Monday, 26 December 2011

ArtDaily Newsletter: Monday, December 26, 2011

The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 Monday, December 26, 2011

 
Dig for San Francisco's Transbay Transit Center unearths artifacts from the Gold Rush

A rope pulley, crucibles and a chisel are shown at an exhibit of artifacts in San Francisco, recently dug up from the Transbay Terminal construction site. Archaeologists working at the site during demolition of the old terminal have unearthed artifacts that help reveal what it must have been like to live in the Irish working-class neighborhood that existed in that part of the South of Market in the mid- to late 1800s. AP Photo/Eric Risberg.

By: Beth Duff-Brown, Associated Press


SAN FRANCISCO (AP).- The big dig for San Francisco's multibillion dollar transportation terminal has unearthed some artifacts from the city's heady Gold Rush days, including opium pipes from a Chinese laundry and a chipped chamber pot found in a backyard outhouse. The 70 artifacts have city archaeologists eager for more and local residents pondering the ground beneath their feet. "It's not often that you get a chance to stop for a moment and have a window into what used to be," said James M. Allan, an archaeologist with William Self Associates, the firm ensuring the items are unearthed and preserved. "It gives you pause." The $4 billion Transbay Transit Center under construction in the South of Market financial district is billed as the "Grand Central Station of the West." The 1 million-square-foot bus and train station will serve as the northern end of California's planned high-speed rail between ... More


The Best Photos of the Day
VATICAN CITY.- Swiss guards line up as they wait for Pope Benedict XVI to deliver his Urbi et Orbi (to the City and to the World) speech from the central loggia of St. Peters Basilica, at the Vatican, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. Benedict XVI called for an end to the bloodshed in Syria and the resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks in his Christmas message Sunday, an appeal for peace that was challenged by deadly attacks on two Nigerian churches. AP Photo/Andrew Medichini.
photo art photo art photo art photo art photo art photo art photo art photo art photo art photo art


Guggenheim Museum presents a focused exhibition selected from its permanent collection   Kunsthal Rotterdam presents presents a major exhibition of Egyptian mummies in the Netherlands   First major Canadian exhibition of works by van Gogh for more than 25 years to open at the National Gallery


Richard Hamilton, The Solomon R. Guggenheim (Spectrum), 1965–66. Fiberglass and cellulose, 121.9 x 121.9 x 20.3 cm. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York© 2011 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/DACS, London.

NEW YORK, NY.- The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum presents a focused exhibitions selected from the museum's permanent collection, exploring Pop art. The explosion of Pop art in America in the early 1960s signaled the return to representational images following the Abstract Expressionists of the preceding decades, who favored large gestural canvases and expressive colors. Other artists at this time investigated the aesthetic potential of paintings and sculpture dominated by a single color or limited to a narrow spectrum of tones. Pop Objects and Icons from the Guggenheim Collection is on view on Annex Level 5 from through January 11, 2012, with an additional gallery on Annex Level 7 on view through February 8, 2012. Pioneered in England in the late 1950s, the Pop art movement took hold in America after support from critics, including British critic Lawrence Alloway ... More
 

Statue of a man and two women. New Kingdom; Dynasty 18; ca.1425 B.C. Painted sandstone. Rijksmuseum van Oudheden.

ROTTERDAM.- The Kunsthal Rotterdam presents a major exhibition of Egyptian mummies in the Netherlands. In a stunningly designed exhibition, over 225 objects provide insight into the fascinating burial rituals of ancient Egypt. Highlights are the mummy of Anchhor from Thebes and his authentic coffins, which are still completely intact. The exhibition includes countless rare objects such as the magic scarabs, amulets, jewels and statues that were placed inside the coffins. Some of the secrets of the mummies have been revealed thanks to the use of new technological developments. There is also a comprehensive educational programme for children and students in the MummieLAB. Nowhere does death such an important role as in the lives of the ancient Egyptians. The exhibition tells the story of the ritual of mummification, which began in approximately 2600 BC as a way of preserving the body for as long as possible for its journey to ... More
 

Vincent van Gogh, Iris, 1889. Oil on thinned cardboard, mounted on canvas, 62.2 x 48.3 cm. National Gallery of Canada. Photo © NGC.

OTTAWA.- The National Gallery of Canada’s 2012 exceptional summer show, Van Gogh: Up Close, will be the first major Canadian exhibition of works by the famous Dutch artist for more than 25 years. In what promises to be a truly unique exhibition, visitors to the National Gallery will have the opportunity to discover Vincent van Gogh’s genius from an entirely new perspective by exploring the artist’s approach to nature through his innovative use of the close-up view. Opening on May 25, 2012, the exhibition is organized in partnership with the Philadelphia Museum of Art and supported by Sun Life Financial, the exhibition will be honoured by the patronage of Her Majesty The Queen of the Netherlands and His Excellency the Right Honourable David Johnston, Governor General of Canada. Van Gogh: Up Close will feature some 45 paintings from private and public collections around the world, offering the opportunity to see so ... More


After two years of extensive renovation work the Museum of European Cultures reopens in Berlin   Elvis at 21: Photographs by Alfred Wertheimer opens at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts   20/21 International Art Fair 2012 to offer accessible prices, quality and variety


Wilhelm Kiesewetter Harem eines tatarischen Kaufmanns Krim/ Ukraine, zw. 1845-1847 Öl auf Leinwand © Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Museum Europäischer Kulturen, Foto: Ute Franz-Scarciglia.

BERLIN.- After two years of extensive renovation work, the Museum of European Cultures reopened this December and is again able to host exhibitions in Dahlem. Highlights will include: • a permanent exhibition on the theme of 'Cultural Contacts - Life in Europe' • a temporary exhibition entitled 'Explorations in Europe - Visual Studies in the 19th Century' and • a study collection, with regularly rotating displays of groups of objects from the museum's collection. The Museum of European Cultures was called into being in 1999 and was created by merging the 110 year-old Museum of European Ethnology (Museum für Volkskunde) with the European collection of the Ethnological Museum. It focuses on lifeworlds in Europe and European cultural contacts from the 18th century until today. Comprising some 27,000 original objects, the museum houses one of the largest European collections of everyday culture and popular art. The topics covered by the collection are as diverse as t ... More
 

Inside Taxi. With his RCA portable transistor 7 radio blasting away in the back of a local cab from the train station, Elvis is about to leave for the Jefferson Hotel. He has two performances at the Mosque Theater (now the Landmark Theater) that afternoon and evening. Richmond, Va., June 30, 1956 © Alfred Wertheimer. All rights reserved.

RICHMOND, VA.- Fifty-six dramatic 1956 photographs of Elvis Presley on the brink of international superstardom - including intimate images taken in Richmond - are being shown in Elvis at 21 at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. The black-and-white photographs taken by Alfred Wertheimer show a baby-faced Elvis just as his career began but before he was a recognizable rock-and-roll icon. "You'll see some extraordinary behind-the-scenes shots of Elvis just as his career was starting," VMFA Director Alex Nyerges said. "The exhibition includes images taken here in June of 1956 of Elvis leaving Richmond's train station, riding in a taxi, having breakfast at the Jefferson Hotel, eating - unrecognized - at the hotel's lunch counter, waiting backstage and performing on-stage during two shows at the Mosque, stealing a steamy kiss in a Mosque ... More
 

Shepard Fairey (b. 1970 USA), ‘Panther Power’, 2008. Silkscreen on metal, signed, dated and numbered. From Dominic Guerrini.

LONDON.- The 20|21 International Art Fair will take place at the Royal College of Art in Kensington Gore, London SW7, from 16 to 19 February 2012. It will be opened by Jeffrey Archer at 12 noon on the 16th. The fair features modern and contemporary art from the UK but has a significant number of dealers who specialise in work from China, India, Japan, Russia, Poland, Serbia and the Ukraine. However, art from a whole host of other countries will also be on show including many European countries, South America and, this year a special exhibit from Australia. International names include Matisse, Miro, Picasso, Braque, Chagall (all works on paper), plus British 20th century favourites such as Henry Moore, David Hockney, Peter Blake and Damien Hirst, together with many emerging and less well known artists whose work will be there to be discovered and enjoyed. An added attraction is a display from the Royal College of ... More


French connection with masters of French Realism highlight Art Gallery of Hamilton exhibitions   Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth presents the largest exhibition ever devoted to Richard Diebenkorn'   Landscapes that emerge from nature: Retrospective of the work of Naoya Hatakeyama at Huis Marseille


James Tissot (French 1836–1902), Croquet c. 1878 (detail). Oil on canvas. Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Basil Bowman in memory of their daughter Suzanne, 1965.

HAMILTON, ON.- The Art Gallery of Hamilton’s Fall 2011 exhibition season offers a closing salute to its French Connection year with a stunning display of nineteenth-century French Realist paintings alongside three intriguing exhibitions drawn from private collections. On view from September 24, 2011 to January 15, 2012, Masters of French Realism showcases works by various French painters associated with the central nineteenth-century artistic movement Realism, which achieved its most coherent expression in French painting. At the centre of French Realism was Gustave Courbet (1819–1877), represented in the exhibition by two landscape paintings. While Courbet’s Realist representations of peasants and labourers were motivated by strong political views, other French Realists, such as Philippe Rousseau (1816-1887), found both popular and critical success with their naturalistically painted humble subjects. Another type of Realism is represented in the work of James ... More
 

Richard Diebenkorn, Ocean Park #27, 1970. Oil on canvas, 100 x 80 in. (254 x 203.2 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of The Roebling Society and Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Blatt and Mr. and Mrs. William K. Jacobs, Jr. ©The Estate of Richard Diebenkorn.Image courtesy The Estate of Richard Diebenkorn.

FORT WORTH, TX.- The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth is presenting the exhibition Richard Diebenkorn: The Ocean Park Series. This exhibition is the most comprehensive show to date of Diebenkorn’s most celebrated body of work, the Ocean Park series. Presenting more than 75 Ocean Park paintings, prints, and drawings-the largest selection ever on view together-this unprecedented project offers visitors the opportunity to explore in-depth the complexity of Diebenkorn’s artistic and aesthetic achievements within this series. Works in the exhibition come from prominent museums, institutions, and private collections across the country, many of which have rarely been seen by the public. The exhibition tour continues at the Orange County Museum of Art and concludes at the Corcoran Gallery of Art. While ... More
 

Naoya Hatakeyama, Atmos#04304, 2003. Photo: ©Courtesy the artist.

AMSTERDAM.- The stories told in Natural Stories – the retrospective of the work of the great Japanese photographer Naoya Hatakeyama – are about the relationships between humans and nature. Hatakeyama’s photographs do not tell stereotypical stories. He takes pictures not of plants or animals, but of stones and minerals, of the raw materials we exploit in order to give ourselves protection and warmth, of the nature we use in order to survive. Naoya Hatakeyama’s camera tells of the poetry of human industrial activity in factories, coal mines and quarries. Hatakeyama photographs landscapes that emerge out of a shared history with people. A part of nature may be either beautiful or ugly in itself, in Hatakeyama’s view, but the process of documenting it in a certain way turns it into ‘landscape’ – that is, a part of nature that has been ascribed a certain meaning. It is always people who turn nature into landscape; nature itself is indifferent t ... More


Charles M. Russell's finest watercolors to be shown at the Amon Carter Museum in February 2012   Winner of the 2010 Baloise Art Prize, Claire Hooper, exhibits at mumok in Vienna   Exhibition by American artist and architect Paul Laffoley at Hamburger Bahnhof


Charles M. Russell (1864–1926), Bronc to Breakfast, 1908. Watercolor on paper. Montana Historical Society, Mackay Collection X1952.01.06

FORT WORTH, TX.- On February 11, 2012, the Amon Carter Museum of American Art presents more than 100 of the finest and best-preserved watercolors by Charles M. Russell (1864–1926) in the special exhibition Romance Maker: The Watercolors of Charles M. Russell. Never before have so many of Russell’s singular depictions of the Old West been brought together. The exhibition is on view through May 13, 2012; admission is free. “Charles Russell is recognized today as a leading artist of the Old West,” says Dr. Rick Stewart, curator of the exhibition and former Amon Carter director and curator of western paintings and sculpture. “The body of work on view in this exhibition represents the most memorable watercolors he created during his lifetime, placing him in the upper tier of American watercolorists at the turn of the 20th century.” Russell created appro- ... More
 

Claire Hooper, Nyx, 2010. Filmstill. Foto: Claire Hooper © Claire Hooper.

VIENNA.- Claire Hooper is the winner of the 2010 Baloise Art Prize. At mumok she is presenting her prize-winning video Video Nyx (2010), as part of a trilogy which also includes two works from 2011, Aoide and Eris. In her films, the British artist (born 1978) interweaves narratives from the present with characters and concepts from Greek mythology. These become elements of a kaleidoscopic mélange of reality and fiction, in which Hooper, in the manner of a Nouveau Roman, also dispenses with the linear succession of past, present and future. Nyx, named after the goddess of the night, takes its viewers on the psychedelic journey of the young man Furat. He cannot understand why he is intoxicated after ‘just two beers’, and his nocturnal U-Bahn journey home turns into a trip through the underworld. The film is set in the stations of U-Bahn line 7, designed by Rainer Rümmler between 1971 and 1984, along the route between Neu ... More
 

Paul Laffoley The Visionary Point 1970, 186,7 x 186,7 cm © Private Collection, New York

BERLIN.- In an exhibition series entitled secret universe, the Hamburger Bahnhof is dedicating itself to artists who have largely gone unnoticed within the established art discourse and will feature them in monographic projects. The second exhibition in this series presents works by the American artist and architect Paul Laffoley (*1940). Since the mid-1960s, Laffoley has confronted scientific, philosophical and spiritual matters in his work with equal verve. He studied art history, history, philosophy and architecture and spent more than 38 years living in a one-room apartment in Boston, which he dubbed the 'Boston Visionary Cell'. He is influenced in his work by his collaboration with the visionary architect Frederick Kiesler, as well as by the theories of Buckminster Fuller and C.G. Jung and the literature of Johann Wolfgang Goethe and William Blake. Another factor that has left a mark on his work is the ... More


More News

Nun famous for kissing Elvis prays for miracle
BETHLEHEM, CONN (AP).- In the little town of Bethlehem, a cloistered nun whose luminous blue eyes entranced Elvis Presley in his first on-screen movie kiss is praying for a Christmas miracle. Dolores Hart, who walked away from Hollywood stardom in 1963 to become a nun in rural Bethlehem, Conn., now finds herself back in the spotlight. But this time it's all about serving the King of Kings, not smooching the King of Rock and Roll. The former brass factory that houses Mother Dolores and about 40 other nuns cloistered at the Abbey of Regina Laudis needs millions of dollars in renovations to meet fire and safety codes, add an elevator and make handicap accessibility upgrades. Like 73-year-old Mother Dolores, the order's nuns have taken a vow of stability with the intent to live, work and die at the complex. The order was established in 1947 in Bethlehem, a small burg in Connecticut's rolling western hills. Now, the ... More

New tour offers glimpse of New Orleans movie sites
By: Stacey Plaisance, Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS (AP).- Sitting near the New Orleans streetcar line aboard a van equipped with video screens and a speaker system, tourists watch actress Vivien Leigh ride the city's vintage electric rail vehicles in a scene from the 1951 film "A Streetcar Named Desire." In the French Quarter, passengers look on as Bruce Willis escapes attackers outside a praline shop in the 2010 film "Red." They also watch a young Kirsten Dunst bite into a woman's neck in Jackson Square in one of her early roles as a bloodthirsty child vampire in 1994's "Interview With a Vampire." A new multimedia tour being offered in New Orleans takes passengers to locations where famous movie scenes were filmed and shows them a clip from the film on site. The tour also includes peeks at the New Orleans ... More


Folklore, fantasies, and fears featured in Andrea Dezsö's Haunted Ridgefield
RIDGEFIELD, CT.- The Aldrich is showing Andrea Dezsö: Haunted Ridgefield—the latest installment of the Museum’s popular Main Street Sculpture Project—featuring folklore, fantasies, and fears. The Transylvania-born artist’s site-specific exhibition at The Aldrich showcases her skill in traditional, labor intensive, hand-crafted book-making, and will take the form of a diorama, in which a series of cut-out panels will reveal layers of a hallucinatory narrative featuring fantasy worlds and idiosyncratic characters. Dezsö presents a powerful journey to the interior of the psyche through giant multimedia tunnel books, visible through the windows of the Museum’s historic 1783 administration building on Main Street. Aldrich curator Mónica Ramírez-Montagut explains, “Dezsö was inspired by Connecticut’s haunted places and their stories; her exhibition will feature strange child-like creatures that ... More

Catástrofes: Exhibition containing works from the its collection opens at Artium
VITORIA-GASTEiZ.- Basque Art Centre-Museum of Vitoria-Gasteiz, presents the exhibition Catástrofes, containing works from the Museum's own collection, prepared by the Education Department. Among other objectives, the exhibition aims to support pedagogic activities and workshops developed by Artium together with a number of different groups, ranging from the school community to our most elderly visitors. On the other hand, the exhibition aims to define the type of catastrophes that might exist in someone's life, by creating a space for dialogue through activities and workshops that allows each individual to express and materialise the feelings it arouses. Catástrofes consists of eight works and includes paintings, drawings and sculptures. The Education exhibition at ARTIUM follows the same methodology applied on previous occasions, in other words, to ask both general questions, such as “What do we ... More



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