No elephant dung, no glitter, no textured, collaged surfaces. It's all a bit of a shock. But do we like Ofili's new work?I'd seen some of Chris Ofili's new work in the lavish new Rizzoli book he has helped put together. Even so, after walking past so many greatest hits and old friends in the galleries at London's Tate Britain, where his latest career survey opens to the public tomorrow, I got a jolt when I walked into the final pair of rooms, filled with his most recent work. In the first, the p...
By Oliver Basciano
For those raised on a diet of contemporary art and all the louche hubbub that surrounds it, entering the London Art Fair is like stepping into a malfunctioning time machine that only ever delivers you back to Cork Street circa the early twentieth century. A quick twirl of the main hall and concentration drifts away from the nicest of nice paintings on sale to the fashions, genteel gossip and guffawing of gallery staff born exclusively of Britain’s public school system, direct...
By Oliver Basciano
ArtReview has asked a host of artists, curators and other such luminaries what they are most looking forward to in 2010. On an ongoing basis, over the next two weeks, we will be posting their responses.
Karla Black is an artist:
“I am very much looking forward to seeing the Lynda Benglis retrospective at the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin before it finishes on the 24th of January. It is touring to Le Consortium, Dijon, France from 2 April - 20 June 2010 so anyone who ...
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Published 14-Jan-10
Source: www.artreview.com
From eerily empty clock faces to angular knots of twisted steel, Strunz creates sculptures that seem trapped in timeSculptor Katja Strunz resurrects the forward-thinking forms of modernism or minimalism, yet what she unearths bears signs of the grave. In her recent Memory Wall (2008), black cubes recalling Kasimir Malevich's famous square or Donald Judd's minimalist boxes congregate haphazardly on walls like migrating birds. While some of her works are rendered in powder-coated steel or bronze, ...
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Published 13-Jan-10
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
Masterpiece saved from Nazis in 1938 to sell alongside key works by Cézanne and Giacometti. See gallery hereA rare and luminously beautiful landscape by Gustav Klimt that was crated up by its owners during the Nazi annexation of Austria in 1938 and then more or less disappeared for decades is to be auctioned in London, Sotheby's announced today.The painting – which represents a key turning point for the artist – is being sold in what the auction house says is one of the most eye-catching sales o...
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Published 13-Jan-10
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
POST BY PADDY JOHNSON
The apocalypse has come! Jeffrey Deitch was appointed the new director of MoCA yesterday and will close his gallery. Facebook, Twitter and Wordpress explode with chatter. I’ll be writing more on this tomorrow, but in the meantime — notes from a few others:
Modern Art Notes has an informative three-part interview with Jeffrey Deitch (One, Two, Three). It’s an interesting read, though I’ll note Deitch says his gallery’s never partnered with anyone or had a backer, even thou...
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Published 12-Jan-10
Source: feedproxy.google.com
Sotheby's has unveiled three impressionist and modern art masterpieces which are to be auctioned at the Evening Sale of Impressionist and Modern Art, London ...
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Published 12-Jan-10
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
Anthony Caro writes: Kenneth Noland (obituary, 9 January) was undoubtedly one of the great masters of 20th-century art. He took his lead from the all-over paintings of Pollock, and instead found the centre of the square canvas. This leap gave birth in the 1960s to his series of circle paintings. Within this simple format, he invested each work, some as large as 6ft x 6ft, with radiant, original colour. These works he followed by opening out the painting by means of the chevron, and later still, ...
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Published 12-Jan-10
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
Misconceived as an 'easy' artist, Claude Monet's unnerving talent for mood in fact speaks directly to our subconsciousLast night I dreamed about a painting. It was Claude Monet's Bathers at La Grenouillère (1869), on display at London's National Gallery. (Except that in my dream, it became a black-and-white photograph.) In this painting, people at leisure are glimpsed in a spatter of dancing light: a group of three figures stand on a jetty, fragmented silhouettes against the brightness, while bo...
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Published 11-Jan-10
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
Having obtained MFA in Applied Art & Graphic Design in 1993 from the Faculty of Fine Arts, M S University of Baroda and a bachelors degree from B.K.College of Art and Crafts, Bhubaneswar, Odisha , Prof. Paresh Choudhury began his professional career with Archie’s and Indian Express as a graphic designer in Delhi. His creative hunger soon pushed him into the mad-ad world. From Visualiser to Art Director and Creative Head his work took him along agencies from TBWA-Anthem, Interact Vision, to M...
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Published 14-Nov-09
Source: ashokartgallery.blogspot.com