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The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, May 12, 2024

 
Christie's website is brought down by hackers days before $840 million auctions

Some collectors and art advisers noticed the problem Thursday evening. By the next morning, the website was redirecting visitors to a temporary page outside its own web domain.

NEW YORK, NY.- Days before Christie’s expected to sell as much as $840 million worth of art at an auction set to include paintings by Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat, the auction house experienced what it described as a “technology security issue” that took its website offline. Some collectors and art advisers noticed the problem Thursday evening. By the next morning, the website was redirecting visitors to a temporary page outside its own web domain. “We apologize that our website is currently offline,” it said. “We are working to resolve this as soon as possible and regret any inconvenience.” Edward Lewine, a Christie’s spokesperson, said that a security issue had affected some of the company’s systems, including its website. “We are taking all necessary steps to manage this matter, with the engagement of a team of additional technology experts ... More


The Best Photos of the Day







Steve McQueen won't be boxed in   At the Met, Sleeping Beauty wakes up in the chemistry lab   Exhibition at Art Institute of Chicago features works by four Chicago artists


Steve McQueen on site in his installation “Bass” at Dia Beacon, a museum in Beacon, N.Y., May 7, 2024. (Bryan Derballa/The New York Times)

NEW YORK, NY.- When the Dia Art Foundation invited Steve McQueen to create a work for its museum in Beacon, New York, the curators assumed that he’d propose a film or video project. It made sense: McQueen is the British director of the Oscar-winning best picture “12 Years a Slave” (2013) and other acclaimed movies such as “Hunger” and “Shame.” And long before that, he was a ... More
 

A skintight “butterfly” dress from Sarah Burton’s first collection for Alexander McQueen, spring/summer 2011 collection, on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, May 5, 2024. (Vincent Tullo/The New York Times)

NEW YORK, NY.- When the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute announced that its 2024 spring blockbuster show would be called “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,” a lot of head-scratching ensued. Was this a show about Disney costumes? Princess frocks? Now the exhibition ... More
 

Christina Ramberg. Untitled, 1971. Edward and Eleanor DeWitt Design Award Endowment and purchased with funds provided by an anonymous donor. © The Estate of Christina Ramberg.

CHICAGO, IL.- The Art Institute of Chicago is presenting Four Chicago Artists: Theodore Halkin, Evelyn Statsinger, Barbara Rossi, and Christina Ramberg on view from May 11–August 26, 2024. Gathering together 95 drawings, sketchbooks, prints, photograms, quilts, paintings, and ephemera from these four iconic Chicago artists, this exhibition ... More



Reflex Gallery opens Peggy Kuiper's first solo exhibition in Amsterdam   Exhibition at Praz-Delavallade Los Angeles revolves around the many layers of the ego   Old Master and European paintings from a private collection selling without reserve


Peggy Kuiper, Infinity, 2024. Acrylic and oil stick on linen, 140 x 120 cm / 55.1 x 47.2 in.

AMSTERDAM.- Reflex Gallery hosts Kuiper's first solo exhibition in Amsterdam with over 25 new works in the show “The Conversation That Never Took Place”, opening on Saturday, May 11th, in presence of the artist. The exhibition will run for two months, concluding on July 13th. The event also marks the launch of the eponymous book publication, created in careful collaboration with the artist. Notable essays within the publication are ... More
 

Swoon, Moni And The Sphinx, 2020, block print with hand painted acrylic gouache and watercolor wash, 81 x 73 in (205.7 x 185.4 cm).

LOS ANGELES, CA.- Praz-Delavallade Los Angeles is presenting I Never Really Knew You, a five-artist group exhibition curated by Mashonda Tifrere that features works from artists Tonia Calderon, Swoon, Dionne Simpson, Malik Roberts, and Calvin Clausell Jr. The exhibition opened on May 11th and will run through June 1st. The exhibition revolves around the many layers ... More
 

Workshop of Hans Memling, The Virgin and Child with music-making angels, known as The Bethune Madonna. © Christie's Images Ltd. 2024.

NEW YORK, NY.- Christie’s announced Old Master Week featuring two live auctions spanning 600 years of Western painting, sculpture and decorative art. The sales will take place 23 May 2024, starting in the morning with Old Masters, which includes works from the Italian and Northern Renaissance and Baroque, as well as attractive examples of 18th and 19th century English pictures. ... More



Jane Fonda presents 'Art for a Safe and Healthy California'   Almine Rech now represents Gwen O'Neil   Iconic lowriders take center stage in Petersen Automotive Museum's newest exhibit


Nathaniel Mary Quinn, Kyle. © Christie's Images Ltd. 2024.

NEW YORK, NY.- Christie’s and Gagosian announced Art for a Safe and Healthy California, a collaboration presented by Jane Fonda. A curated selection of contemporary artworks donated by the artists and their respective galleries will be sold via auction and private sale with proceeds benefiting the Campaign for a Safe and Healthy California. The sales will kick-off during Christie’s Spring Marquee Week. A special ... More
 

Portrait of Gwen O'Neil, 2024. Courtesy of the Artist and Almine Rech. Photo: Paris Mumpower.

PARIS.- Almine Rech announced the global representation of American artist Gwen O'Neil. The gallery is presenting her work in a group exhibition in New York. This has been followed by her first solo exhibition with the gallery in Paris, which opened on May 11, 2024. Gwen O’Neil (b. 1992, New York, New York) currently lives and works in Los Angeles. She earned her BFA from the Savannah College of Art and Design in 2015. O’Neil’s ... More
 

Located in the Mullin Grand Salon, the exhibit celebrates the creativity and unique identity of lowrider culture by highlighting the intricate and labor-intensive craftsmanship that goes into creating these mobile masterpieces.

LOS ANGELES, CA.- The Petersen Automotive Museum celebrates the artistry, culture and history of lowriders with its largest and most comprehensive lowrider exhibit. “Best in Low: Lowrider Icons of the Street and Show” showcases some of the most significant lowriders in history, as well as incredible custom motorcycles, bicycles and ... More


GRIMM New York opens 'Francesca Mollett: Corso'   Ian Gelder, 'Game of Thrones' actor, dies at 74   Book bans are surging in Florida. So Lauren Groff opened a bookstore.


Francesca Mollett.

NEW YORK, NY.- GRIMM is presenting Corso, a solo exhibition of new works by London-based artist Francesca Mollett, on view at the New York gallery from 10 May to 22 June 2024. This is the artist’s second exhibition with GRIMM since joining the gallery in 2022, and her debut solo exhibition in New York. A new publication with an introduction by Bryony Bodimeade will be published ... More
 

He appeared in 12 episodes of “Game of Thrones” as Kevan Lannister, starting in the first season when his character was a military adviser to his older brother, Tywin (Charles Dance), as the House Lannister battled House Stark.

NEW YORK, NY.- Ian Gelder, the British actor who capped his half-century career by appearing in the hit series “Game of Thrones” as Kevan Lannister, brother of feared patriarch Tywin Lannister, died Monday. He was 74. His death was announced by ... More
 

Lauren Groff is interviewed by a local television reporter on opening day at her bookstore The Lynx, in Gainesville, Fla., April 28, 2024. (Dustin Miller/The New York Times)

NEW YORK, NY.- On a recent Sunday, Lauren Groff got out of bed at 3 in the morning, jolted by a mix of anxiety and adrenaline. It was opening day for the Lynx, Groff’s new bookstore in Gainesville, Florida, and her mind raced with all that could go wrong. So she drove over to the store, where she felt reassured by the presence of some 7,000 books, a ... More



Quote
One always has to spoil a picture a little bit, to finish it. Delacroix

More News
The Frederick R. Weisman Museum of Art presents On Location in Malibu 2024 and Rediscovering Constance von Briesen
MALIBU, CALIF.- The Frederick R. Weisman Museum of Art at Pepperdine University announced two exhibitions that explore diverse dimensions of the natural beauty of California: On Location in Malibu 2024 and Rediscovering Constance von Briesen. A juried exhibition organized by the historic California Art Club (CAC), On Location in Malibu 2024 celebrates the continued vitality of California Impressionism and plein air painting. Inspired by the beauty and scenic diversity of Malibu's canyons and beaches, this exhibition is the ninth in a triennial series organized since 1999. This year’s presentation was juried by CAC executive director and CEO Elaine Adams, President Emeritus Peter Adams, and president ... More

A boat designed to be a breath of fresh air
MILAN.- In the middle of Milan Design Week last month, in the middle of the Bagni Misteriosi — a historic bathing complex in the Porta Romana neighborhood — Italian luxury shipbuilder Azimut Yachts hosted an unusual exhibition. It was a celebration of the company’s latest offering: the Seadeck 6, which made its debut last year and features interiors by the design team of Matteo Thun and Antonio Rodriguez. Having been lowered into the facility by crane, the nearly 60-foot vessel was set afloat in an outdoor swimming pool. There it bobbed, traversed by hordes of well-coiffed guests while a concealed apparatus shrouded it in bursts of atmospheric steam. Surreal, elegant, not a little absurd, it was a scene straight out of Fellini, with overtones of Werner Herzog’s boat-hoisting epic “Fitzcarraldo.” But the thing that made it most unusual? ... More

Exhibition of new work by Lisa Oppenheim opens at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery
LOS ANGELES, CA.- Tanya Bonakdar Gallery is presenting At the Lace Shop and Other Light Drawings, an exhibition of new work by Lisa Oppenheim, on view in Los Angeles from May 11 through July 13, 2024. This is the artist’s fifth solo show at the gallery and second in Los Angeles. At a time when considerable attention is being given to repatriation and restitution of cultural objects, Oppenheim turns her critical eye to artworks stolen by various arms of the Nazi regime from Jewish collections. Specifically, she looks at artworks and objects whose whereabouts remain unknown or are known to have been destroyed. These absences allow her to think through particular histories and materials to produce artworks that are constitutive of both. For this exhibition, Oppenheim presents a new series of Jacquard woven textiles that expand ... More

SculptureCenter opens an exhibition of works by Tolia Astakhishvili
LONG ISLAND CITY, NY.- For more than two decades, Tolia Astakhishvili has worked across sculpture, drawing, painting, sound, and video. At scales that both augment and seemingly disappear into gallery spaces, Tolia’s environments posit architecture as an unfixed and transforming entity shaped by those who live through it. At the same time, her sculpture attends to disavowed space and the overlapping markers of use, authorship, and social position that produce different settings of decay. Writer Kirsty Bell has described Tolia’s installations as a form of “simultaneity – whereby a space exists as a plan, a model, a projected vision, a memory and a real place.” [1] Tolia’s work unsettles a building’s ability to designate and distribute its own space, instead overriding it with new structures, layers of used things, and other detritus. To this performed ... More

In 'The Big Cigar,' a Black Panther stars in a fake movie
NEW YORK, NY.- When movie producer Bert Schneider met Black Panther Party leader Huey P. Newton, he swooned. Schneider, who had helped revolutionize the movie industry (and made a lot of money) as a producer of films like “Easy Rider,” wanted to shake up things off the screen as well. He saw Newton, who had already done a prison stint for the killing of a police officer — Newton denied that he shot the officer, and the conviction was eventually overturned — as the real deal, a star on the front lines of the actual revolution. Their unlikely partnership is now the heart of the new limited series “The Big Cigar,” which premiered last month on Apple TV+. It’s a caper about how Newton (played by André Holland) fled to Cuba in 1974 after he was arrested and charged with the murder of a prostitute (also a crime he claimed he ... More

Are floating cities the solution to rising seas?
NEW YORK, NY.- Worldwide, rising sea levels and increasing urbanization represent a formula for disaster, with more and more people seeking to live on land that will, at some point, be swallowed up by the sea. But a futuristic-sounding solution — the construction of full cities on top of the water — is poised to become a reality. One project in particular, off Busan, South Korea, is roping in a combination of high and low technology to create a large-scale, on-water town, which will be able to house more than 10,000 people. Strictly defined, floating communities already exist in the Netherlands, Thailand and elsewhere in Southeast Asia. But these are typically clusters of houseboats moored close to one another. What sets the new concepts apart is a matter of scale. Rather than comprising an agglomeration of smaller vessels, each ... More

A party for the haters
NEW YORK, NY.- “What’s Hate Reads?” a patron at the River, a bar on Bayard Street in Manhattan’s Chinatown, asked early one evening this month. She and a friend had no idea they had wandered into the beginning of a party. It was perhaps the perfect question to kick off the evening’s event: a reading to celebrate the limited run of Hate Reads, a pop-up newsletter within a newsletter and the brainchild of Delia Cai, a writer for Vanity Fair. (Hate Reads was published as a limited run on Cai’s regular newsletter, Deez Links, which she publishes on Substack, the sponsor of the evening’s fete.) In a call back to the juicy blogging style of a bygone era (2010), contributing writers anonymously wrote essays railing against their least favorite things. They hated on things like Taylor Swift’s outfits, goldendoodles, media parties and, in a meta-commentary, the Hate ... More

David Shapiro, who gained fame in poetry and protest, dies at 77
NEW YORK, NY.- David Shapiro, a cerebral yet deeply personal poet aligned with the so-called New York School, whose highly lyrical work balanced copious literary allusions with dreamlike imagery and intimate reflections drawn from family life, died Saturday in the Bronx. He was 77. His wife, Lindsay Stamm Shapiro, said the cause of his death, in a hospice facility, was Parkinson’s disease. Shapiro published 11 volumes of poetry during his six-decade career. His book “You Are You: Writings and Interviews on Poetry, Art and the New York School” is scheduled to be published this fall. His 1971 collection, “A Man Holding an Acoustic Panel,” was nominated for a National Book Award. He was also an art historian, producing monographs on Piet Mondrian, Jasper Johns, Jim Dine and other painters. And he maintained a career in academia that included decades as an art history professor at ... More

Bill Holman, whose arrangements shaped West Coast jazz, dies at 96
NEW YORK, NY.- Bill Holman, an arranger and composer whose work with Stan Kenton, Gerry Mulligan and other jazz greats established him as a transformative figure in the cool jazz sound associated with 1950s California, died Monday at his home in the Hollywood Hills section of Los Angeles. He was 96. Kathryn King, his stepdaughter, announced the death. Holman’s longtime collaboration with Kenton, first as a saxophonist in his band and later as an arranger, provided the foundation of his reputation, but he also went on to arrange for Maynard Ferguson, Count Basie, Peggy Lee, Tony Bennett, Michael Bublé and many others, and to lead his own 16-piece ensemble. He won three Grammy Awards — for his arrangements of “Take the A Train” (1988) for Doc Severinsen’s band and “Straight, No Chaser” (1998) for his own, and for his ... More

'Sally & Tom' frees Sally Hemings from being a mere footnote
NEW YORK, NY.- Sally Hemings might be a household name these days, but we still know little about the relationship between Hemings and Thomas Jefferson. Yet Hemings endures as a figure of endless fascination: American writers aspire to tell her story, and there remains a yearning for a deeper understanding of the enslaved woman who left no firsthand accounts of her inner thoughts. In “Sally & Tom,” Suzan Lori-Parks is the latest writer trying to fill in the gaps in order to present Hemings as a multidimensional character and, in the process, rescue her personhood onstage. “We don’t know what happened,” Sheria Irving, who portrays Hemings in the play, said, adding that Parks is “building on this factual account.” (The play has been a hit for the Public Theater and runs there through June 2.) She continued: “We do not have to reimagine, we ... More

Penrith Regional Gallery presents 'Diana Baker Smith: This Place Where They Dwell'
EMU PLAINS.- Penrith Regional Gallery, Home of The Lewers Bequest, launched a major new commission, inspired by the life and legacy of acclaimed 20th Century Modernist artist Margo Lewers (1908 – 1978). Sydney artist Diana Baker Smith works at the intersection of performance and moving image, her artistic practice examining the politics of art history through methods of archival research, collaboration, embodiment, and fiction. In her new commission, This Place Where They Dwell, she engages with the personality enshrined within the historied buildings and heritage gardens of Penrith Regional Gallery, re-animating the spirit of one of the most important Australian artists of the post-war period, who once called the gallery site home. A four-channel video installation, presented in ... More







From Agnes Pelton to Rembrandt Peale: The 2024 American Art Signature Auction.


 



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Flashback
On a day like today, French artist Jean-Léon Gérôme was born
May 11, 1824. May 11, 2018. Jean-Léon Gérôme (May 11, 1824 - January 10, 1904) was a French artist born in Vesoul, France. The leading Orientalist painter of his time, he was also highly regarded for his polychromed sculptures, evocations of life in ancient Rome, and depictions of events from French history. In this image: a museum technician at Hearst Castle admires ‘Napoleon before the Sphinx’ (or ‘Oedipus’), 60.3 x 101 cm, about 1886. Inv. no. 529-9-5092. Photo: Courtesy ?Hearst Castle®/California State Parks, photo by Vickie Garagliano. All rights reserved.



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