Fern Siegel: Stage Door: My Stubborn Tongue
Give it up for Anna Fishbeyn, who manages to turn painful memoir into an insightful, entertaining show.
Read more: Theater, My Stubborn Tongue, Off-Broadway, New York, Arts News
SOURCE: Theatre on Huffington Post – Read entire story here.
StoryLTD’s Online K. Laxma Goud Art Auction – artmarketblog.com
StoryLTD’s Online K. Laxma Goud Art Auction – artmarketblog.com
Indian auction house Saffronart’s online sales platform StoryLTD will host an online auction of early gouache works by renowned Indian artist K. Laxma Goud over two days from August 5-6.
“Those ‘70s Fables: Laxma Goud” comprises a collection of 25 works created by the artist in the 1970s during his tenure at All India Radio (AIR), which was later renamed Doordarshan, where he worked as a graphics designer.
During his time at AIR, Goud created a number of animated narratives for television. Included in “Those ‘70s Fables: Laxma Goud” are a few images from the Sheikh Chilli series, a number works depicting what is most likely the fable of Brahmin and the Tiger, as well as other depictions of rural and everyday life.
According to StoryLTD, the collection offers a glimpse into K. Laxma Goud’s early works, which on viewing, would not be immediately associated with the artist who is best known for his depictions of the relationship between man and nature featuring delicate washes of colours and firm line work.
“While many of the images depict narratives set in a rural backdrop, the lines are softer and there is very little use of colour, if any at all. The images do not shock or test the viewer. Instead, they tell stories,” the auction catalogue states.
To view the full catalogue visit the StoryLTD website here.
**Nicholas Forrest is a Sydney/London based art market analyst, art consultant and writer. He is the founder of the Art Market Blog (artmarketblog.com) which offers independent commentaries as well as research and analysis on the current art market, and has recently been published in Fabrik magazine, Verve magazine, Visual Art Beat magazine, Australian Art Collector magazine, Art & Investment magazine and many others. Nic has made several radio appearances (both nationally and internationally) as an art market expert and has received press from the likes of the New York Times, Conde Nast Portfolio and Times of London.
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SOURCE: Art Market Blog – artmarketblog.com – Read entire story here.
Dream of Style
Didn’t think this one was gonna get finished today. The humidity was crazy and it rained off and on as I neared the end. The goal is always to finish in one day in enough time to get good daylight shots. 2 day productions are out of the question…it gets boring then!
SOURCE: Sye! TC5 – Read entire story here.
Edinburgh Art Festival: Generation: 25 Years of Contemporary Art in Scotland, review: ‘diverse’
This celebration of Scottish art from the last quarter century offers an absorbing variety of styles, says Alastair Sooke
SOURCE: Art reviews – Visual arts reviews, previews, pictures and gallery info – Read entire story here.
Magnus Renfrew to Leave Art Basel for Bonhams Asia – artmarketblog.com
Magnus Renfrew to Leave Art Basel for Bonhams Asia – artmarketblog.com
Bonhams have announced the appointment of Magnus Renfrew as Deputy Chairman, Asia and Director of Fine Arts, Asia, signaling Renfrew’s departure as Director Asia and Member of the Executive Committee of Art Basel. He will take up his new position in September and will operate from the brand new Bonhams saleroom in Hong Kong on the 20th floor of One Pacific Place.
In his position with Bonhams as Deputy Chairman, Asia and Director of Fine Arts, Asia, Renfrew will be “responsible for defining the strategy for Bonhams in Asia relating to the Fine Arts and will oversee the established departments of Classical, Modern and Contemporary Art in Asia,” according to Bonhams. He will also sit on the board of Bonhams Asia.
Renfrew comments, “I am excited to be returning to Bonhams to take up this new position and relish the opportunity to drive forward the business for the fastest growing auction house in the most rapidly developing art market in the world.”
Robert Brooks Co-Chairman of Bonhams comments, “We are delighted to welcome Magnus back to Bonhams in this newly created role. Magnus has an exceptional reputation and network within the international art world. He has played an instrumental role in the development of the art market in Asia over the past decade and we look forward to working with him to drive forward Bonhams’ business in Asia.”
**Nicholas Forrest is a Sydney/London based art market analyst, art consultant and writer. He is the founder of the Art Market Blog (artmarketblog.com) which offers independent commentaries as well as research and analysis on the current art market, and has recently been published in Fabrik magazine, Verve magazine, Visual Art Beat magazine, Australian Art Collector magazine, Art & Investment magazine and many others. Nic has made several radio appearances (both nationally and internationally) as an art market expert and has received press from the likes of the New York Times, Conde Nast Portfolio and Times of London.
Related Posts:
SOURCE: Art Market Blog – artmarketblog.com – Read entire story here.
A concert – in your living room?
People are gathering in Berlin for ultra-intimate gigs in people’s homes – and even on their balconies. Thomas Rogers explores a scene where smaller is better.
SOURCE: BBC Culture – Music – Read entire story here.
Lumiere Gallery Presents: Designed By Nature
Designed By Nature Exhibition
Lumiere Gallery
The Galleries of Peachtree Hills
425 Peachtree Hills Ave Building 5 Suite 29B
Atlanta, GA 30305
404-261-6100
Group Exhibition: June 15, 2012 – August 18, 2012
Photographs by Wynn Bullock, Philip Hyde, Robert Glenn Ketchum, Bob Kolbrenner, Al Weber, Peter Essick, Tom Murphy and Robert Weingarten, and sculpture by David Hayes.
“Everything that moves is a flow system. One that generate shape and structure in order to facilitate movement across a landscape filled with resistance. Flow systems have two basic properties… current that is flowing and the design through which it flows.” –From the book Design In Nature by Adrian Bejan and J. Peder Zane Rivers, lightning, trees and the human body all have a like architecture… >>read more>>
Lumiere Gallery Hours:
Tuesday – Thursday by appointment
Friday – Saturday 10 am – 4 pm Eastern
View information about the current exhibition showing at Plumas Arts’ Capitol Arts Center in the blog post, “Plumas Arts Reinvents The Capitol Club In Quincy, California.”
SOURCE: Fine Art Photography Collector’s Resource – Read entire story here.
Hard as Snails… Sheffield
Live art, music and bbq, plus an exhibition showcasing a selection of contemporary works from some of the norths finest graffiti artists.
There will be original art and prints available for purchase on the day plus our exclusive ‘Hard As Snails’ zine which will be premiered at this event. The zine includes contributions from each artist involved in the show and will be A5, printed in black and white on matt paper. The covers will be individually hand finished so each of the zines will be a one off.
SOURCE: HURTYOUBAD SUPERBLOG – Read entire story here.
Dance Review: A Taste of Russian Dance in London
The Mariinsky Ballet is dancing mixed bills of Balanchine, Fokine, Ashton and Ratmansky — a chance to see its dancers in varying styles, techniques and aesthetics.
SOURCE: NYT > Dance – Read entire story here.
Preview Christopher Derek Bruno “A Second”
Derek Bruno Opens his latest exhibition of work at FlatColor Gallery in Portland. The exhibition titled “A Second” continues his studies with color, shape, and form to engage our ability to perceive our surroundings. The stimulus of all these put together is not only the focus on the work but also a journey the artist has taken in not only understanding these stimuli but reinterpreting these moments through concrete works of art. We hope you are able to witness the perfection of his work and his ability to capture not only space but a dialogue with the interpreter or witness who is confronted with multiple viewpoints with which to engage the work.
GF
Flatcolor Gallery presents a solo exhibition from Christopher Derek Bruno entitled “A SECOND”
Opening August 7th, 2014 5-9PM, “A SECOND” marks Christopher Derek Bruno’s return to Flatcolor Gallery with a solo exhibition of new works.
request show preview by emailing info@flatcolor.com
Join us for this exciting August opening. The artist will be in attendance.
About the Exhibition
A SECOND :
*certainty is now:*
*the image of thoughts passing; shifting foundation.*
“For the past two years I have been studying color, shape, and form to better understand both the dimensional and rational means in which our eyes turn stimuli into a descriptive image of our immediate surroundings. This exploration has raised my awareness of the way our perception of a subject develops over brief slices of time, specifically the impact that each passing moment has on the fidelity of our greater visual comprehension. A SECOND is comprised of works that serve as a benchmark for this continuing investigation.”
– Christopher Derek Bruno
SOURCE: GraffuturismGraffuturism | Graffuturism – Read entire story here.
Braco Dimitrijević’s ‘Early London Years’
This review was originally published on Art-Agenda in March 2014
Braco Dimitrijević’s current exhibition at MOT International offers a careful selection of early works by this Paris-based, Sarajevo-born pioneer of Conceptual art. The show’s title, “Early London Years,” refers to the period from 1971 to 1973 when the artist lived there, although a number works produced in other cities like New York and Zagreb between 1968 and 1988 are also on view. Casual Passer-By I Met at 1.14pm, London 1978, for example, is part of one of Dimitrijević’s most celebrated “Casual Passer-By” series (1969–ongoing), in which he photographed anonymous city dwellers and, after obtaining permission from the local authorities, printed the portraits on huge billboards in a key public space. At MOT International, a framed certificate and a picture serve to document one such action, which was installed in the Leicester Square tube station. Although this was notable within the context of a city like London, there have been more confrontational iterations, including when Dimitrijević hung several billboards in 1971 with anonymous faces in the public squares of Zagreb—sites which were usually reserved for the honoring of figures like Marshal Josip Broz Tito and other high ranking officials.
John Foster (1972) is another twist on the “Casual Passers-by” project; Dimitrijević installed a memorial marble plaque of his sitter on the façade of a house as is typical of famous historical figures. About Two Artists (Leonardo – Evans) (1988), a third variation on the theme, is a showdown of two marble busts, one bearing the effigy of Leonardo da Vinci and the other with the semblance of another John Doe who, as a framed text certificate duly informs us, was also painter, but sank into obscurity. Dimitrijević returns time and again to the issue of celebrity, questioning the reasons why some names are written into history, while the talents of many unknown men and women go unnoticed. With its insistent vindication of the everyday man, it comes as no surprise that late Swiss curator Harald Szeeman included an iteration of “Casual Passers-By” in the “Individual Mythologies” section of his 1972 Documenta 5.
When a 23-year-old Dimitrijević enrolled in the postgraduate course in the sculpture department at St. Martin’s School of Art in London in 1971, he had already accumulated substantial artistic experience. As the son of Vojo Dimitrijević, a celebrated painter from the former Yugoslavia, he grew up amongst his father’s brushes and canvases, and began exhibiting his work at the age of ten. Wanting to break with traditions (both familial and artistic), he gave up painting soon after and started a practice based on urban interventions. HisAccidental Sculpture, Accidental Drawing (both works 1968) and Painting by Krešimir Klinka (1969) are early examples, and are perhaps the most delicate and nuanced works in this exhibition. Dimitrijević would leave materials on the streets and wait for some chance occurrence to turn them into contingent works of art, from a gust of wind turning plaster powder into an ephemeral sculpture to a tram slicing a sheet of paper in two.
With the city streets as backgrounds, these interventions in public spaces bring to mind the actions of George Maciunas, or other works by less prescriptive conceptualists like Vito Acconci’s Following Piece (1969) or Ewa Partum’s Aktive Poesie [Active Poetry] (1971–73), which also relied in the interaction of the artists with participants to generate meaning. And while these works critique the monolithic systems of value and authorship typically associated with the production of art and history, they make their point in a much more playful and understated manner than coeval series like Dimitrijević’s “This could be a place of historical importance” (1971–ongoing), in which marble plaques bearing this message were installed in random pedestrian locations.
Overall, Dimitrijević’s oeuvre appears somehow paradoxical: he rejects both history as a false construct and fame as an invalid system of valuation, but his constant engagement of these issues by replicating their official language (through his use of certificates, plaques, billboards) reveals a fascination with them as representing aspirational, or at least inescapable, taxonomies of existence. This echoes the contradictions of Conceptual art or even institutional critique, which rejected formalism and the commodification of the art object, but quickly became institutionalized (and commodified) styles themselves, opening up the age-old question of how effective a cultural critique can be that reproduces the same codes it targets, be it bureaucracy, history, or the visual language of corporations. Still a predominant strategy of much critical art, I sometimes wonder whether resistance might be better prompted by an art that reimagines reality, instead of mimicking it.
–
MOT International, London. February 7 – March 22, 2014
All images courtesy of the gallery.
SOURCE: SelfSelector – Read entire story here.
Wendy Whelan: Restless Creature
It’s been a busy week in dance, with Covent Garden in full throttle. Alice Pennefather was on photocall duty, having captured not only Carlos Acosta’s Cubania and ENB’s sunny production of Coppélia (stay tuned for review and full gallery), but also the general rehearsal of Wendy Whelan’s latest project, Restless Creature. Using the chamber space of the Linbury Theatre, the stunning NYCB principal sets her transition to the contemporary scene in this collaboration with four different choreographers:
All Photos: © Alice Pennefather, courtesy of ROH
Wendy Whelan: Restless Creature continues at The Linbury Theatre until tomorrow. For more information and booking, visit the Royal Opera House website.
© The Ballet Bag, 2013.
The post Wendy Whelan: Restless Creature appeared first on The Ballet Bag.
SOURCE: The Ballet Bag – Read entire story here.
Meghan Feeks: Review: Natalia Osipova and Ivan Vasiliev in ‘Solo For Two’
I have to hand it to Natalia Osipova and Ivan Vasiliev. Easily the world’s most exciting ballet couple, they could probably spend the rest of their careers performing Don Quixote, and still pack houses every night.
Read more: Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, Ivan Vasiliev, Natalia Osipova, Royal Ballet, Arts, Ballet, English National Opera, Dance, American Ballet Theatre, Ohad Naharin, London, Arts News
SOURCE: Dance on Huffington Post – Read entire story here.