earthquake, Zamora was sensitive to how Christchurch people might feel about the sculpture's tumbled appearance, but with the passing of time the work can now function as he intended: as a comment on inner city living and urban density.
Image: Hector Zamora's Muegano, Christchurch Botanic Gardens

Monday, March 4, 2013

Coming up at Starkwhite


Jin Jiangbo's Rules of Nature opens at Starkwhite on Thursday at 6pm. Drawing on the ancient tradition of Chinese ink and wash paintings and employing interface software, his shanshui-inspired landscape is formed and re-formed in response to interactions by viewers. Presented in association with the Auckland Arts Festival 2013, Rules of Nature runs to 4 April.
Image: Jin Jiangbo's interactive projection at the 1012 Guangzhou Triennial

Friday, March 1, 2013

Europes's nomadic biennial to be hosted by the Hermitage


The 10th edition of Europe's nomadic biennial, Manifesta, will be hosted by the State Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg. The biennial, which changes its location every edition, was launched shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall to encourage artistic dialogue between countries formerly divided by the Iron Curtain. Manifesta in 2014 will be the first edition to take place in an eastern European country.
Image: Hermitage