Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Larsen Art Auction Will Be Held at The Bentley Scottsdale Polo Championships on October 24th

Art Auctioning Made Simple: A 101 Guide to Bidding and Securing that One-of-a-Kind Work of Art at the Larsen Art Auction
The Larsen Art Auction Will Be Held at The Bentley Scottsdale Polo Championships on October 24th at WestWorld of Scottsdale
(SCOTTSDALE) – Going once, going twice…SOLD!  Art auctions are an exciting and savvy way to purchase an array of prized one-of-a-kind works of art.
Once understood, bidding and buying at an auction is a surprisingly easy and fun way to begin building an art collection.

 Just in time for the 2015 Larsen Art AuctionLarsen Gallery is offering a 101 Guide to Bidding and Securing that one-of-a-kind work of art.  The Larsen Art Auction will be held on Saturday, October 24thbeginning at 10:00 a.m. at WestWorld of Scottsdale.  The auction is part of the Bentley Scottsdale Polo Championships: Horses & Horsepower and is FREE with a general admission ticket to The Polo Party, but registration with the Larsen Art Auction is required to bid.
“The first step to becoming a seasoned auction goer is learning about the lots for sale,” said Scott Larsen, Owner of Larsen Art Auction.  “Prospective bidders can view all of our artwork or lots for sale online, in the auction catalogue or in person prior to or the day of the auction.”
The auction catalogue is where prospective bidders can see the estimates on each lot for sale. This provides them with an important preliminary guide to the value of each piece. Larsen also welcomes registered bidders to come view the artwork at Larsen Gallery in Old Town Scottsdale, from October 1st-21st, where the gallery is happy to answer any questions.
Next up, registering to bid. All participants are encouraged to register prior to the day of the event. Registering to bid entails reading the Terms and Conditions of Saleof the auction and completing a simple form.  The Terms and Conditions of Sale provide important information such as the buyer’s premium, disclaimers, payment policies and guidelines for shipping and picking up artwork. Registered bidders will also receive an invitation to attend a private VIP Viewing Party ahead the auction. Register to bid now at larsenartauction.com.
The day of the auction has arrived!  With the Auction starting at 11:00 a.m. Larsen recommends arriving early in order to get all settled in before the fun begins.
“Registered bidders will check in and be issued a paddle with a bidder number. During the auction, bidders will experience the exciting buzz, drama and the fast paced atmosphere that are synonymous with a live auction,” said Larsen.   “The auctioneer will lead the sale and take bids following the bid increments for each lot offered.”
To place a bid, simply raise that paddle high until acknowledged by the auctioneer or his associates (“ringmen”).  When a lot is sold, the auctioneer will strike his hammer stating the winning bid amount and the paddle number of the winning bidder!
The Larsen Art Auction is always excited to welcome new spectators and buyers to its annual auction.  Participation in the auction can be both a fun and memorable experience for all who attend!
The Larsen Gallery is located at 3705 N Bishop Lane in Scottsdale.  To get more information or to register to bid for the 2015 Larsen Art Auction please visit the auction’s website at larsenartauction.com or contact the gallery at 480-941-0900.
 #fineartmagazine

Monday, June 22, 2015

Latest from Art basel:






 The lasted word from  the Art Basel Folks

BASEL | JUNE 22, 2015


Outstanding booth presentations, strong collector attendance and exceptional sales confirm Art Basel’s position as the premier fair for contemporary and Modern works

As the 46th edition of Art Basel closed in Basel on Sunday, June 21, 2015, the show was once again widely praised for the many outstanding quality artworks on display and the precisely presented stands. Gallerists reported excellent sales across all levels of the market – to a particularly international array of collectors and institutions – with many declaring this to have been their strongest Art Basel edition. 


The show, whose Lead Partner is UBS, presented 284 galleries from 33 countries, exhibiting the work of over 4,000 artists. A total of 14 galleries showed in Basel for the very first time, coming from China, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Israel, Italy, Japan, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates and the United States.

Once again, Art Basel provided a platform for galleries to present the very best contemporary and historical material. This year a significant reconfiguration of the downstairs floorplan in Hall 2 moved 57 galleries to new positions – representing the biggest such shift at the show in the last decade. Bringing galleries showing work from 1900 to 1970 in closer proximity to each other, it created a stronger focus for their outstanding historical material, which included premier pieces by Max Beckmann, Marc Chagall, Max Ernst, George Grosz, Yves Klein, René Magritte, Pablo Picasso, Mark Rothko and Egon Schiele.

The show attracted an attendance of 98,000 over the six show days. Alongside major private collectors from Europe, North and Latin America, and Asia, representatives and groups from over 80 museums and institutions from across the world attended the show, including: Art Gallery of Ontario; Dia Art Foundation, New York; Guggenheim Museum, New York; Hirshhorn Museum & Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.; Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; Institute of Contemporary Arts, London; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne; National Gallery Singapore; Palais de Tokyo, Paris; Serpentine Galleries, London; Tate, London; The Royal Academy, London; The Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing; Whitechapel Gallery, London; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York and Yuan Museum, Beijing.

Galleries exhibiting within all sectors of Art Basel expressed their enthusiasm about this year's show:

‘Business at this year's Art Basel has been brisk and continuous. We are proud to have placed more works in museum collections than ever before in our history at the fair, including a significant piece by Mike Kelley. We also managed to place all four of our Unlimited projects – a testament to the unrivalled reputation of Art Basel and the collectors it attracts.’
Iwan Wirth, President, Hauser & Wirth, Zurich, New York, London 

‘Art Basel provided the perfect platform to present our Robert Rauschenberg works. They all sold within the first few hours.’
Mollie Dent-Brocklehurst, Pace London President, Pace, New York, London, Zuoz, Beijing, Hong Kong

‘Art Basel provides high visibility to artists and galleries on the world stage – we have been able to place work with a major European museum as a direct result of the fair. And I always learn things in Basel that continue to inform my program throughout the year.’
Maureen Paley, Founder & Director, Maureen Paley, London

‘Art Basel was once again a fair that went beyond expectations. We saved important works for this fair, including two Joseph Beuys sculptures that we placed in the most exciting collections. It was our first time showing Robert Rauschenberg since we began to work with the Foundation, and we placed works with museums and important collections in Germany and France. The attendance of major museum directors and curators was enormous, and they travelled with their trustees, which meant they were able to make quick decisions. Only Art Basel is able to attract this kind of seriousness.’
Thaddaeus Ropac, Founder & Director, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, Salzburg

‘Once again, Art Basel has proven to be the best art fair in the world. We have had an incredible response to every artist exhibited in our booth, placing multiple major works with museums and private collectors from the Americas, Europe and Asia. Unlimited was equally successful for the gallery, as we placed significant historical installation-based works by Olafur Eliasson and Haim Steinbach with an important North American museum and an important European collection, respectively.’
Tanya Bonakdar, Founder & Director, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York

‘We had an extremely good start to this year's fair with many key works on the booth selling in the first few hours. We were especially happy to re-connect with Asian clients, who we got to know during Art Basel in Hong Kong earlier this year. Art Basel continues to impress.’
Esther Schipper, Founder, Esther Schipper, Berlin

‘We have found the show very strong this year – and the shift in floorplan has brought a real cohesion, making it easier for galleries to be in conversation with one another and for collectors to navigate the show and explore their interests. Basel is still the only fair where when they say 'vernissage', it really is dedicated time with collectors who are here to explore the show seriously.’
Pierre Ravelle-Chapuis, Director, Van de Weghe Fine Art, New York

‘Art Basel continues to be the very best fair for us, and this year we met new collectors from Europe, including France, and also from Taipei. We found new collectors for our younger generation of artists, including Navid Nuur and Ida Ekblad, as well as artists who we have worked with for many years – our highlight being the sale of six works by Albert Oehlen on the first day of the fair.’
Samia Saouma, Director, Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin, Paris

'It's always a pleasure to be in Basel, as it continually offers a wonderful opportunity to connect with our international collectors, including those from the United States and Asia. We have had good sales on the preview days and strong engagement continued in the days following. We appreciate Basel's dedicated attention to art from across Africa this year.’
Kirsty Wesson, Senior Curator, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, Cape Town

‘Our first year exhibiting at Art Basel has been both a rewarding and inspiring experience. We have had an incredible opportunity to share our artist's work with curators and we are very much looking forward to the institutional follow up from the fair.’
Jasmin T. Tsou, Owner and Director, JTT, New York

‘Art Basel consistently draws the highest quality works on the market. This year's floorplan revisions, in order to highlight the show’s historical focus, seems to have had a motivating impact on exhibitors and created new energy.’
Paul L. Gray, Partner, Richard Gray Gallery, Chicago, New York

‘The fair was a great success. We were impressed by the quality of institutions present at the show and also the positive feedback we received about our presentation of Paolo Scheggi in Feature.’
Michele Casamonti, Founder, Tornabuoni Art, Paris, Florence, Milan, Forte dei Marmi, Portofino

‘It has been a wonderful week in Basel. We were particularly touched by the outpouring of love for Marcia Hafif and her presentation in Unlimited, and are working with a group of institutions to find a permanent home for this masterwork.’
Fergus McCaffrey, Founder and Owner, Fergus McCaffrey, New York, Saint Barthelemy

‘Art Basel is the gold-standard fair. It has been our best to date with everything spoken for in the first hour of opening.’
Glenn Scott Wright, Director, Victoria Miro, London

'Art Basel sets itself apart with its unparalleled visitors – both in terms of critical quality and quantity – and the Edition sector continually attracts strong and informed collectors.  We have been exhibiting in Basel for the past 42 years and this is one of the best ever.'
Sidney Felsen, Founder, Gemini G.E.L. LLC, Los Angeles

‘Art Basel always makes us re-realize the limitlessness of art through the huge scope of works that are presented. Visitors have a serious passion and are interested to learn about the works in-depth. We have been very happy to see many collectors appreciating art that stretches beyond their own borders.’
Chiara Hsinke Lee, Director, Long March Space, Beijing

‘Art Basel is one of the few places where we can place works with major American institutions while also broadening an artist's audience among intelligent, informed European collectors. This underscores why Art Basel remains the most important and influential art fair.’
Jack Shainman, Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, Kinderhook

'This year's show had more new collectors than ever, right from the start. And this flow of traffic continued through the subsequent days, with interest across the range of works on our booth. The audience here is not afraid of challenges.'
Frish Brandt, President, Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco

‘We were really happy to be at the fair again this year. This year's booth dedicated to Italian art from the 50s to the 70s attracted collectors from all over the world, creating interesting new relationships for us.’
Eleonora Tega, Director, Galleria Tega, Milan

‘Our Feature booth dedicated to Mono-ha was extremely well received and we have made very strong sales. This is our first time showing in Art Basel in Switzerland and we would love to come back next year.’
Hozu Yamamoto, Gallery Owner, Tokyo Gallery + BTAP, Tokyo, Beijing

‘This year for Art Basel, we took a new approach by focusing on four of our artists and rotating works throughout the fair. Our two solo presentations inside the booth with Jose Davila and Jorge Mendez Blake were extremely well received, and we sold almost all of the sculptures by Davila. Over 80 percent of our placements were with museums or very significant private collections.’
Kerstin Erdmann, Director, OMR, Mexico City

‘Given the great success of previous editions of the fair, we were delighted that sales continued to be extremely strong at Art Basel this year. We bring our best to Basel. Showing important works by Keith Haring, Thomas Schütte, George Condo, Albert Oehlen, Martin Kippenberger, Cindy Sherman, Rosemarie Trockel and Andy Warhol, among others, and we were very pleased to be met with enthusiastic and knowledgeable collectors at the highest level. This year there was unparalleled energy on the floors during the first few days, once again confirming the dominance of the Art Basel fair.’
Per Skarstedt, Owner, Skarstedt, New York, London

‘We were delighted to participate in Feature this year at Art Basel, especially as the sector gave us the freedom to show Andrea Bowers’ powerful installation. Visitors have had quite an emotional response to the piece, and we’ve received incredible support from several curators and institutions.’
Kevin Scholl, Director, Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects, Culver City

Unlimited 
Providing galleries with a unique opportunity to present works that transcend the normal art fair stand, Unlimited, curated for the fourth year by Gianni Jetzer, presented 74 ambitious works in Hall 1, and galleries reported particularly strong sales from the sector. Visitors commented on the exceptionally high quality of Unlimited, with some of the many highlights including works by renowned international artists such as, Kenneth Anger, Ed Atkins, Kader Attia, Martin Creed, Dan Flavin, Gilbert & George, Marcia Hafif, Sheila Hicks, Robert Irwin, Anna Gaskell, Shilpa Gupta, Jeppe Hein, Pierre Huyghe, Leigh Ledare, Maha Malluh, Sarah Morris, Bruce Nauman, Elizabeth Price, Pedro Reyes, Lorna Simpson, Sturtevant, Wu Tsang, Julius von Bismarck and Zhang Enli.

Statements 
The solo artist presentations in Statements offered visitors and collectors an opportunity to discover the work of emerging artists with a strong presence of the digital-native mind set: Bunny Rogers at Société, Borna Sammak at JTT, Avery Singer at Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler and Amalia Ulman at James Fuentes. Looking eastwards for new talents, Grey Noise from Dubai showed Caline Aoun; The Third Line, also from Dubai, presented Abbas Akhavan; and Platform China from Beijing showed Zhao Zhao.

The Baloise Art Prize was this year awarded to British artist Beatrice Gibson and Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc from France. The prize of CHF 30,000 was presented by a jury of international experts, and works by the award winners were acquired by Baloise and donated to the MMK, Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am Main and the MUDAM, Luxembourg.

Feature 
This year's Feature sector, an annual highlight at the show, was expanded by 25 percent to spotlight even more precise curatorial projects at 30 galleries. Showing both historical and contemporary work, this year's edition saw galleries from 13 countries, with six of the galleries exhibiting at Art Basel for the first time. There were many highlights in Feature, with connoisseurs commenting on the quality of the work shown within the sector, including: a presentation by Luxembourg & Dayan (New York, London) of two lesser-known bodies of works by Michelangelo Pistoletto; a significant thematic show on Mono-ha, featuring five artists from the sculpture based Japanese art movement from the late 1960’s onwards, by Tokyo Gallery + BTAP (Tokyo, Beijing); a stand-out presentation by Tornabuoni Art (Paris, Florence, Milan, Forte dei Marmi, Portofino) of four works by Paolo Scheggi, gathered together for the first time since they were shown at the Venice Biennale in 1966; a much-discussed installation by Andrea Bowers at Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects (Culver City) and an installation of rarely seen dung sculptures and ‘Body Prints’ by David Hammons, shown by Salon 94 (New York).

Parcours 
The 2015 edition of Parcours was curated for the third time by Florence Derieux, Director of FRAC Champagne-Ardenne, and was sited in the historical centre of Basel around the city’s iconic cathedral and at select locations such as the Museum of Culture, the Natural History Museum, the Town Hall and the Münsterplatz. Parcours featured a total of 23 site-specific art works by internationally recognised artists, the biggest selection for Parcours to date, including Alexandra Bachzetsis, Adriano Costa, Nate Lowman, Michaela Meise, David Renggli and Ugo Rondinone. A highlight of the week was Parcours Night on Saturday, June 20, when the project venues stayed open late, accompanied by special one-off performances by Rosa Barba, Julien Bismuth and Erkka Nissinen, as well as a live set by Haroon Mirza with London-based band Factory Floor. As part of the evening, Art Basel with HeK (House of electronic Arts Basel) presented a new live performance by Edwin van der Heide. Between Wednesday and Sunday 9,000 people visited Parcours.

Film 
This year's Film program was selected for the first time by Cairo-based film curator and lecturer Maxa Zoller. Consisting of six screenings – including one programmed by the Locarno Film Festival and one by This Brunner – the film program was shown at Stadtkino Basel over six nights. It featured 19 film and video works by and about artists, exploring a range of different themes, with highlights including the screening of Takashi Murakami’s debut feature film ‘Jellyfish Eyes’, marking a turning point in Murakami’s practice and in the artist's own words ‘a healing film for post-tsunami Japan’; the first screening in Europe of Lisa Immordino Vreeland’s documentary ‘Peggy Guggenheim: Art Addict’, an intimate portrait of the artworld icon; the films of South Korean KimSooja and Moroccan-born Hassan Hajjaj, which use female traditional craft as a way to offer to the viewer a non-traditional, philosophical approach to art forms; and a special short film program featuring the work of a range of artists including Karolin Meunier, Laure Prouvost, Oliver Laric and Julieta Aranda. Film was widely attended, and throughout the week two additional screenings were added to the program due to demand.

Conversations and Salon 
Art Basel's Conversations and Salon series brought together prominent voices from the international artworld, including Danh Vō, Mark Coetzee, Manuela Ammer, Wael Shawky, Elena Filipovic, Anicka Yi, Susan Hiller, Christian Jankowski and Jumana Manna. The program of artist conversations and discussion forums took place daily, with a number of timely themes covered, including ‘Rethinking Kunsthalles and Non Profits’, ‘The Caribbean is the Future of Art’, ‘Collecting Africa’ and ‘Residencies, Communities: Support Structures for Artists’. The Art Basel talks program of over 20 panels was free and open to the public. A total of over 2,700 people attended this year's talks program. High-quality videos of all talks will be available shortly after the show at artbasel.com/basel/talks.

DO WE DREAM UNDER THE SAME SKY
For the duration of Art Basel, ‘DO WE DREAM UNDER THE SAME SKY’ by conceptual artist Rirkrit Tiravanija, German architects Nikolaus Hirsch/Michel Müller and Finish chef Antto Melasniemi was installed on Messeplatz in Basel. The work was an extension of Rirkrit Tiravanija’s and Thai artist Kamin Lertchaiprasert’s ‘the land’, a self-sustaining artistic community near Chiang Mai in Thailand. Including a herbal garden, kitchen, communal dining and meeting area, the project involved collaborations with engineers Bollinger + Grohmann and students from the Institute of Art of the FHNW Academy of Art and Design in Basel and the Städelschule in Frankfurt. With the show now closed, the installation for ‘DO WE DREAM UNDER THE SAME SKY’ will travel to 'the land' in Chiang Mai, where it will form the basis for the foundation’s first permanent structure. Through Art Basel’s Crowdfunding Initiative – a unique partnership with Kickstarter to support non-profit visual arts organizations founded in 2014 – 'the land' is raising funds to expand this structure to house artist residencies and special programming, including workshops, talks and performances.

Exhibitions and performances in Basel 
Exhibitions in and around Basel were of an exceptionally high standard this year, and included: ‘Paul Gauguin’, ‘Marlene Dumas’ and 'Tobias Rehberger' at Fondation Beyeler; ‘Future Present’ at the Schaulager; ‘Joseph Beuys: Installations, Actions & Vitrines’ at Museum für Gegenwartskunst; ‘Haroon Mirza/hrm199 Ltd’ at Museum Tinguely; ‘Anicka Yi: 7,070,430K of Digital Spit’ and ‘Vincent Fecteau: You Have Did the Right Thing When You Put That Skylight In' at Kunsthalle Basel; and ‘Making Africa – A Continent of Contemporary Design’ at Vitra Design Museum.

Theater Basel presented ‘The Metopes of the Parthenon’ by internationally renowned theater director Romeo Castellucci. In addition, Fondation Beyeler hosted a performance of the 1913 Futurist opera ‘Victory over the Sun’.

Design Miami/Basel 
Design Miami/Basel, the global forum for collectable design was once again held within Hall 1 on the Messeplatz. The 10th edition presented more than 50 galleries exhibiting historic and contemporary design alongside a program of commissions, talks and satellite shows. For more details, please visit designmiami.com

Publications 
In celebration of Art Basel's 45th year, Art Basel | Year 45 retraces the 2014 editions of Art Basel's three fairs in Basel, Miami Beach and Hong Kong. The book has an A-to-Z format that maps the world of Art Basel with a comprehensive look at last year's shows, featuring interviews, essays and personal highlights from artists, curators, collectors, museum directors and other luminaries from the international artworld. The publication is available to buy at all Art Basel shows, and at selected art bookstores across Europe, the United States and Asia. The Unlimited catalogue, also published by Hatje Cantz, sold out by the end of the fair.  


NOTES TO EDITORS


About Art Basel
Art Basel stages the world's premier art shows for Modern and contemporary works, sited in Basel, Miami Beach, and Hong Kong. Defined by its host city and region, each show is unique, which is reflected in its participating galleries, artworks presented, and the content of parallel programming produced in collaboration with local institutions for each edition. In addition to ambitious stands featuring leading galleries from around the world, each show's singular exhibition sectors spotlight the latest developments in the visual arts, offering visitors new ideas, new inspiration and new contacts in the art world.

Partners
UBS, global Lead Partner of Art Basel, has supported the organization for more than 20 years. As Art Basel’s global network has expanded, so too has UBS’s commitment and lead partnership, which includes all three shows in Basel, Miami Beach and Hong Kong. In addition to its support of Art Basel, UBS has a long and substantial record of engagement in contemporary art: as a holder of one of the world’s most distinguished corporate art collections, as an active partner in global contemporary art projects such as the Guggenheim UBS MAP Global Art Initiative, and as a source of information and insights through the UBS Art Competence Center, UBS Arts Forum and its new contemporary art news-focused app, 'Planet Art'.

Associate Partners Davidoff, the prestigious Swiss cigar brand, Audemars Piguet, the independent high-end watch manufacturer, and NetJets, the world leader in private aviation, support Art Basel across its three shows. Art Basel's Media Partners are The Financial Times and the Neue Zürcher Zeitung, and the VIP car service at the show is by BMW. Long-standing partner AXA ART, the international art insurance specialist, provides VIP guided tours at all shows. For further information on Art Basel's partners, please visit artbasel.com/partners.

Upcoming Art Basel shows
Miami Beach, December 3 - 6, 2015
Hong Kong, March 24 - 26, 2016
Basel, June 16 - 19, 2016

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Friday, June 19, 2015

The Sky to the North

NEW BALSIC MOON TO THE WESTERN SKY

ED PASCHKE AND ZHOU BROTHERS”



THE ED PASCHKE ART CENTER AND ZHOU B ART CENTER 

PRESENTS A UNIQUE MULTI-VENUE EXHIBITION 
“JOURNEY TO ART:  ED PASCHKE AND ZHOU BROTHERS”

Sunday, June 21, 2015 
11 a.m. – 1 p.m. – Paschke in the Park Family Event The Ed Paschke Art Center will build on the success of last summer’s free, family friendly event and host an all day event featuring a public installation of the Zhou Brothers sculptural works in Jefferson Memorial Park (4822 N. Long Ave., Chicago, IL), adjacent to EPAC. The event will also be the public opening for “Journey to Art: Zhou Brothers.”


"Nothing like this has ever been done before, and the Zhou Brothers would never do anything like this for anyone but Ed,” said Vesna K. Stelcer, chair of the Ed Paschke Foundation. “The generosity and daring of this exchange is a testament to their relationship, and it perfectly embodies EPAC's inaugural year."
Image Credit: Ed Paschke, Red Boxer, 2004, Oil on linen, 50 inches x 60 inches.

About Ed Paschke 

Born June 22, 1939 and raised on the North side of Chicago, Ed Paschke's father's sketches and Disney animation drew him to art at an early age. He earned his BFA in 1961 and MFA in 1970, both from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC). He established his reputation as a leading artist of his generation early on, and began showing at the Hyde Park Art Center with a rotating cast of artists. Soon dubbed the Chicago Imagists, they were recognized for their works highly finished surfaces and busy compositions. Ultimately, Paschke would go on to distinguish himself by using tabloids and photographs as source material, as well as by adding a social or political dimension to much of his work. Paschke died suddenly in his sleep from heart failure on November 24, 2004 at the age of 65. His work is in countless private collections throughout the world, as well as major museums both here and abroad, including The Art Institute and Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; The Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, D.C.; and the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, among others.

About the Ed Paschke Art Center

The Mission of the Ed Paschke Art Center is to preserve and provide public access to the work of the legendary Ed Paschke; to serve as an educational resource for youth, adults, artists and academics; and to function as an accessible platform for artists to showcase their work.


The Center has been funded through the generous support of The Rabb Family
Foundation and includes partnerships with the 3M Company, the School of the Art Institute and the Block Museum of Art.

About the Zhou Brothers 

Before leaving China in 1986, the Zhou Brothers had become nationally recognized contemporary artists with shows in the National Museum of Art, Beijing; the Museum of Art, Nanjing; the Shanghai Museum of Art; the Guiling Art Museum; and the Guanxi Art Museum in Naning. The Zhou Brothers then went to achieve international acclaim, opening shows in the United States and Europe. The Brothers work collaboratively on each piece they create, often communicating in a dream dialogue. In 1973 DaHuang and ShanZuo finished their first painting together, The Wave, and have created art in multiple media together since. In 1986, the Brothers moved to the United States and settled in the Bridgeport neighborhood where they retain a private residence and studio. The Zhou Brothers founded the Zhou B Art Center in 2004, hoping to create a platform in Bridgeport for artists and international dialogues.

About the Zhou B Art Center 
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The Zhou B Art Center was founded in 2004 by the internationally acclaimed Zhou Brothers. Located in Bridgeport, the Zhou B Art Center's mission is to promote and facilitate a cultural dialogue by organizing contemporary art exhibitions and programs of international scope. As a Center created by artists, for artists, the vision of the Center is to facilitate the exchange of contemporary art between Chicago and the international art community and promote the convergence of Eastern and Western art forms in the United States.

The Zhou B Art Center provides galleries, studio spaces, and a collaborative creative environment to a thriving community of talented artists. The primary purpose of the Zhou B Art Center is to nurture the creativity and growth of its nearly 50 resident artists. The Center is also home to some of the most thought-provoking and cutting edge exhibitions in the city. On the Third Friday of each month, the Center hosts a free exhibition and open studio event where families can explore its main exhibitions, galleries, and resident artists' studios. This event is the perfect opportunity for Chicagoans and tourists to support the local and international artists involved with the Zhou B Art Center.

Catch Scope Art Basel opens today

Monday, June 15, 2015

For those in the art game this is a must read: At Art Basel, a Powerful Jury Controls the Market, Graham Bowely, New York Times /614/ Via Flip






Photo

A Warhol “fright wig” self-portrait sold at Art Basel last year for around $34 million.CreditHarold Cunningham/Getty Images
The hundreds of gallery owners who apply each year to secure a coveted booth at Art Basel, the Swiss art fair, spend weeks on their admission applications. They describe the evolution of their galleries, track the history of their exhibitions and list the biographies of their artists. Then there is the matter of the “mock booths,” intricate sketches, miniature models, even virtual tours, of their planned exhibition spaces, complete with tiny reproductions of the exact works they hope to exhibit.
All to impress the fair’s selection jury, six fellow dealers who have become among the most powerful gatekeepers — and tastemakers — in the art world.
“It is like the Olympics,” said the New York dealer Fergus McCaffrey, “or the European Champions League, and every good gallery and their artists wants desperately to compete.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/15/arts/design/at-art-basel-a-powerful-jury-controls-the-market.html?&moduleDetail=section-news-3&action=click&contentCollection=Arts&region=Footer&module=MoreInSection&version=WhatsNext&contentID=WhatsNext&configSection=article&isLoggedIn=false&pgtype=Blogs

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Wednesday, June 10, 2015

GUGGENHEIM PRESENTS MAJOR ALBERTO BURRI RETROSPECTIVE: October 9, 2015_January 6, 2016



GUGGENHEIM PRESENTS MAJOR ALBERTO BURRI RETROSPECTIVE

First Exhibition in the United States in Over 35 Years Devoted to the Italian Artist 

Exhibition:
Alberto Burri: The Trauma of Painting
Venue:
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

1071 Fifth Avenue, New York
Location:
Full rotunda
Dates:
October 9, 2015_January 6, 2016





(NEW YORK, NY–June 10, 2015)—From October 9, 2015, to January 6, 2016, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum will present a major retrospective—the first in the United States in more than thirty-five years and the most comprehensive in this country—devoted to the work of Italian artist Alberto Burri (1915–1995). Exploring the beauty and complexity of Burri’s process-based works, the exhibition positions the artist as a central protagonist of post–World War II art and revises traditional narratives of the cultural exchanges between the United States and Europe in the 1950s and ’60s. Burri broke with the gestural, painted surfaces of both American Abstract Expressionism and European Art Informel by manipulating unorthodox pigments and humble, prefabricated materials. A key figure in the transition from collage to assemblage, Burri barely used paint or brush, and instead worked his surfaces with stitching and combustion, among other signal processes. With his torn and mended burlap sacks, “hunchback” canvases, and melted industrial plastics, Burri often made allusions to skin and wounds, but in a purely abstract idiom. The tactile quality of his work anticipated Post-Minimalist and feminist art of the 1960s, while his red, black, and white “material monochromes” defied notions of purity and reductive form associated with American formalist modernism. Bringing together more than one hundred works, including many that have never before been seen outside of Italy, the exhibition demonstrates how Burri blurred the line between painting and sculptural relief and created a new kind of picture-object that directly influenced Neo-Dada, Process art, and Arte Povera. 

Alberto Burri: The Trauma of Painting is organized by Emily Braun, Distinguished Professor, Hunter College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York, and Guest Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, with support from Megan Fontanella, Associate Curator, Collections and Provenance, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and the collaboration of Carol Stringari, Deputy Director and Chief Conservator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. 


#1394
June 10, 2015
3Fineartmagazine
















Garis & Hahn presents: Yale MFA Painting and Printmaking Graduates 2015 / July 1-August 8th


Garis & Hahn presents:
Yale MFA Painting and Printmaking Graduates 2015 


Sarah Faux, Untitled, 2015, oil on canvas, 56 x 50 inches

A Group Exhibition Curated by David Humphrey
Exhibition Dates: July 1-August 8, 2015
Opening Reception: Wednesday, July 1st | 6-8 p.m.

June 10, 2015 (New York, NY) – Garis & Hahn is pleased to present Yale MFA Painting and Printmaking MFA Graduates 2015, a group exhibition curated by Yale critic and professor, David Humphrey. The 21-person exhibition will present new painting, sculpture, and video works by: Henry Chapman, Maria Cornejo, Brandon Cox, Katherine Davis, Sarah Faux, Sean Fitzgerald, Marcela Florido, Danielle Friedman, Patrick Groth, Camille Hoffman, Fox Hysen, Marisa Manso, Johanna Povirk-Znoy, Luke Rogers, Tschabalala Self, Martha Tuttle, Samantha Vernon, David Walsh, William Warden, Kyle Williams and Luyi Xu. The gallery will host a reception at 263 Bowery on Wednesday, July 1st from 6 to 8 p.m.

Yale Painting and Printmaking MFA Graduates 2015 is unorthodox in presenting an entire MFA class in a New York City gallery exhibition upon graduation and a special opportunity for New York audiences to see a curated selection of work by this fresh group of artists emerging from the highly influential Yale MFA program. Curator David Humphrey further contextualizes the show, stating, “MFA programs are a rolling social experiment engaged in a conversation about what matters. No one can know how the two-year chemistry will play out, but it will surely be unpredictable and new art will happen.”

Abstract and abstracted figurative painting make up the majority of the work in the exhibition, with many of the artists mixing the two approaches in various ratios. Sarah Faux, who exhibited previously in Garis & Hahn’s Dying on Stage: New Painting in New York 2013 survey of New Casualism, visually articulates the boundaries between the abstract and figurative in her work. Through unfocused, re-arranged, and disembodied anthropomorphic constructions she examines the human body and the viewer’s psychic connection to it rendered in painting. Her newest Untitled paintings depict a mix of recognizable forms, but ultimately only give the impression of a body, making the paint itself and the artist’s gestures the primary subject.

Brandon Cox, who has exhibited in several group and solo exhibitions in New York already, is known for a body of work that examines contemporary issues surrounding identity, racial, sexual and institutional politics. His mixed-media works selected for this exhibition include upwards of 10 materials used in one piece alone, including handmade paper, glitter, and linen in abstract compositions both earthen and urban, reminiscent of the late 1960s and early 1970s Italian Arte Povera movement. 

Tschabalala Self takes a similar approach, filtered through an individual's sense of identity within a community, referencing her own and other black female bodies to contextualize the iconography they represent within contemporary culture. The roughed out quality of her work makes garish Western culture’s voyeuristic tendencies toward the gendered and racialized body, and the duality of fetishization and censure directed at it. 

When considering how best to interpret this body of work selected from such a diverse and varied group of artists, Humphrey draws on an analogy of states of matter, with each student represented as a particle, “well separated and moving freely at high speeds when in a gas state, sliding past each other in a liquid state and tightly packed into a regular pattern, vibrating without movement when solid.”  For the occasion of this exhibition, these artists are packed together in one final solid state, just before they ultimately break out in their liquid or gaseous futures.

About Garis & Hahn
Garis & Hahn is a gallery-cum-Kunsthalle that mounts exhibitions focused on conceptual narratives and relevant conversations in contemporary art. By displaying an array of carefully curated artists, the gallery endeavors to provide accessibility, education, awareness, and a market to the art while engaging both the arts community and a broader general audience.

Location:
Garis & Hahn
263 Bowery
New York, NY 10002

Contact:
P. 212.228.8457
F. 917.720.9851

Gallery Hours:
Tuesday – Saturday, 11-7*
*Starting July 1st through August 8th the gallery will be open Tuesday – Saturday, 11-6

#fineartmagazine

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

ANNUAL WAREHOUSE SALE, Sag Harbor, 6/13th &14th Look like fun !

ANNUAL WAREHOUSE SALE







Paintings, Prints, Ceramics, and Photos  sale next Saturday and Sunday
 June 13th and 14th from 9am to 3pm
6 Bay Street Sag Harbor, NY

 located in the side garage of 6 bay streetKEYES ARTSWWW.JULIEKEYESARTS.COM917-509-1379

#fineartmagazine


Tuesday, May 26, 2015

In the Taos area: The 11th Annual Gala Exhibition and Auction (on display from June 30 through August 28)

FREE TO ENTER

CALL FOR ARTISTS: Deadline May 30
JURIED EXHIBITION AND AUCTION


The Taos Art Museum at Fechin House is situated in the historic home that Russian painter Nicolai Fechin created and ornamented for his family from 1927 to 1933.

The 11th Annual Gala Exhibition and Auction (on display from June 30 through August 28) will showcase artists from across the US and abroad who find inspiration in Fechin’s legacy, Taos, and the creative traditions of the Southwest. 


Juror: Nedra Matteucci
Born in a small farming community in southeastern New Mexico, Nedra Matteuccihad a passion for art from an early age and learned about the art world by working in the gallery she now owns. At the time it was known as the Fenn Gallery. She opened her own gallery on Canyon Road in 1986 and two years later purchased the Fenn Gallery, renaming it Nedra Matteucci Galleries. Widely recognized for its outstanding standards of quality and professionalism, the gallery specializes in 19th and 20th-century American art, including artists of the American West and Taos Society Artists.

Who Should Apply
Artists who are inspired by the American Southwest and wish their artwork to be seen by a nationally recognized curator/juror.

Media
  • Drawing
  • Painting
  • Photography
  • Printmaking
  • Craft
  • Sculpture
Promotion
Accepted artwork will be promoted in the Museum’s press and Gala program literature and online, and sold in festive live and silent auctions at the Gala.

Terms and Conditions
  • No submission fee
  • Original artwork only
  • Maximum number of submissions per artist: 3
  • All art must be framed, dry, and exhibition-ready at time of submission
  • Artwork must not exceed 3’ in any dimension, or 50 pounds
  • All accepted artwork will be for sale
  • Minimum reserve price: up to 50% of retail value, maximum
  • Artist’s commission: up to 40% of sale price
  • Artist is responsible for return shipping costs for unsold artwork
  • Shipped artwork must be sent in reusable materials that will serve for return
  • Taos Art Museum reserves the right to reproduce accepted artwork
  • Term of payment: 30 days from end of event
  • Juror’s decisions are final, no late submissions, revisions, or changes.
Key Dates
  • In-person submission dates: Friday 5/29 and Saturday 5/30, 11 am – 5 pm
  • Deadline for electronic submissions: Saturday 5/30
  • Notification: Thursday 6/4 and Friday 6/5
  • Pick-up declined submissions: Thursday 6/11 and Friday 6/12, 11 am – 5 pm
  • Delivery deadline for accepted, shipped artwork: Tuesday 6/26
  • Pick-up unsold artwork: Friday 9/4 and Saturday 9/5, 11 am – 5 pm
  • Return of shipped artwork: week of 9/7
  • Please note: all artwork must be retrieved on pick-up dates.
  • Artwork not claimed by September 9 will become property of the Museum.
How to Submit
In person:
1. Download Entry Form in PDF or Word: See the website for form links.
2. Fill out two copies of Entry Form for each submission (one copy will serve as your receipt)
3. Bring forms and submissions to 227 Paseo del Pueblo Norte on 5/29 or 5/30, 11 am – 5 pm

Online:
1. Download Entry Form in PDF or Word: See the website for form links.
2. Fill out one Entry Form for each submission
3. Provide one jpg image, no larger than 1 MB, for each submission (no details, please)
4. Attach Entry Form(s) and image(s) to one email with subject line “Gala Submission”
5. Send Gala Submission email to taosartmuseumgala@gmail.com