• Top Posts From AJBlogs 12.20.16

    Art For Christmas and Chanukkah
    Are still shopping for gifts this holiday season? An email from Winterthur this morning reminded me that I’ve been meaning to suggest giving the gift of art – or art books, even for children or grown-up kids. ... read more
    AJBlog: Real Clear Arts Published 2016-12-20Monday Recommendation: Redman’s And Mehldau’s “Nearness”
    Joshua Redman And Brad Mehldau, Nearness (Nonesuch) ... read more
    AJBlog: RiffTides Published 2016-12-19
    &nb
  • Sound Artist Tarek Atoui Selected for Next Turbine Hall Commission at Tate Modern

    Artist Tarek Atoui has been selected as the next artist to take on the Hyundai Commission in Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall. His exhibition at the London museum will open on October 13 and run into April 2027. Tate Modern international art curators Nabila Abdel Nabi and Dina Akhmadeeva will curate the commission.The Beirut-born, Paris-based artist is known for creating complex installations featuring specially designed instruments that are often made in collaboration with other artists, compos
  • Studio Museum in Harlem to Close for More Than a Week After ‘Sprinkler Emergency’

    The Studio Museum in Harlem will remain closed through February 7 to work on repairs related to a “sprinkler emergency” that forced visitors to evacuate on Friday.As first reported by Hyperallergic, visitors were instructed to leave after water began pouring from a ceiling near the gift shop. “We saw a large pool of water on the floor near the entrance, and saw the water flowing down in the store,” a witness told the publication. The museum initially announced a week
  • Ai Weiwei Returns to China for the First Time Since 2015

    Chinese artist Ai Weiwei returned to China last month after a decade-long exile in Europe. The three-week trip to Beijing marked his first visit since authorities returned his confiscated passport in 2015, ending years of travel restrictions tied to his political dissent. Ai is internationally famous for his criticism of authoritarianism and its cultural consequences—censorship, police brutality, extrajudicial incarceration—making him a longtime target of the Chinese government.
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  • Renowned Composer Philip Glass Withdraws Symphony from the Kennedy Center

    Celebrated composer Philip Glass has withdrawn a symphony he composed on commission honoring Abraham Lincoln for the 50th anniversary of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, he said in a statement today. The work, Symphony No. 15, was scheduled for its first-ever performance by the National Symphony Orchestra this June.Glass informed the center of his decision in a letter on Tuesday that he later shared on social media. “Symphony No. 15 is a portrait of Abraham Lincoln, and
  • Alison Weaver Named Next Director of NYU’s Grey Art Museum

    New York University announced Tuesday that Alison Weaver will serve as the next director of its Grey Art Museum. She will begin in the role on May 26, after the conclusion of the current academic year. Weaver succeeds Lynn Gumpert, who retired last year and had been in the role since 1997.Weaver comes to NYU from another university museum, theMoody Center for the Arts at Rice University in Houston, where she served as founding executive director since 2015. Her last day at Rice will be on May 1.
  • Laura Lima: The Drawing Drawing review – if everything’s on wheels, why doesn’t this show go anywhere?

    ICA, LondonLima made her name with surreal encounters meant to free you from mundane everyday thinking. It’s rather a lot to ask of a key-grabbing hand, a dancing parasol and some melting iceOne of the worst things contemporary art can make you do is think serious thoughts about stupid things. Sure, sometimes a urinal is beautiful, a shed is interesting, and an empty room is a container of countless ideas. But sometimes, it has no deeper meaning worth seeking out. Sometimes it’s just
  • Meet the Swiss Artist-Publisher Making Children’s Books With Artists Like Rachel Harrison and Martin Parr

    Rachel Harrison’s recent show “The Friedmann Equations,” at New York’s Greene Naftali gallery, was a highlight of 2025. To try to break it down briefly, it was classic Harrison: brainy, oblique, and funny. The show’s title alluded to mathematical formulas relating to the universe’s expansion that were used as a sly call for the opening up of society by Chinese dissidents amid Covid lockdowns. It included a number of her lumpy sculptures that mix abstract shape
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  • Guggenheim Museum Reveals 2025 Acquisitions, Including Paintings by Salman Toor, Ambera Wellmann

    New York’s Guggenheim Museum has revealed the 39 works that it acquired last year, among them paintings by some of today’s most celebrated artists.There were some historical works added to the collection last year, including pieces by Freddy Rodríguez and Fanny Sanín, who were born in the Dominican Republic and Colombia, respectively. Both were included in the 2024 Venice Biennale, and both relocated to the US.But many of the works acquired are by emerging and mid-caree
  • London’s Courtauld Will Build New Contemporary Art Galleries with $13.8 M. Blavatnik Gift

    London’s Courtauld Gallery, home to a storied collection including works by artists like Manet and van Gogh, will open two new galleries devoted to contemporary art at the museum’s recently refurbished campus at Somerset House. The galleries will be built with a Blavatnik Family Foundation gift of £10 million ($13.8 million). This brings recent support by the foundation to a total of £20 million ($27.5 million). The top-floor galleries, designed in the 18th century a
  • Big Name Artists Donate Works to Auction Benefitting Gaza, Courtauld Unveils Plans for Two New Contemporary Art Galleries: Morning Links for January 27, 2026

    To receive Morning Links in your inbox every weekday, sign up for our Breakfast with ARTnews newsletter.The HeadlinesART FOR GAZA. A group of 21 artists have donated works to “Seeds of Solidarity,” an art auction supporting medical professionals in Gaza, the Art Newspaper reports. Organized by Health Workers 4 Palestine, the sale will take place on February 1 at The Savoy in London, with proceeds going to the Gaza Medics Solidarity Fu
  • Pierre Huyghe: Liminals review – terrifying quantum visions in a notorious Berlin club take seeing beyond believing

    Halle am Berghain, BerlinThis towering display projected inside a former East German power plant-turned-techno stronghold is a gut-wobbling mythological journey that will leave you unhingedGo up the concrete stairs, cross the concrete floor and mind the concrete pillars. People are groping about in the darkness, waiting for their eyes to adjust, though most give up and start navigating by the light of their smartphones, trying to find Pierre Huyghe’s new work without quite realising they a
  • ‘The Gallerist,’ an Art World Satire at Sundance, Offers Good Fun and Little to Think About

    The Gallerist, the most high-profile art world satire in some time, centers around Polina Polinski (Natalie Portman), a struggling gallerist on the verge of bankruptcy who’s betting it all on a one-artist debut at Art Basel Miami Beach. The gruesome (and very funny) accidental death of a particularly obnoxious art influencer, Dalton Hardberry (Zach Galifianakis), occurs just as the legendary dealer Marianne Gorman (Catherine Zeta-Jones)—a character with a very similar name to the lat
  • A ‘Rhythm 0’ for the TikTok Age

    In 1974, Marina Abramovic placed an assortment of items on a table. A rose, a gun, a knife, a feather, a pot of honey, a whip, and so on. Objects that could bring pleasure or pain. The audience was informed that those props could be used on Abramovic over the course of the next six hours, she would not resist them. It was a famous performance: what began with gentle, playful interaction quickly devolved into an act of violence. When the gallerist announced that the performance was over, the peop
  • Expo Chicago Names Exhibitors for 2026 Edition, Nearly 25% Fewer Than Previous Year

    Expo Chicago has named the over 130 exhibitors that will participate in its upcoming 2026 edition, scheduled to take place April 9–12 at Navy Pier.Last November, when the fair announced the promotion of Kate Sierzputowski to director and the appointment of Essence Harden as curator, it also promised a smaller floor plan. That is now borne out in the just-released exhibitor list, which represents nearly a 25 percent smaller fair than the 2025 edition. The slimmed down fair is meant to provi
  • NFT Platform Nifty Gateway to Shut Down Amid Market Collapse

    Nifty Gateway, one of the earliest and most high-profile online marketplaces for non-fungible tokens (NFTs), announced it will close on February 23, citing sharply declining activity. The platform, which has already entered “withdrawal-only mode,” is advising users to move their assets before the deadline, after which they will no longer be able to buy, sell, or bid on NFTs, though withdrawals will still be possible.Founded in 2018 by twins Duncan and Griffin Cock Foster, Nifty Gatew
  • British House That Inspired a Turner Painting Hits the Market for a Cool $2 M.

    Brendan and Celia Wilson’s home, you could say, is museum-quality. As the BBC reported, their Grade II-listed home—called Rossett Mill—in Wrexham, Wales, dates to 1588 and once inspired an early painting by J.M.W. Turner.The Wilsons first encountered the water mill 17 years ago, when it was boarded up, uninhabitable, and slated for demolition. A newspaper advertisement initially caught their attention, and a chance drive through the area soon sealed their fate. “We knew w
  • British House That Inspired a Turner Painting Hits the Market for a Cool £1.5 M.

    Brendan and Celia Wilson’s home, you could say, is museum-quality. As the BBC reported, their Grade II-listed home—called Rossett Mill—in Wrexham, UK, dates to 1588 and once inspired a painting by J.M.W. Turner, the artist widely regarded as one of Britain’s greatest landscape painters.The Wilsons first encountered the watermill 17 years ago, when it was boarded up, uninhabitable, and slated for demolition. A newspaper advertisement initially caught their attention, and a
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  • ‘I box to exorcise the badness’: Sue Webster on boozy spats, her thrilling new work – and having a baby at 52

    She was half of a 90s art power couple that seemed unstoppable. But they split and the trauma floored her. Now she’s back with defiant paintings celebrating her punk past – and late-career motherhoodSue Webster is reminiscing about boozy 90s art openings. A hazy memory of Damien Hirst riding Leigh Bowery’s shoulders is surfacing, and a terrible fight with Jake Chapman at Charles Saatchi’s gallery. “It was a verbal thing but he was probably about to punch me. You&rsq
  • Adolf Hitler’s Art Still Sells, as ‘Industry’ Just Reminded Us

    Adolf Hitler’s artistic ambitions may have died in a Vienna admissions office, but his watercolors remain surprisingly alive on the auction circuit—and, now, on prestige television.This week’s episode of HBO’s Industry features a quiet reveal that would have felt implausible if it weren’t so well documented: a tasteful watercolor of Neuschwanstein Castle turns out to be signed “A. Hitler.” The moment lands as satire, but it also reflects a
  • Jaume Plensa Sculpture Collapses Outside University of Notre Dame Museum

    A 36-foot-tall stainless steel sculpture by Jaume Plensa collapsed outside the Raclin Murphy Museum of Art at the University of Notre Dame last month, with museum officials saying the cause of the failure remains unclear, according to the university’s student-run paper The Observer.The work, Endless, was found broken into two pieces on December 10 after standing outside the museum for nearly three years. No injuries were reported, and officials said there was only minor damage to
  • Art Gallery of Ontario Trustee Reportedly Led Push Against Acquiring Nan Goldin Work

    A trustee at the Art Gallery of Ontario advised an acquisitions committee at the museum not to acquire a Nan Goldin piece because of the artist’s statements on Israel’s war in Gaza, according to a new report by the Globe and Mail.The same publication previously reported that the museum had sought the acquisition of Stendhal Syndrome, a 2024 video installation that does not address Israel, Palestine, or the conflict in Gaza. The plan was initially to purchase the work in tandem with t
  • AI-Generated Image Misattributed to Egon Schiele Provokes Outrage

    An AI-generated image purporting to be a famous watercolor by Austrian Expressionist Egon Schiele has generated hundreds of thousands of page views, as well as outrage and alarm on X.The image was posted by @lovedropx, an account with 287,000 followers and a vigorous reposter with a weakness for maudlin inspirational quotes. The image in question is a depiction of a woman in a black dress and stockings rendered in the style of a Schiele drawing and titled with the name of an actual watercolor, g
  • In New York, the Stakes are High for a Young Gallery Dedicated to Play

    A cold wind cuts through lower Manhattan, passing shuttered storefronts that once housed small galleries—some casualties of the rent crisis—before losing force at the corner of Broome and Chrystie Streets. There, a different kind of market experiment took shape. Last year, Spielzeug Gallery, a nomadic curatorial project had a turn as a brick-and-mortar commercial gallery, testing a model that reads almost anachronistic beside Tribeca: one in which chaos is not a pose, but the consequ
  • Artists Urge Jewish Museum to Save Federal ‘Sistine Chapel of New Deal Art’ from Demolition in Open Letter

    The latest attempt to save the New Deal-era artwork from the Wilbur J. Cohen Federal Building in Washington, D.C., involves a letter written by a group of artists urging the Jewish Museum in New York to save the murals and sculptural reliefs created by Jewish artists like Ben Shahn, Philip Guston, and Seymour Fogel.The letter, addressed to Shari Aronson, chair of the board of the Jewish Museum, was written by artists Elise Engler, Joyce Kozloff, and Martha Rosler, and has been signed by hundreds
  • Louvre Closes Again as Union Negotiations Drag On

    The Louvre closed on Monday due to a strike as employees’ demands for improved working conditions and pay equity continue to go unmet, marking the fourth day the Paris museum has shuttered since mid-December. The stoppage is one of the longest strikes in the history of the world’s most visited museum, a crisis intensified by the October 19 burglary and related revelations of systemic security failures.According to Le Parisien, roughly 300 employees voted in a general assembly on Mond

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