Robert Fulford: The surprisingly Semitic roots of modernist design – National Post
National Post |
Robert Fulford: The surprisingly Semitic roots of modernist design
National Post Since then, the Museum of Modern Art's favourite mantra, “Good Design,” has become commonplace whenever products are discussed. This year a little-known aspect of that first good-design generation has been noticed in print for the first time: Almost … |
SOURCE: art Design – Google News – Read entire story here.
Annabel Osberg: Knott’s Reveals Gory Details of 2014 Scary Farm: Recap and Analysis of the Exclusive Preview
On August 6, Knott’s Berry Farm treated season pass-holders and members of the press to an exclusive preview of its 42nd annual Halloween Haunt, also known as Knott’s Scary Farm.
Read more: Arts, Knott's Scary Farm, Daniel Miller, Knott's Scary Farm Season Pass, Haunted Houses, Southern California Halloween Events, Brooke Walters, John Cook, Knott's Halloween Haunt, Knott's Scary Farm 2014, Weird News, Haunted House, Knott's Season Pass, Elvira, Tooth Fairy Maze, Jeff Tucker, Lara Hanneman, Theater, Knott's Scary Farm Preview, Halloween, Scarela, Knott's Scary Farm 2014 Mazes, Gus Krueger, Los Angeles, Voodoo, Voodoo Maze, Orange County Halloween Events, Trapped Maze, Knott's Berry Farm, Tooth Fairy, Knott's, The Hanging, Theme Parks, Entertainment, LA Area Halloween, Cassandra Peterson, Knott's Scary Farm 2014 Shows, Los Angeles News
SOURCE: Theatre on Huffington Post – Read entire story here.
ArtsBeat: In Performance: Ramin Karimloo of ‘Les Misérables’
The actor sings and plays the banjo on the number “Bring Him Home.”
SOURCE: NYT > Theater – Read entire story here.
Why I’d like to be Jennifer Connelly in Labyrinth
Goblins, animatronics and David Bowie’s trouser bulge aside, Jim Henson’s adventure is really a universal coming-of-age tale, and a reminder to persevere when life gets tough
Why I’d like to be John Cusack in Grosse Pointe Blank
Why I’d like to be Dan Aykroyd in The Blues Brothers
Why I’d like to be Scarlett Johansson in Lost in Translation Continue reading…
SOURCE: Film | The Guardian – Read entire story here.
Life and times of Astad Deboo
Listen to the legendary Astad Deboo as he shares his journey of finding his feet in Indian contemporary dance through Kathak and Kathakali at this week’s Mumbai Local session Contemporary Indian dancer and choreographer Astad Deboo is known to captivate audiences with his spectacular presence and amalgamation of all the training he has had since … (more)
SOURCE: Modern Dance News – Read entire story here.
New release by Palgrave Macmillan: The Supermodel and the Brillo Box
The Supermodel and the Brillo Box is a new book by economist Don Thompson, author of the successful The $12 Million Stuffed Shark. Written in the same engaging style, and centred around the same theme, namely What are the reasons behind extreme prices at the highest levels of contemporary art?, the new book takes off where the previous one ended: on the threshold of the 2008 financial crash.
Don Thompson writes not just about facts and economic factors, but also digs into many personal stories of major collectors, artists, dealers and auction houses, shedding light on how they all form a part of the bigger picture. However the author does not pretend to be able to explain everything. He often states that he cannot exactly define why an artwork is worth 9 or 8 figures instead of 6 or 5 – the factors are variable and in constant evolution. He is also critical about the popular notion that contemporary art is a great investment by demonstrating that a moderate-risk bond portfolio is likely to give you a much more favourable return. Here’s a cross section of key topics throughout the book, ready to be casually dropped in conversation at your next cocktail party.
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Did you know that when a collector is shown an artwork available for sale at a price he can afford, his brain reacts in the same way as when he is shown a chocolate truffle? But neurological research aside, artworks also come with a “job-to-be-done” says Don Thompson. As other luxury goods and symbols of wealth and power, it needs to fulfil numerous other roles than just the functional and the esthetic ones.
We all love good storytelling and an artwork that comes with an outstanding story is all the more cherished. Thompson describes how provenance (former celebrity owner is a jackpot), direct link to political activism or even just a clever title (what if The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living was just called Shark?) add to the value of an artwork as much as its formal aesthetics. Famous New York dealer – and Larry Gagosian’s mentor– Leo Castelli said that one of his responsibilities is “myth-making of myth material”.
With prices for contemporary art going berserk, authentication became a powerful yet risky business, with its own particularities. While in the US the Andy Warhol Authentication Board ceased activities after being sued by wrathful collectors one too many times, Europe gives the “moral” authentication rights to the artists’ legal heirs. How that functions in case of widow being asked to authenticate an artwork donated to her late husband’s female companion, we leave to your imagination.
The book takes a very small slice of the art market and as such also a small slice of the collectors. But even this restricted group comes with different flavours: some collect for gain and power (Mugrabi), others out of passion (The Vogels, Sandretto Re Rebaudengo), or combining both aspects at once (Saatchi). Now what is your motivation?
With so much buzz around the investment potential of contemporary art, Thompson argues that collecting can be seen as a “Keynesian beauty contest“. Consequently, astute collectors/investors do not choose art based on purely their own taste but also on what they think will be liked by others.
You might feel daunted facing Thompson’s tough statistical evidence of the limited chance of becoming famous (and make a 6-figure income) as an artist. Fret not thyself – for at least the ways to reach the top are truly diverse: “some have become successful and generated high prices for being great at drawing or coloration, for being innovative or controversial, or just for being celebrities…“.
Similar to the artists’ fate, only a handful of galleries have been able to take full advantage of the contemporary art boom of the recent years. Without surprise, Gagosian is mentioned as the overlord and his model as the most successful and scalable approach to the current market. The book gives few signs of hope for the mainstream dealer, other than working with early career artists… until Larry picks them up. Or not.
The contemporary art world might have become globalised, but at the end it all comes back to where the money and the power is: New York and London. This goes for galleries as well as for the artists they represent. The Middle East (Abu Dhabi and Quatar) and China (Bejing) are the new kids on the block, honoured with their share of branded art fairs and gallery outposts.
Although there have been multiple trials in selling art over the internet, few have become mainstream. In Thompson’s view the “online” aspect has mainly worked for mid market art and for print editions while initiatives that tried to reach the top of the market (e.g. the VIP Art Fair) didn’t manage to break through. Artsy, which is more focused on helping people discover art, appears as one of the rare winners. (On the one hand, we agree with Thompson’s analysis that selling online, especially high-end artworks, will remain limited. On another hand, digital innovations that focus on facilitating the current art processes and transactions are gaining momentum. Think of ArtBinder – an app that allows galleries to show their inventory on tablet and mobile. It has already signed up most important galleries, as we noticed during the last Frieze Fair. Ed.)
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It is fascinating to discover stories behind the biggest sales of the last 6 years and to peek into the top-echelons of the art world. Don’t forget to keep in mind ‘though, that you really are reading about a tiny elite segment. That goes for the artists (Cattelan, Murakami, Hirst, Weiwei), for the dealers and auction houses (Christie’s, Sotheby’s, Gagosian, Pace, Hauser & Wirth…), as well as for the collectors that pay the astronomic prices (Abramovich, Brand, Mugrabi & Co).
The Supermodel and the Brillo Box is a must-read for contemporary art enthusiasts. It describes an art world seen through the eyes of an economist, so there is more attention to value and value creation that to creative process, art theory or aesthetics. It is an original view and one that rarely gets so well expressed – and that is makes this book unique.
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The Supermodel and the Brillo Box: back stories and peculiar economics from the world of contemporary art is available through the publisher’s website, at selected retailers and on amazon.
SOURCE: Happy Famous Artists » Blog – Read entire story here.
Chicago Celebrates Women Building Change
Although women have become increasingly visible in the fields of art, architecture and design, they are frequently underrepresented in institutional exhibitions.
In the field of architecture, where women represent 50 percent of students enrolled in architecture programs, but only 18 percent of licensed architects, there is a pressing need to encourage the creations of females by bringing it to the attention of the public.
“Women Building Change,” an exhibition at the Chicago Architecture Foundation, aims to do exactly that by highlighting outstanding works by female architects living and working in the city of Chicago. Organized by Chicago Women in Architecture, which was founded in 1974 and is celebrating their 40th anniversary this year, the show includes architectural drawings, photos and other visuals of local buildings and the work of local architects.
It is held in conjunction with a number of other events, including a design dialogue between Elizabeth Diller of Diller Scofidio + Renfro and Reed Kroloff at the MCA, and a bus tour of several new buildings by women in Chicago on August 9.
The latter will lead ticket-holders to the new UNO Galewood Charter School, a glass and concrete masterwork designed by UrbanWorks, a female-owned firm. It will also feature a tour of the boathouse at Clark Park, which was designed by Jeanne Gang.
Gang is perhaps the most prominent of all of the architects featured in the exhibition. She has made an indelible mark on the skyline of the city with Aqua, an 82-story mixed-use structure that looks like stacks of paper stacked on top of glass to form a weightless tower in the sky. The skyscraper won many awards, including the 2009 Emporis Skyscraper of the Year award, as well as a place on the shortlist for the 2010 biannual International Highrise Award. Gang herself received a MacArthur Fellowship in 2011. If anyone will raise the profile of female architects, it will be in the wake of her legacy — and at 50, she’s just getting started making her mark on the built world.
“Women Building Change” is on view through December 2014 at the Chicago Architecture Foundation.
–Brienne Walsh is a writer and photographer who, in addition to ARTPHAIRE, contributes to publications such as The New York Times, Art in America, Interview, ArtReview, Modern Painters, Departures, Paper, New York magazine, and Forbes among others. She has also appeared as an art expert and blogger on television programs including Today and Anderson Cooper Live. Brienne received her BA in art history from Brown University in 2004, and her MA in Critical Studies from Columbia University in 2011.
SOURCE: Arts Blog on The Huffington Post – Read entire story here.
What America’s Strangest Parking Garage Means For The Future Of Detroit
An inventor’s workshop. A movie palace. A rock club. A car park. A skate park. The backdrop for Eminem videos.
Now it’s one of America’s strangest …
Read more: Theater Parking Garage Detroit, Abandoned Theaters, Michigan Theater Parking Detroit, Michigan Theater Detroit, Detroit Parking Garage, Architecture, Detroit Architecture, Abandoned Theater, Abandoned Theater Detroit, Abandoned Buildings, Theatre Parking Garage, Detroit History, Michigan Theatre Detroit, HuffPost Home News
SOURCE: Architecture on Huffington Post – Read entire story here.
Rem Koolhaas blows the ceiling off the Venice Architecture Biennale
An exploded false ceiling and a lineup of lavatories become the stars as Koolhaas delves into the overlooked innards of today’s buildings and shows how architecture has become nothing more than cardboard
The best of the Biennale in pictures
Sandcastle towns in Israel to greenhouses shaped like snowflakes in Antarctica: the top 10 pavilions
A shiny tangle of pumps and pipes spills out above a suspended polystyrene ceiling in the central pavilion of the Venice Biennale, the metallic guts of air conditioning and sprinkler systems sliced open for all to see. Above this cross-section of a contemporary office ceiling, which hovers claustrophobically close to your head, soars a majestic dome, frescoed with heroic scenes of the evolution of art.
Continue reading…
SOURCE: Architecture and design blog | The Guardian – Read entire story here.
Song Qi, Monaco’s First Gourmet Chinese Restaurant
SOURCE: Feed – Yatzer.com – Read entire story here.
Penguin Defends “Creepy” Cover Of “Charlie And The Chocolate Factory”
“Members of the public reacted angrily when the new edition – part of the Penguin Modern Classics range – was revealed [last] Wednesday. The cover was deemed ‘misleading’ and ‘creepy’. Author Giles Paley-Phillips said it looked ‘more like Lolita‘. But Penguin said it stressed ‘the light and the dark aspects’ of Dahl’s work.”
SOURCE: ArtsJournal – Read entire story here.
Marc Trujillo: Why You Need Painting to Say That Painting Is Dead
I’m a painter, so of course I find statements about the death of painting annoying, but also sloppy thinking, since painting is what it takes to be able to even make the statement.
Read more: Art, Language, Art Criticism, Arts, Yale University, Contemporary Art, Gilgamesh, Caves Lascaux, Painting, Arts Education, Death, Yale, Arts News
SOURCE: Painting on Huffington Post – Read entire story here.
How pop pinches from classical
If you believed that concertos and chart hits were entirely separate beasts, think again. BBC Culture picks five pop songs that betray their classical origins.
SOURCE: BBC Culture – Music – Read entire story here.