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Showing: Peter Gronquist –“Refuge” @ Joseph Gross Gallery

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Currently on view at Joseph Gross Gallery in Chelsea, NY is Refuge, a solo exhibition featuring thirteen works by Peter Gronquist. The show includes all-new pieces that combine creative uses of material, such as LED lights, shaped frames, and silk flowers, with traditional painting techniques. The pieces interact with the viewer both spatially, with paintings that appear to be falling on top as they look up, such as with Master Cleanse, and visually, with its pleasant rich blue gradient. Glitch 1 and 2 appear to allude to a seismic interruption to the peaceful atmosphere contained within. The plug-in works explore both depth, with its never-ending field, and number, with its seemingly infinite army or flowers and helicopters. Visit the show and interact with these immersive works yourself before the show closes on July 2.

Overtime: June 13 – June 19

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More stories from the week that ended June 19 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Christo and Jeanne-Claude's The Floating Piers opens in Italy on Lake Iseo.
  • RIP: Bill Berkson, who passed away at the age of 76 due to a heart attack.
  • RIP: Gillett Griffin, who passed away due to natural causes at the age of 87.
  • The art world responds to the mass shooting tragedy in Orlando.
  • Casey Nocket pleads guilty to several acts of vandalism in national parks for painting on rock formations.
  • David Nahmad adamant that Modigliani painting in his possession if not Nazi loot.
  • MoMA curat0r Sally Berger fired after 30 years with the museum.
  • Renewal of BP’s sponsorship agreement with British Museum increasingly unlikely following protests.
  • Tate protest regarding inclusion of Carl Andre’s work and exclusion of Ana Mendieta’s work in the museum.
  • Colleen Wolstenholme accuses Damien Hirst of copying her work and designs.
  • Clare McAndrew leaves TEFAF to join Art Basel.
  • Artnews SA files for bankruptcy, although Peter Brant-owned US operations are unrelated and will continue.
  • University of Notre Dame displaying collection of art that was stolen 20 years ago, according to lawsuit.
  • Leon Black now sole owner of Pablo Picasso's Bust of a Woman (1931) after legal dispute settled.
  • Why the market for  Louise Nevelson's work stalled for a while.
  • Long-lost still-life by Gauguin rediscovered in Connecticut and authenticated by Wildenstein Institute.
  • Sketchbook of drawings by Vincent Van Gogh has been discovered and will be published in November.
  • Cherokee Nation contributes $500,000 to Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian.
  • Brâncuşi sculpture displayed at National Bank of Romania in effort to raise funds to buy it from private owner.
  • The Guardian reviews Tate Modern's new Switch House building. Wolfgang Tillmans documented the construction. The museum also gets a radical rehang.
  • David Adjaye's firm chosen to design Latvian Museum of Contemporary Art.
  • Christopher Knight reviews the Cindy Sherman show at The Broad.
  • Christian Viveros-Fauné writes about Nan Goldin's Ballad of Sexual Dependency on view at MoMA.
  • Clément Chéroux hired by SFMoMA as senior curator of photography.
  • Kevin McGarry visits the Berlin Biennale.
  • Artinfo looks at the best Manifesta 11 has to offer.
  • ARTnews covers Jake Cruzen and Jared Madere's exhibition at White Flag Projects.
  • Petter Olsen opening his own private museum in Norway.
  • Christie's selling Johnny Depp's Basquiat collection.
  • Sotheby's to sell decorative arts and sculptures from the Collection of Bernard and Simone Steinitz.
  • Artdaily's analysis of Sotheby’s Modern & Post-War British Art Evening and Day Sales.
  • Judd Tully reviews some lots at the Phillips London evening sale and also the Sotheby's evening sale.
  • Sotheby's offering $70mil. diamond at auction.
  • Artsy x UBS' film on the rise of the art fair.
  • Eileen Kinsella previews Art Basel. Artnet's list of 9 Artists Under 39 To Know at Art Basel 2016. Art Basel in Instagram posts.
  • Photography doing well as a medium at Art Basel.
  • Artinfo's highlights from Art Unlimited at Art Basel. Artnet's choices from the fair section.
  • Kneeling Donald Trump sculpture reminiscent of Maurizio Cattelan installed in Les Trois Rois during Art Basel.
  • Artnet's picks for the 10 best booths at Art Basel. Judd Tully also covers some of his booth picks. Andrew Goldstein chooses his top ten works. Marta Gnyp’s picks for the best artwork at the fair. Alan Servais gets in on the fun as well. Sandy Rower picks his top five.
  • Artnet has a Art Basel sales report. Judd Tully also writes about some deals. Artnet provides more sales for day 2. Artinfo is also there for day 2. Judd Tully also reports on day 2.
  • Kenny Schachter's Art Basel adventures.
  • ARTnews visits Liste.
  • Artnet's must-see booths at Liste. Artspace also has highlights from the fair. Michele Robecchi makes his picks as well.
  • Arta raises $1mil. in investment.
  • Hauser & Wirth sells Lygia Pape’s Book of Night and Day (1963 – 1976), 35-part work for $2.8mil.
  • Liu Yiqian acquires 36' Gerhard Richter piece from Marian Goodman at Art Basel.
  • Steven Cohen consigns $20mil. Richter painting with Gagosian Gallery at Art Basel.
  • When sons and daughters start working in the family gallery business.
  • NPR discusses the principal and act of selling art.
  • Is wearing high heels mandatory to selling art at fairs?
  • Where to eat and drink during Art Basel because people like to do that.
  • Scott Reyburn assesses the state of the art market as Art Basel approaches.
  • Jerry Saltz writes about the painting group show at Canada and the state of mid-sized galleries.
  • Galerie Perrotin moves to the Lower East Side of Manhattan.
  • Skarstedt to open new 4,000 sq. ft. gallery space in London.
  • Profile of Dem Passwords gallery.
  • Part 1 of Artnet's list of the top 100 collectors in the world. Part 2 is also released.
  • UTA’s Fine Arts division adds Ai Weiwei to its roster and will help set up distribution for his documentary film.
  • Sara Cwynar and Mary Reid Kelley win Baloise Art Prize, which includes CHF 30,000.
  • University of Chicago announces that Kerry James Marshall is recipient of 2016 Jesse L. Rosenberger Medal.
  • Virginia Overton discusses her Art Basel site-specific work.
  • Barry Humphries sits to be painted by David Hockney.
  • Interview with Alicja Kwade about her piece at Art Basel.
  • Sotheby's interviews Jenny Saville.
  • Brace yourself to learn 10 things about Hokusai.
  • Artsy's list of 5 Zürich Gallery Shows You Need to See This Summer.
  • Winners of the Swiss Art Awards and Swiss Design Awards announced.
  • Tate Modern sells Wolfgang Tillmans unique works that were displayed in the museum.
  • What Silicon Valley investors can learn from the art world.
  • Art Basel emoji guide.
  • That feel when you're an extra in a painting.
  • Ashley Olsen and George Condo may be dating.

Overtime: June 20 – June 26

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More stories from the week that ended June 26 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Images and information up for Darja Bajagić's Unlimited Hate at Künstlerhaus Halle für Kunst & Medien.
  • RIP: Bill Cunningham, who passed away at the age of 87 after suffering a stroke.
  • RIP: Tony Feher, who passed away at the age of 60 due to cancer-related causes.
  • RIP: Bill Berkson, who passed away at the age of 76 due to a heart attack.
  • RIP: Lorna Kelly, who passed away at the age of 70 due to a stroke.
  • RIP: Nicolás García Uriburu, who passed away at the age of 78.
  • Performers claim Laura Lima pressured them to insert end of rope inside their vagina during performance.
  • Milo Moiré detained in London for performance involving the public touching her breasts and vagina.
  • Brexit worries caused caution in the art market. Damien Hirst supported the campaign for Britain to stay in the EU. John Akomfrah thought that an exit would be "scary, near-suicidal political strategy".
  • Artnet collects the art world's takes on what Brexit means for them. Artinfo also shares some responses. Artists react to the vote as well.
  • London art auctions next week seemed to have been poorly planned, in retrospect. Buyers will be in search of bargains.
  • Aaron Bell's Stand Tall, Stand Loud goes up in Riverside Park after alteration to previously censored work.
  • Sree Sreenivasan, Cynthia Round, and Susan Sellers leave the Met amid financial troubles with the institution.
  • Christo's The Floating Piers installation now has closing hours at night because visitors are wearing it out. Thousands become stranded on their way to visit the work.
  • Lucas Museum of Narrative Art no longer considering Chicago as a site for the museum and will choose CA.
  • US federal government fights to reclaim New Deal-era Ad Reinhardt painting.
  • Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum closes basement due to fear of flooding.
  • Sole lone student HaeAhn Kwon drops out of USC's MFA program.
  • Art Cologne moves forward one day to avoid clash with Berlin Gallery Weekend.
  • Terence Koh will honor victims of Orlando massacre by reading victims names and transmitting to outer space.
  • Knoedler & Company forgery scandal appears to have no lasting impact on the art market.
  • Artsy examines how much control an artist has over her or his work after it is sold.
  • Pablo Picasso's The Studio, part of The Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice, receiving a restoration.
  • Spain to get a new Barcelona Hermitage Museum to open in 2019.
  • NY Times profiles Le Consortium.
  • Musée nationale des beaux-arts de Québec doubles space for local artists with $103m expansion.
  • Contemporary Art Society and Frieze London launch acquisition fund for UK regional museums.
  • Works from State Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg to show at 28th edition of Biennale des Antiquaires.
  • 10 things to know about the Tate Modern Switch House extension.
  • Christopher Knight reviews Made in L.A. 2016: a, the, though, only at Hammer Museum.
  • Artinfo reviews Ella Kruglyanskaya's show at Tate Liverpool.
  • Flash Art reviews Yngve Holen's exhibition at Kunsthalle Basel.
  • Museum of the City of New York's Gay Gotham: Art and Underground Culture in New York show opens in fall.
  • Christian Viveros-Fauné looks at Danny Lyon's show at the Whitney Museum.
  • Peter Morton now be a member of MOCA's board of trustees.
  • MoMA PS1 extends free admission and adds new board members, including Maria Arena Bell & Adrian Cheng.
  • Marie Lavandier appointed new director of Louvre-Lens.
  • Maxwell L. Anderson will become the president of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation.
  • Tamara Chalabi and Paolo Colombo will co-curate Iraq’s pavilion at the 57th Venice Biennale.
  • Gal Weinstein will represent Israel at the 2017 Venice BiennaleEgill Sæbjörnsson will represent Iceland. Zad Moultaka will represent Lebanon.
  • Judd Tully examines some works in Christie's evening sale. Colin Gleadell also looks at the auction.
  • Judd Tully reports on Christie’s Impressionist and Modern evening sale. Colin Gleadell writes about the auction as well.
  • Christie's to offer Frank Auerbach painting and Glen Brown's appropriation of that painting in the same sale.
  • Sotheby’s will begin holding sales of modern and contemporary African art in London.
  • Judd Tully analyzes Sotheby’s London Impressionist and Modern evening sale.
  • David LaChapelle consigns Keith Haring's The Last Rainforest to Sotheby's.
  • Banksy SWAT van offered by Bonhams at auction with estimate of £200,000 to £300,000.
  • Lock of David Bowie's hair to be auctioned by Heritage Auctions.
  • Man from Argentina buys over 50 Nazi items at Hermann Historica auction sale.
  • Dai Zhikang now investing in art, now that he feels Chinese real estate has peaked.
  • Linda Yablonsky's adventures during Art Basel.
  • Artnet's final sales report on Art Basel 2016.
  • How committees decide what galleries to admit to art fairs.
  • The New Art Dealers Alliance adds nine new members to its roster.
  • Inigo Philbrick discusses Rudolf Stingel's market in the Artelligence Podcast.
  • Show + Tell Projects opens in Downtown Los Angeles.
  • William and his daughter Andra Eggleston's relationship.
  • Images of Christo's The Floating Piers on Italy's Lake Iseo.
  • Elad Lassry at his studio.
  • ARTnews interviews Body by Body.
  • Kenny Scharf and Victor Matthews paint street murals in the Bronx.
  • Christopher Knight reviews Federico Solmi's The Brotherhood at Luis De Jesus Gallery.
  • Artsy interviews Knowledge Bennett.
  • Giant Robot interviews Edwin Ushiro.
  • Yusaku Maezawa's CAF Foundation announces £20k art award with 3-month residency at Delfina Foundation.
  • The Wes Anderson Collection: Bad Dads book by Spoke Art Gallery, with foreward by Ken Harman forthcoming.
  • Judith Hess selling her condo, where you can see work up by Condo, Prince, and Bouchet, among others.
  • Kanye West's Famous music video inspired by Vincent Desiderio’s Sleep painting.
  • Mas Subramanian explains the properties of the blue he discovered - YInMn blue.
  • Kurt Cobain's artwork to get a traveling exhibition.

Overtime: June 27 – July 3

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More stories from the week that ended July 3 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Sui Park creates sea creature sculptures using cable ties.
  • RIP: Kenworth Moffett, who passed away at the age of 81, due to complications of heart disease.
  • RIP: Peter J. Amdam.
  • RIP: Lisa Liebmann, who passed away at the age of 61.
  • RIP: Ben Patterson, who passed away at the age of 82.
  • RIP: Wellington Ward, who passed away at the age of 81.
  • Isil destroys Temple of Nabu in the Assyrian city of Nimrud in northern Iraq.
  • Codacons filing complaint with Lombardy spending watchdog to investigate costs of Christo installation.
  • Bavarian government revealed to have sold looted art to Nazi families instead of returning to heirs.
  • Rosamund Felsen Gallery closing its space.
  • Site of Mark Leckey's Liverpool Biennial work hit by arson attack, forcing him to find a new venue.
  • Germany’s tough new cultural objects law could destroy the country's antiquities market.
  • Kraemer Gallery pulls out of Biennale Des Antiquaires in aftermath of forgery scandal.
  • Spain's Supreme Court rules that Dalí foundation has no legal standing to protect artist’s image.
  • The dispute and feud over Basil and Elise Goulandris' $3bil. art collection.
  • More on Dai Zhikang leaving real estate to invest in artwork.
  • Lesedi La Rona diamond fails to find a buyer at Sotheby's sale.
  • Peter Schjeldahl and Brooke Alderson annual Fourth of July blockbuster celebration ends.
  • What not to do during an art auction sale.
  • Troll Museum evicted after owner fails to pay rent for months.
  • Donut Time appears to have closed for good.
  • Michael Musto's list of NYC's coolest lost stores and galleries from the '70s and '80s.
  • Ben Davis writes about what art must do post-Brexit.
  • Charges against Shepard Fairey in Detroit dismissed.
  • 12 art world figures share the exhibition that they regret missing most.
  • Are art world peripheries becoming its new centers?
  • Henri Neuendorf interviews Michael Govan about LACMA and the future of museums.
  • New York’s International Center of Photography opens in downtown.
  • Steve Martin hosts preview of The Idea Of North: the Paintings of Lawren Harris at Art Gallery of Ontario.
  • Vasiliki Dwyer donates 23 artworks, mostly by Northwest artists, to Tacoma Art Museum.
  • The Stedelijk Museum receives major donation of 600 works from Thomas Borgmann.
  • Wayne Thiebaud donates four major paintings of his to the University of California, Davis.
  • Ronald Perelman donates $75mil. for arts complex at World Trade Center site.
  • Katharina Grosse takes over building in Rockaway, Queens, for MoMA PS1's new site-specific installation.
  • The Art Institute of Chicago acquires newly discovered High Renaissance painting by Sebastiano del Piombo.
  • Former residence and studio of architect Michael Graves will be bought by Kean University for $20.
  • Norton Museum set to re-open July 5 with free admission, after being closed for one month.
  • Guy and Myriam Ullens are looking for a new owner for UCCA.
  • Artinfo interviews Michelle Grabner about the Portland Biennial.
  • W Magazine profiles M Woods' Michael Xufu Huang.
  • Kenny Schachter writes about Brexit's effect on the art market and on the London auctions.
  • Judd Tully reports on the Phillips 20th Century and Contemporary Art sale. Colin Gleadell also covers the sale.
  • Colin Gleadell reports on the Sotheby's contemporary art evening sale. Judd Tully gets in on the action. ArtForum gets in on the action. The results are further analyzed.
  • Judd Tully reports on the Christie’s Post-War & Contemporary art auction. Colin Gleadell writes about the sale as well.
  • Colin Gleadell reports on Christie's Defining British Art auction. Judd Tully is along for the sale too.
  • Candy Coleman joins Sotheby's after leaving Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills.
  • The New Yorker's extensive profile of Loïc Gouzer.
  • Ray Entwistle now chairman of Bonhams Scotland.
  • Lock of David Bowie‘s hair sells for $18,750 at Heritage.
  • MCH Group, parent company of Art Basel fairs, acquires Curiator.
  • When artists collect work by other artists.
  • The determining factors of an artwork's value.
  • Six characteristics of next-gen art collectors.
  • Marian Goodman awarded Independent Curators International's 2016 Leo Award.
  • Thaddaeus Ropac opening a gallery in Mayfair, London in spring of 2017.
  • Chapter NY gallery expands to a larger location in Manhattan's LES.
  • A look at the Kathy and Keith Sachs art collection.
  • Interview with Antonio Mugica about his collection.
  • Profile of Ken Okuyama and his car designs and collection.
  • Jean-Michel Basquiat gets a plaque in NoHo, New York.
  • Is Lauretta Vinciarelli an overlooked master painter?
  • Dazed Digital profiles Meatwreck.
  • Patrick Jackson at Ghebaly Gallery is an ArtForum Critic's Pick.
  • Mirabelle Jones creates 600 sq. ft. gay pride flag.
  • Profile of Richard Duardo and information about an upcoming exhibition of his work.
  • Vincent Desiderio discusses Kanye West's Famous music video, which was inspired by his work. He also reacts to it in the NY Times. Lena Dunham criticizes the work.
  • ARTnews reviews Pentti Monkkonen's show at Jenny's.
  • Emma Sulkowicz receives the 2016 Woman of Courage award by the National Organization for Women.
  • David Hockney's return to portraiture.
  • Donald Judd Catalogue Raisonné committee has an open call for the artist's works.
  • David Zwirner Gallery's People Who Work Here show features work by the gallery's staff.
  • LA Times reviews Martin Werthmann's show at Wilding Cran Gallery.
  • Hiwa K wins City of Kassel's biennial Arnold–Bode-Preis.
  • Fiona Tan named artist in residence for 2016-17 at Getty Research Institute for 2016–2017 Scholars Program.
  • Images from Hotel Art's Remains of the Day: Might, WiIl Return show, curated by Keith J. Varadi.
  • Kanye West says that Matthew Barney is his Jesus.

Overtime: July 4 – July 10

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More stories from the week that ended July 10 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Dread Scott updates historic protest flag and installs it outside of Jack Shainman Gallery.
  • RIP: Elyse Grinstein, who passed away at the age of 87.
  • RIP: Abbas Kiarostami, who passed away at the age of 76, after being diagnosed with gastrointestinal disease.
  • RIP: Dave Heath, who passed away on his 85th birthday after a fall.
  • The demise of Artlist.
  • Tracy Williams, Ltd. closes gallery space.
  • Brooklyn Museum closed for the weekend due to air conditioning outage.
  • Swiss prosecutors seize Giacometti drawings from Grisons Museum of Fine Arts due to ownership dispute.
  • Does Sotheby’s failure to sell $71mil. Lesedi La Rona diamond at auction point to larger issues?
  • Helga Wall-Apelt sues John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art for breach of contract related to large donation.
  • Lucas Museum of Narrative Art looking to build in San Francisco or LA after being spurned by Chicago.
  • Lee Ufan actually authenticates 13 suspected forgeries of his work presented to him by police.
  • Nira Levine sues Woodward Gallery for selling her Warhol prints with doctored or nonexistent documents.
  • Ruedi Hofmann in dispute with Richard Avedon Foundation over unsigned prints he claimed artist gave him.
  • Parviz Tanavoli has his passport confiscated and is barred from leaving Iran.
  • Despite widespread protests, German parliament passes controversial law to protect cultural heritage.
  • Profile of Holocaust hustler James Palmer.
  • Anthony Haden-Guest explains how he did not kill Jean-Michel Basquiat.
  • Work in Kamenz honoring Georg Baselitz is defiled.
  • Eric Shiner, leaves job as director of the Andy Warhol Museum to work at Sotheby's.
  • Louis Murphy passes out from drinking at Flagler Museum, gets locked inside, and breaks glass to escape.
  • Frieze NY reduces the number of days the fair will be open from five to four.
  • Peter Doig forced to prove that painting attributed to him was not painted by him.
  • Northeast corner of Fifth Ave and East Fifty-Seventh St in NY temporarily renamed Bill Cunningham Corner.
  • Henri Neuendorf writes about the underground art scene in Los Angeles.
  • The British Museum announces that 2015-16 was its most successful year ever, with 6.9mil. visitors.
  • Kate Middleton presents the Art Fund Museum of the Year Award for 2016 to the Victoria & Albert Museum.
  • Minneapolis Institute of Art has highest attendance in 101-year history.
  • V-A-C Foundation expanding to Moscow and Venice.
  • Louvre Abu Dhabi to host summit on culture versus terrorism, led by French president and president of UAE.
  • The Norton Museum of Art announces acquisition of Super Blue Omo by Njideka Akunyili Crosby.
  • Sterling Ruby has his first European show at Vienna’s Winterpalais.
  • Francis Bacon: Monaco and French Culture opens at the Grimaldi Forum.
  • Street Art: a global view” (Futura, NUNCA, VHILS, more) opens at at CAFA Art Museum in Beijing.
  • Artinfo reviews Nan Goldin's The Ballad of Sexual Dependency at MoMA.
  • Scott Indrisek reviews the Made in L.A. biennial at the Hammer Museum.
  • Mami Kataoka, named artistic director of the Biennale of Sydney.
  • Claudia Schmuckli named curator-in-charge of contemporary art at Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.
  • Vice buys Garage Magazine.
  • Artcurial’s 1st semester sales jump 6% over last year's figures.
  • Hugh Edmeades discusses the art of auctioneering.
  • Art Basel making a move towards online sales territory with acquisition of Curiator?
  • Brooke Shields makes her curatorial debut with the New York Academy of Art at Art Southampton. Artinfo previews Art Southampton.
  • Artinfo visits the Market Art + Design fair.
  • Éric de Rothschild explains why the family sold their Rembrandts.
  • Chinese collectors increasingly collecting art from Africa.
  • Why you should drop two months worth of rent to buy a piece of art.
  • Items and ephemera from Christo’s dismantled Floating Piers installation appearing on eBay.
  • Timothy Taylor is expanding gallery into the US with plans to open a space in Chelsea, New York.
  • Scott Indrisek writes about Dan Attoe's work.
  • Katharina Grosse now represented by Gagosian Gallery.
  • Sandro Chia returns to the art world and is now represented by Marc Straus.
  • Sotheby’s S|2 hosting an exhibition of work by The Estate of Joel Mesler.
  • Mona Kuhn photographs Emily Ratajkowski for Bazaar interview with the actress and model.
  • Imi Knoebel will be named Knight of the Order by the French Order of Arts and Letters.
  • Ssense interviews Lucien Smith.
  • Review of Alicja Kwade's I Rise Again, Changed but the Same at 303 Gallery
  • Darren Flook interviews Eddie Peake. The artist will have a series of performances at Jeffrey Deitch's 18 Wooster St.
  • Damien Hirst’s 1985 assemblages, series he used to apply to school at Goldsmiths, on view in Hydra show.
  • Financial Times profiles Autumn de Forest.
  • Jonas Mekas talks about filmmaking.
  • Yuri Pattison now represented by Labor Gallery.
  • Wolfgang Tillmans releases his first techno record.
  • Artillery visits Ecaterina Vrana show at Nicodim Gallery.
  • 6 facts about the Dansaekhwa movement.
  • Six artists talk about making work based on Donald Trump.
  • Artinfo visits Skyslide at the US Bank Tower in Downtown LA.
  • Collection of art world Instagrams on occasion of Fourth of July and summer.
  • Wydr is the Tinder for buying art.

Overtime: July 11 – July 17

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More stories from the week that ended July 17 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Patrick Jackson's Drawings and Reliefs at Ghebaly Gallery is an Artforum Critic's Pick.
  • RIP: Alan Vega, who passed away at the age of 78.
  • RIP: Bill Jones, who passed away at the age of 81.
  • RIP: Gabrielle "Gabby" Tillman, who passed away at the age of 23 after taking her own life.
  • RIP: Harold E. "Hank" Muma, who died at the age of 94 due to respiratory failure
  • Boyle Heights Alliance Against Artwashing and Displacement demand that galleries leave Boyle Heights.
  • LITER arrested for defacing a Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall in Venice just before Memorial Day.
  • New evidence further proves that van Gogh cut off his ear and that his mental illness hampered his work.
  • Hannelore K. damages Arthur Köpcke by using a ballpoint pen to "solve" his crossword artwork.
  • Human Rights Foundation strips Pyotr Pavlensky of the Vaclav Havel International Prize for Creative Dissent.
  • Parviz Tanavoli faces charges in Tehran of disturbing the peace. They are based on the content of his artwork.
  • More Banksy street stenciled works destroyed by construction workers in Melbourne.
  • Art expert vanishes without a trace with an elderly client’s sketch, possibly by Leonardo da Vinci.
  • Olivier Thomas indicted again as new evidence emerges in ongoing investigation into stolen Picasso paintings.
  • Bloomberg writes about the bitter battle over the Wildenstein art empire.
  • Value of sales at Sotheby’s fell 24% during the 1st half of the year, to $2.4bil.
  • Corey Menafee faces charges after shattering and destroying stained-glass window depicting working slaves.
  • Peter Doig sued for $5mil, over painting he claims that he did not paint.
  • Athens Biennale co-director, Xenia Kalpaktsoglou, as well as its program director, Massimiliano Mollona, quit.
  • Andre Saraiva apologizes for vandalizing Joshua Tree National Park.
  • Gina DiSabatino tries to have Nahmads in jail, stemming from depositions related to her divorce proceedings.
  • New York Central Art Supply will close by the end of September.
  • Holocaust Museum would like visitors to stop catching Pokémon there.
  • 5 art-related things you should abstain from doing while traveling.
  • Brooke Shields and Will Kurtz rummage through trash to recover artwork mistakenly thrown away.
  • The best anti-Trump art from around the world.
  • Martin Parr photographs the food under threat from the UK's impending EU exit.
  • Rafael Schacter argues that Street Art has come to an end.
  • Is social media ruining art?
  • 5 things artists shouldn't do.
  • How Do Black Lives Matter in MoMA’s Collection? The art world's BLM Instagrams.
  • LACMA's attendance rose to 1.4mil. in the past year.
  • Review of The Art Gallery of New South Wales’s Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera exhibition.
  • Sadiq Khan nominates London Underground logo into the Design Museum permanent collection display.
  • Getty Foundation and Rothschild Foundation team up for new joint, annual fellowship.
  • The Irish Museum of Modern Art and Hennessy agree to a partnership to create an acquisition fund.
  • Museo del Prado unveils video installation based on Hieronymus Bosch’s The Garden of Earthly Delights.
  • Takahiro Iwasaki to represent Japan at 2017 Venice Biennale. Samson Young to represent Hong Kong in the show.
  • The Contemporary Austin will be host the Suzanne Deal Booth Art Prize, a $100k unrestricted biennial award.
  • Helena Newman has been named chairman of Sotheby’s Europe.
  • David Bowie's art collection to be sold at Sotheby's. His Sottsass collection is also up for sale.
  • Artcurial tops in sales in Paris so far for 2016, beating Christie's and Sotheby's.
  • Artnet Auctions offers early Peter Doig work.
  • FIAC fair expands into two new spaces.
  • Houston Art Fair, under new management, returns in Sept.
  • New York Times writes about collecting street art.
  • Seventeen Gallery to open in NY on Bowery.
  • The collectors that have been driving the trend for super-sized artwork.
  • Tico Murgrabi getting married to Colby Jordan.
  • Larry's List profiles and interviews Gloria, Princess of Thurn and Taxis.
  • Sexy Beast, the gala and art auction that benefits Planned Parenthood, announces 2016 lineup.
  • George R.R. Martin invests in Meow Wolf.
  • New York Times has an extensive profile of Chuck Close. A list of his most expensive works at auction.
  • Barry Schwabsky writes about Nicole Eisenman.
  • Danh Vō  to create sprawling installation at White Cube in Hong Kong.
  • Part IV of Mark Flood's diary on ARTnews.
  • Profile of Sam Gilliam in the Washington Post.
  • Deborah Kass creates Warhol Nixon-style anti-Trump art for Hillary Clinton campaign.
  • Lucas Samaras' experimentations and artworks using Polaroid film.
  • Richard Prince's upcoming marijuana and High Times-themed exhibition at Blum & Poe. Page Six also previews the Green Street Agency-organized project.
  • Metro Pictures gallery now represents Oliver Laric.
  • Michael Simpson named the winner of the 2016 John Moores painting prize, which includes £25k.
  • Robert De Niro takes JR around New York.
  • Sotheby's interviews Joel Messler and Adam Abdalla about their partnership and the artist's work.
  • How living in Monaco affected Francis Bacon's work.
  • Daily Mail writes about 13-year old Kieron Williamson.
  • Mike Daisey to have performance work based on Donald Trump.
  • Christian Marclay honored with SFMoMA’s 2016 Contemporary Vision Award.
  • Julius von Bismarck awarded the city of Wolfburg’s 2017 Art Prize.
  • Spencer Tunick's latest photoshoot is in Hull.
  • Artinfo visits Intimisms group show at James Cohan.
  • Artillery goes to M+B's Please Have Enough Acid in This Dish!” opening.
  • Socrates Sculpture Park announces recipients of its 2016 Emerging Artist Fellowship.
  • Artsy explores how certain photographs come to define a movement.
  • Study shows that Rembrandt used a clever combination of mirrors to create his work.
  • Artists and their use of studio assistants.
  • Artinfo's list of 7 Young British Designers to Watch Out For.
  • Elena Soboleva’s Instagram tips.
  • The busy art week in New York.
  • Norberto Rodriguez's It’s The Least I Can Do series now available online to purchase from Maitland Foley.
  • Jerry Seinfeld learns of Genesis P-Orridge's body transformation.
  • When you play Pokémon GO at MoMA.

Showing: “Night & Day” @ Joseph Gross Gallery

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NY: Night & Day: A Curated Exhibition of Light opening at Joseph Gross Gallery

Opening last Thursday at Joseph Gross Gallery was Night & Day, an exhibition featuring the work of 9 multi-disciplinary artists: Lucinda Grange, Erik Otto, Jason Peters, LaLa Abaddon, Boris Ipsum, George Kroenert, Will Penny, Dave Singley, and Eric Ruggiero. The show, which was conceived, organized, and curated by the gallery's director Lynzy Blair, centers on pieces that have dual lives, one in daylight and one in darkness. The artists were challenged to create new works that maintain a distinct look during the day under external lighting. During the night and in darkness, a transformation occurs and the work activates into an equally attractive second identity. Night & Day was featured on a ABC7 New York network news segment. See video of it here.

Overtime: July 18 – July 24

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More stories from the week that ended July 24 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Yanyan HuangGiardino del Tempo at Tomorrow Gallery featured by Mousse Magazine.
  • RIP: Mladen Stilinović, who passed at the age of 69 after battling a serious illness.
  • RIP: Billy Name, who passed away at the age of 76. When he turned Andy Warhol's Factory silver.
  • RIP: Carlos Nine, who passed away at the age of 72.
  • Jeff Koons' studio lays off 14 workers.
  • Met Museum might let go of as much as 100 workers after facing huge deficit.
  • Jack Shainman Gallery will not reconsider hanging of Dread Scott flag.
  • Marc Restellini to publish new Modigliani catalogue raisonné, despite death threats.
  • Adolf Hitler’s birthplace and childhood home may either be demolished or turned into a museum.
  • Andrew Schoultz & Paul Insect artworks censored and pulled from South Park-themed exhibition.
  • Scientific research team retracts findings that say Damien Hirst’s formaldehyde works are a health risk.
  • Zara steals Tuesday Bassen's work and sends her a callous response to her letter.
  • US federal prosecutors plan to seize $1bil. in assets controlled by fund connected to Jho Low. The prosecutors expose Jho Low’s secret scheme to illicitly aquire $137mil. in art.
  • Leigh and Leslie Keno face charges of improper bidding and are accused of not paying for auction items.
  • Christie’s 2016 first half sales volume is down by 27.5%.
  • Gagosian Gallery settles with State of NY over its failure to pay sales tax on works sold by its CA affiliate.
  • KPCC on gentrification in Boyle Heights and how the opening of art galleries may have triggered it.
  • Fake or Fortune authenticates Lucian Freud painting, despite the artist having claimed it is not his work.
  • Recepient of Van Gogh's ear revealed to be a farmer’s daughter who lived north of Arles, France.
  • Brian Whiteley retrieves his Donald Trump tombstone from NYPD after it was confiscated.
  • Artnet's guide to the Los Angeles gallery scene, via 5 neighborhoods.
  • KPCC covers the first ever Los Angeles Public Art Biennial.
  • MTA's new five-year, $27bil. spending plan will bring new art to 31 stations across system in New York.
  • 17 summer museum shows that might be worth traveling for in the United States.
  • UNESCO lists Le Corbusier's works among its World Heritage Sites.
  • Artnet's list of the 10 most respected art dealers in Europe.
  • Pokémon Go's popularity in London museums.
  • François Pinault to display works from his collection for first time in Germany at Museum Folkwang.
  • Guerrilla Girls get first dedicated UK show at Whitechapel Gallery.
  • Suhanya Raffel will be the new executive director of M+ Museum.
  • Julian Brooks appointed senior curator and head of drawings at Getty Museum.
  • Asian Art Museum in SF releases renderings of wHY-designed expansion.
  • Rashid Johnson is now the second artist ever named to Guggenheim Foundations’ board.
  • Akron Art Museum will launch the Akron Art Library, which will lend out artwork as they would books.
  • Smithsonian American Art Museum acquires artworks by Janet Echelman, Maya Lin and Leo Villareal.
  • Kanye West collaborating on an art installation piece with Robert Wilson at the Watermill Center benefit gala.
  • UCLA graduate studios renovation plans moving forward thanks to donation from Margo Leavin.
  • Patton Hindle, Courtney Childress, and RJ Supa open Yours Mine & Ours gallery in LES, NY.
  • Leslie Waddington's collection to be offered by Christie's this fall.
  • Jane Fonda offering a Warhol portrait and other items in a sale at Julien’s Auctions.
  • Bonhams will have two major works by Irma Stern in its Sept 14th sale.
  • Artnet covers Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation’s annual St. Tropez Gala.
  • Expo Chicago Announces Expo Video programming schedule.
  • Paris’s Outsider Art Fair announces roster of participating galleries.
  • A list of the most expensive British artists at auction.
  • Artnet's 10 tips for pricing artwork.
  • Claus Busch Risvig discusses collecting in the Scandinavian art scene.
  • Matthew Barney to recreate Blind Perineum performance at Gladstone Gallery.
  • Jessica Silverman Gallery now represents Judy Chicago.
  • Andy Warhol's pet portraits.
  • The art history behind Deborah Kass's anti-Trump print.
  • Frank Gehry exhibits fish sculptures at Gagosian Gallery in Rome.
  • 18 female artists share advice to women just starting out in the art world.
  • Mnuchin Gallery exhibiting Sean Scully show in Sept.
  • Spencer Tunik stages nude photoshoot with 100 women during Republican National Convention. Esquire goes behind the scenes.
  • Keith J Varadi reviews Shio Kusaka's show at Blum & Poe.
  • LA Times reviews Peter Alexander, Sculpture 1966-2016: A Career Survey at Parrasch Heijnen Gallery.
  • Lynzy Blair interviewed in Frank151 about the Night & Day show at Joseph Gross Gallery.
  • Logan Hicks is the next artist to create work on the Houston Bowery Wall.
  • 10 paid residencies around the world for artists to research and apply to.
  • Tate Shop releases new Wolfgang Tillmans works.
  • The Pit releases Amando Ross-Ho Eternal Flame limited edition poster.
  • Google launches new version of Google Arts & Culture website and app.
  • A list of art-related books to take to the beach and read this summer.
  • The art history of Donald Trump. Plastic Jesus creates baby border wall for Donald Trump Hollywood Walk of Fame star. Brian Boucher writes about the photo of a Trump supporter in front of Jeff Koons' Michael Jackson and Bubbles.
  • Frances Bean Cobain selling her artwork online.

Overtime: July 25 – July 31

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More stories from the week that ended July 31 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Piston Head II show, including a car by Richard Prince (above), comes to Venus Over Los Angeles.
  • RIP: S.H. Raza, who passed away at the age of 94.
  • RIP: Anne Chu, who passed away at the age of 57 due to cancer.
  • RIP: Wendy Snyder MacNeil, who passed away at the age of 72.
  • The Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum in Hawaii faces financial troubles and leadership scandal.
  • How political instability is negatively impacting the art market in Turkey.
  • Swiss authorities seize paintings by Vincent van Gogh and two by Claude Monet amid 1MDB investigation.
  • Dede Wilsey out as president of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco following ongoing investigation.
  • Louis B. James Gallery closes after five years as owners pursue other projects.
  • Hazel O’Leary surreptitiously sold paintings by Florine Stettheimer and Rockwell Kent while at Fisk University.
  • Despina Stokou on sexism in the art world.
  • Marina Abramović says that having children holds back female artists.
  • Zara revealed to have allegedly stolen designs from many more artists.
  • Lacy Doyle arrested for evading taxes on $3.5mil. in inheritance.
  • Mary Boone Gallery sues Vanessa Buia for misrepresenting the identity of her client.
  • Carol M. Highsmith sues Getty Images for $1bil. after it charges her for using own image she has copyright to.
  • Orlan loses plagiarism lawsuit against Lady Gaga and is ordered to pay €20k.
  • Top executives Paul R. Provost, Nicholas Hall, and Cathy Elkies all leave Christie's.
  • Robert Miller Gallery closes Chelsea space and will exhibit in private showroom on the Upper East Side.
  • Agnes Husslein-Arco fired as director of Belvedere Museum due to misconduct.
  • Despite protests, BP will invest £7.5mil. in new sponsorship deals with four major British cultural institutions.
  • Ben Davis discusses How the Rich Are Hurting the Museums They Fund.
  • Artnet's list of The 10 Most Controversial Art Projects of the Last Century.
  • Long-lost engraving by Albrecht Dürer discovered at flea market and returned to the Staatsgalerie in Stuttgart.
  • Salvador Dalí and Tamara de Lempicka works stolen in '09 from Scheringa Museum of Realist Art recovered.
  • Fritz Koenig's Sphere for Plaza Fountain sculpture to return to WTC site.
  • High Museum of Art's list of acquisitions for 2015-16.
  • The Indianapolis Museum of Art achieves reaccreditation by the AAM — the highest national recognition.
  • Detroit Institute of Art launches multimillion-dollar effort to acquire African-American art.
  • A look at the 29 works The Broad acquired this year, including works by Oscar Murillo and Jonas Wood.
  • J. Tomilson Hill opening private art museum in Chelsea, NY.
  • Tehching Hsieh will represent Taiwan at the 2017 Venice Biennale.
  • Performa 15 gala shall honor Okwui Enwezor.
  • Study by Artprice.com calls China the world's largest art marketplace, following an analysis of auction data.
  • Chinese insurer Taikang amasses 13.5% stake in Sotheby’s.
  • Choi Seung Hyun, aka T.O.P., to curate a Sotheby's Hong Kong sale.
  • Eileen Kinsella reports on the Wright Four Seasons restaurant auction.
  • Five art dealers tell the story of how they came to open their gallery.
  • Morgan Lehman Gallery will move to a new location, at 534 West 24th Street in Chelsea.
  • Larry's List interviews Lio Malca.
  • Experts reveal the true hidden message in Leonardo Da Vinci’s The Last Supper painting.
  • Film about Vincent van Gogh will be the world’s first feature-length oil painted animation.
  • Artnet reviews Park Nights performance at Serpentine Gallery with Brian Belott, Jamian Juliano-Villani, more.
  • JR's large-scale work for the Rio Olympics.
  • Artspace writes about Nan Goldin.
  • ART21 premieres Daniel Gordon Looks Back on NOWNESS.
  • A musical playlist put together by Mary Heilmann.
  • Yanyan Huang's show at Tomorrow is an Artforum Critic's Pick.
  • A preview of Mehmet Ali Uysal at Galerie Paris-Beijing.
  • GCC show coming to Mitchell-Innes & Nash.
  • Air Pop exhibiting meme on canvas works at Sade.
  • David Bowie on art and artists.
  • The story of Opie Ortiz's Sublime sun logo.
  • Dazed Digital's list of the artists to watch right now. Artnet's list of 9 Emerging Artists You Need to Know About Right Now.
  • TimeOut's list of 10 NYC artists 35 and under you should know.
  • Rain Embuscado's guide to becoming a famous artist.
  • Sarah Sascone's Artiquette: 10 Mistakes Not To Make While Promoting Your Art.
  • Artinfo's list of the 10 Most Exciting New Buildings Announced in 2016.
  • Artnet's list of the 20 most fashionable women in the art world.
  • Donald Judd chairs available from Artware Editions.
  • Movie in the works about 1972 Worcester Art Museum heist, based on Stealing Rembrandts book.
  • Artnet's list of 10 Political Figures Who Resemble Famous Artworks.
  • Cantor Fine Art transforms well-known artists into emojis. First poo-themed dessert cafe set to open in Canada.
  • Artforum visits San Diego Comic-Con International convention.

Overtime: Aug 1 – Aug 7

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More stories from the week that ended Aug 7 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Artnet shares some art-filled day trips from NYC.
  • Ben Medansky's studio and everything in it lost to fire in Downtown Los Angeles.
  • LA Times writes about the gentrification resistance in Boyle Heights centered around art galleries.
  • Will Zika concerns be a major issue during the Miami art fairs in December?
  • Justin Giarla leaves San Francisco as artists, collectors, and others discuss financial disputes with the dealer.
  • Lenora Claire fighting to change archaic anti-stalking laws.
  • Lushsux Instagram account censored by the platform after Hilary Clinton pic goes viral. The artist subsequently alters the mural by covering the presidential candidate in a niqab. He releases a limited edition print of the image.
  • Magnus art-pricing app removed from Apple's App Store due to evidence of widespread data theft.
  • Giancarlo Neri public art installation in Rio, coinciding with 2016 Olympic Games, scrapped due to budget cuts.
  • Pokémon Go player crashes into Deana Haggag's car. Her house is Great Blue Heron, Fishing Gym PokéGym.
  • Jeff Wall leaves Marian Goodman after 25 years to go to Gagosian Gallery.
  • Zehra Doğan among those detained in Turkey’s wave of arrests after a failed military coup.
  • Trial judge denies request to reconsider California Resale Royalty Act decision.
  • Trial for lawsuit centered on Peter Doig painting the artists says he did not paint set to begin on Monday.
  • Harry Brant arrested, charged with larceny, resisting arrest, and drug possession after skipping $28 taxi fare.
  • Studies show that there is a lack of ethnic and racial diversity among top museum staff in the US.
  • Jens Hoffmann out as deputy director of Jewish Museum.
  • Lori Hotz, global head of postwar, contemporary at Christie's, leaves company amid declining sales.
  • Kanye West Watermill Center Benefit performance postponed until next year. Photos from the event, as well as other summer social events.
  • Robert Ekelund on Why the booming contemporary art market is bad for art museums.
  • Jamie Sterns writes about exiting the gallery world as a professional.
  • Ronald S Lauder says that a work with a disputed provenance was discovered at New York’s Neue Galerie.
  • Why collecting art and investing in it for money is frowned upon.
  • X-ray reveals mysterious female face hidden beneath Degas' Portrait of a Woman painting.
  • Jamillah James named curator of new ICA LA.
  • Michelle Obama visits MCA to view Kerry James Marshall exhibit.
  • Metropolitan Museum of Art had its best year ever in attendance, despite $10mil. deficit.
  • The Getty Research Institute acquires major collection of works on paper by Käthe Kollwitz and her peers.
  • A preview of LACMA's Meander galleries.
  • Garage Museum of Contemporary Art organizes first exhibition in St Petersburg, featuring Russian artists.
  • 100 Joseph Beuys works on paper in exhibition at Edinburgh’s Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art.
  • Creative Time adds seven new members to its board of directors, including Trevor Paglen and Waris Ahluwalia.
  • Daehyung Lee appointed curator of the Korean Pavilion (group show) for the 2017 Venice Biennale.
  • FRONT International: Cleveland Exhibition for Contemporary Art triennial coming in 2018.
  • The Tennessee State Museum to receive donation of 238 Red Grooms graphic works from Knestricks.
  • The Hyde Collection receives gift of artwork and cash valued at $11mil. from a Schenectady architect.
  • Jupiter Artland unveils a new permanent outdoor commission by Christian Boltanski.
  • USC Roski School hires Suzanne Lacy, Patty Chang, Edgar Arceneaux, Kori Newkirk, and Keith Mayerson.
  • CGC 5.5-graded Action Comics #1 issue sells for $1mil. at Heritage Auctions.
  • Sotheby's to offer works from the Steven and Ann Ames collection.
  • Kenny Schachter finds his way back on Facebook and writes about his mischief in Ibiza.
  • Swizz Beatz's No Commission Art Fair has a Bronx, NY edition.
  • Bortolami Gallery launches Artist/City project, which install artworks in nontraditional spaces across the US.
  • Artnet's list of six art dealers under the age of 40 to watch.
  • CoBo's list of Top 5 Asian Collectors You Need to Follow on Social Media.
  • Why antiques fairs are now also showing contemporary art.
  • Hannelore K. claims copyright of new work after claiming "collaboration" with Arthur Köpcke increased value.
  • Robert Irwin installation opens in Marfa.
  • Mariko Mori's sixth Olympic ring installation: Ring: One with Nature.
  • Brandi Twilley's show at Sargent's Daughters.
  • Juergen Teller to curate exhibition of works by Robert Mapplethorpe at Alison Jacques gallery.
  • Patrick Martinez interview with Take Two on KPCC 89.3 FM.
  • Petra Cortright by Stefan Simchowitz, in Vogue Italia.
  • Pioneer Works announces its fall 2016 residents.
  • KCRW's ArtTalk visits some group shows in Los Angeles.
  • Blake Gopnik writes about an unknown "self" portrait of Andy Warhol.
  • Richard Diebenkorn: The Catalogue Raisonné release date announced.
  • Rob Pruitt creates for J.Crew.
  • Tracey Emin, David Shrigley, Eddie Peake, and others discuss work they created for Rio Olympics.
  • MoMA/MoMA PS1 Records label to release The Thoughts of Gilbert & George.
  • Artnet writes about 12 Sound Artists Changing Your Perception of Art.
  • Architectural Digest visits the home of Laure Heriard Dubreuil and Aaron Young. They also provide a tour of Marc Jacobs' house and art collection.
  • Pikachu statue appears in New Orleans.
  • Tips on how to take a art selfie.
  • Jimmy Fallon and Jonah Hill draw fruit and a nude model.

Preview: Taiyo Watanabe –“Architecture Photography Exhibition” @ AIA | LA Gallery

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When he's not contributing impeccable photographs to Arrested Motion, Taiyo Watanabe is a professional architectural designer and an accomplished architectural photographer. Graduating with a degree from the prestigious Southern California Institute of Architecture (aka SCI-Arc), coupled with a keen interest in photography has resulted in masterful and technically precise architectural captures. His photographs have been included in publications such as Architect, Architectural Record, CLOG, HYPEBEAST, Log, Taschen books and others. A collection from these results will be exhibited during his show at AIA|LA, located at 3780 Wilshire Blvd #800, Los Angeles, CA 90010. Don't miss the opening reception, which will be on Friday, Aug 12, from 6-8pm.

Overtime: Aug 8 – Aug 14

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More stories from the week that ended Aug 14 (click on bolded words for more information):

Overtime: Aug 15 – Aug 21

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More stories from the week that ended Aug 21 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • David Hockney: The Yosemite Suite show is a pick in Artnet's Must-See Art Guide: Los Angeles.
  • RIP: John Vaccaro, who passed away at the age of 86 due to complications from surgery.
  • RIP: Jacques Terzian, who passed away at the age of 94.
  • Marina Abramović compares Aborigines to dinosaurs and has other racist thoughts in her upcoming book. The artist responds. Publisher will remove racist passages from book.
  • Dale Chihuly criticized for his reasons for naming a series Persians.
  • How money laundering affects the art market.
  • David's ankles could bring down Michelangelo’s almost perfect statue.
  • Gerda Taro's images vandalized in Leipzig in politically-motivated attack.
  • Two men arrested over attempted theft of a panel appropriated from Banksy work previously installed.
  • CNBC thinks that Death, divorce or bankruptcy is needed to jumpstart this art market.
  • Gary Nader battles Jorge Perez over bid for new museum development in Miami.
  • Bradley Theodore painting of Diana Vreeland stolen from Dream Downtown hotel and then returned later.
  • Madam Chung Khin Chun wanted a Xu Beihong, but instead received a replica and now broker is on trial.
  • Jeff Koons work revealed to be piece surrounding $6mil. Fabrizio Moretti lawsuit against David Zwirner.
  • Peter Doig's testimony in his authentication trial. Artnet reports on the final day of the trial. I. Kurator also covers the trial.
  • Rain Embuscado takes us Inside the Hidden Drama Behind Modern Art’s Most Treacherous Rivalries.
  • Nude Donald Trump sculptures by INDECLINE installed in cities across the US.
  • New York Public Library restores original Winnie-the-Pooh stuffed dolls.
  • CA judge declares that Norton Simon Museum can keep Cranach works that were subject to Nazi loot claim.
  • Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors exhibition does a US-wide tour.
  • Brooklyn Museum to host year-long program devoted to the history and multiplicity of feminist art.
  • NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale receives promised gifts from David Horvitz and Francie Bishop Good.
  • MoMA announces major Pedro Almodóvar career retrospective.
  • Christopher Knight reviews Loris Gréaud's Sculpt at LACMA.
  • Hammer Museum announces recipients of the three Made in LA 2016 Mohn Awards and prizes.
  • The Smithsonian Institute has announces that Rachel Goslins will head the Arts and Industries Building.
  • Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art names Lauren Haynes curator of contemporary art.
  • Portland Museum of Art announces David E. Shaw and Family Sculpture Park, which will be free to the public.
  • Stanton Williams and Asif Khan chosen to design new Museum of London at West Smithfield.
  • Minneapolis Institute of Art receives $6mil. bequest to focus on Asian art and events.
  • Crocker Art Museum acquires work by Allison Schulnik.
  • NY Times looks at Steven Korff's ceramics collection.
  • Cobo interviews Marta Gnyp about collecting.
  • Helen Molesworth answers some questions.
  • Steven Cohen's Point72 Asset Management dropped two thirds of its Sotheby’s stock. Sotheby's shares doing well since the last year.
  • Sotheby’s to auction off traditional Chinese paintings from the Roy and Marilyn Papp Collection.
  • The Collection of B.Z. + Michael Schwartz currently on display at Sotheby's.
  • Elizabeth Tenenbaum's artwork picks from Code Art Fair.
  • Artnet's list of the top Asian art collectors.
  • Tom Ford’s Tadao Ando-designed Santa Fe, New Mexico ranch on the market for $75mil.
  • H&H Classics offering Porsche Carrera acclaimed as most successful by Classic 911 Magazine for over £1mil.
  • Why Stefan Simchowitz Is the Donald Trump of the Art World.
  • Gustavo Aceves to install monumental sculptures, addressing migration issues, in front of Rome's Colosseum.
  • Hueman designs Nike Hyperdunk 2016 shoe.
  • Omul Negru at Nicodim Gallery is a Artforum Critic's Pick.
  • A list of New York’s 20 hottest public artworks on display this summer.
  • Artnet discusses advice and etiquette around museum or gallery dates.
  • Tracie Ching's Kickstarter for her Wes Anderson-themed merit badges.
  • Washington Post writes about fan participation and demand in the arts.
  • Burning Man to get a transformed Boeing 747 jet.
  • Larry Gagosian and Shaq to produce Killer Bees, a film about a black basketball team in the Hamptons.
  • Madonna coming to Art Basel Miami Beach in 2016 and wants to take a couple of fans along with her.
  • David Bowie gets commemorative plaque on former home in Berlin.
  • Supreme makes a brick.

Overtime: Aug 22 – Aug 28

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More stories from the week that ended Aug 28 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Carolina A. Miranda gives us a tour of Glenstone. Above: pair of reflecting pools by Felix Gonzalez-Torres.
  • The demise of Qatar's art scene.
  • Experts fear many historic buildings might have been damaged as a consequence of the earthquake in Italy. Italian museums to donate ticket sales on Sunday to earthquake rescue efforts.
  • Paris terrorist attacks and flooding cause 20% drop in attendance at the Louvre.
  • Ai Weiwei says his work was pulled from Yinchuan Biennale due to political sensitivity.
  • Roland Scahill indicted after he raised money for fake Broadway play that would have starred Lupita N’yongo.
  • Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi pleads guilty to destroying Timbuktu mausoleums. A first war crimes case of its kind.
  • Banksy's Spy Booth street piece may be lost forever. BBC also covers the removal.
  • James Smith sues the Met saying he was fired due to false allegations.
  • Mynxii White sues Richard Prince over Instagram photo work.
  • Defne Ayas pulls out of Antarctic Biennale.
  • Leonardo Dicaprio may have canceled hosting a Clinton fundraiser due to his ties to Jho Low.
  • Louis Hock builds a wall at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego to protest Trump.
  • The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego eliminates eight full-time positions and 20 part-time positions.
  • Speed Art Museum lays off seven employees and reduces hours of two more after unveiling renovation plans.
  • Björk fans upset and unhappy that Somerset House seeks unpaid volunteers for VR show.
  • Marina Abramović apologizes for her racist and controversial comments about aboriginal Australians.
  • Judge rules in favor of Peter Doig in his authentication trial. The Art Law Blog comments.
  • Portrait bought by Belgian couple for €450  turns out to be a long lost early work by Willem de Kooning.
  • The deal SFMOMA made to acquire the Fisher collection.
  • New video series has artists discussing works in LACMA's collection.
  • Ben David reviews Forty at MoMA PS1.
  • The New York Public Library exhibits some Japanese Dada works.
  • Serpentine Sackler Gallery to host major Zaha Hadid show.
  • Prince's Paisley Park estate and studio in Minneapolis will open for public tours in October.
  • McNay Art Museum receives $1mil. donation from G.A.C. Halff Foundation.
  • PAM appoints new deputy directors: Adrienne Chadwick, Melissa Cowley Wolf, and Christina Boomer Vazquez.
  • SculptureCenter fall programming will feature solo exhibitions by Cosima von Bonin and Aki Sasamoto.
  • Ben Davis shares 10 Fall Museum Shows to Get Excited About Around the US.
  • St. Moritz Art Masters opens this weekend with a focus on the United States.
  • Erin Thompson writes about the reasons people collect art.
  • Kelly Osbourne and Zackary Drucker team up for TransNation Festival, a transgender film festival in LA.
  • Henri Neuendorf discusses the tax benefits of having private museums in the US.
  • Artinfo interviews Sarah Cottier Gallery.
  • Massive short-term interest in Sotheby's stock.
  • Christie's attempting to revive ­interest in the fallen angels of India’s contemporary art scene.
  • Truman Capote's ashes offered in Los Angeles at Julien’s Auctions.
  • Michael Jackson's RIAA gold record for Thriller to be offered at auction by Nate D. Sanders Auctions.
  • 1955 Jaguar D-Type becomes the most expensive British automobile sold at auction at RM Sotheby's.
  • Chart Art Fair opens in Copenhagen.
  • Gallerists that also make and exhibit their art.
  • Modern Painters' list of the top galleries of 2016 in Europe. Also their list of the top galleries in Asia. And of course, a list for Africa.
  • Surace interviews Jack Shainman.
  • Larry's List visits and interviews Jeffrey N. Dauber about his collection.
  • Claire Tabouret, Awol Erizku, and Cara Benedetto is now represented by Night Gallery.
  • Pavel Zoubok Gallery will soon join forces with George Adams Gallery.
  • Haynes Fine Art launches new gallery with rare and unseen works by Andy Warhol.
  • The New Yorker profiles Michael Heizer, whose City is nearly complete.
  • AnOther Magazine writes about Jamian Juliano-Villani and her upcoming Studio Voltaire show.
  • New York Times profiles Tom Wesselmann.
  • Artinfo has a Q&A with Jessica Stockholder.
  • Kent Twitchell creating another Ed Ruscha mural for Downtown Los Angeles.
  • Tom Sachs discusses his collaboration with Frank Ocean. Wolfgang Tillmans also discusses working with the musician. How Wolfgang Tillmans' track ended up on Frank Ocean's album.
  • Lensratch revisits the Elizabeth Avedon Mixtape.
  • Mitzi Pederson, Josh Faught, Simone Bailey, Will Rogan, and Ruth Laskey finalists for 2016 SF Artadia Awards.
  • Peter Alexander at Parrasch Heijnen Gallery is an Artforum Critic's Pick.
  • Artnet's list of 20 New York Gallery Exhibitions Everyone Should See This Fall. And their preview of NY museum exhibitions.
  • John Baldessari limited edition print released to benefit Lincoln Center Education.
  • Madonna surprises fans by visiting MoMA.
  • James Franco releases bizarre erotic music video shot at Chateau Marmont.
  • Amy Schumer complains about Anna Wintour’s Gala at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Overtime: Aug 29 – Sept 4

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More stories from the week that ended Sept 4 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Blum & Poe exhibits Kanye West's Famous sculpture. The work is on the market for $4mil. The gallery now claims that the work is not currently for sale.
  • RIP: Jaime Davidovich, who passed away at the age of 79 due to pancreatic cancer.
  • RIP: Nathan Lyons, who passed away at the age of 86 due to complications from pneumonia.
  • Lisa Cooley closes her gallery space after eight years. She speaks about the decision to shut the doors and the economics of her gallery. Stefan Simchowitz harshly criticizes Cooley.
  • Bronx Museum of the Arts names interim board leadership days after major resignations.
  • New York Central Art Supply Inc to close after 111 years in business.
  • The ignored and forgotten black artists from Canada.
  • Four thieves burglarize Anselm Kiefer's workshop for raw materials.
  • Pacific Northwest College of Art cancels MA programs a week before classes were scheduled to begin.
  • Christoph Büchel project at Kunstsammlung Nordrhein Westfalen cancelled due to complexity and ambition.
  • Anish Kapoor considering withdrawing his work from Yinchuan Biennale in protest of exclusion of Ai Weiwei.
  • Group of Israeli artists, museum directors and art educators file lawsuit against the country’s ministry of culture.
  • Tara Kulukundis's son sues her to stop sale of trust-owned artwork.
  • Joseph Kinnebrew sues Bonnie Deutsch for return of artwork after she broke up with him via email from son.
  • Petition started against planned extension of Seattle Asian Art Museum into Volunteer Park.
  • New York Times eliminates art coverage of the Tri-State area.
  • Art law experts speak about the Peter Doig authentication case.
  • Ben Davis looks at whether obtaining an MFA is worth it for artists.
  • The role non-profits play in the art world.
  • Michelangelo may have hid feminist symbols in the Sistine Chapel ceiling fresco.
  • Is San Francisco ready to become a art world capital?
  • Scientists discover that white substance on Munch Scream painting is candle wax.
  • Guerrilla Girls install giant banner on facade of Museum Ludwig in Cologne.
  • Parviz Tanavoli unveils his largest ever work at Toronto’s Aga Khan museum.
  • Artnet visits the 11th Gwangju Biennale.
  • NPR profiles the Underground Museum.
  • Gary Simmons installation to inaugurate Culture Lab Detroit.
  • Rembrandt’s Abraham Entertaining the Angels travels to the Frick Collection.
  • The Baltimore Museum of Art appoints Katy Siegel senior programming and research curator.
  • KINDL – Centre for Contemporary Art to open in Berlin at Power House, including cafe in Brew House.
  • How Nancy Spector gets things done.
  • Artspace's guide to the 7 best MFA painting programs in the United States.
  • The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) names Elissa Tenny the college’s new president.
  • The growing Indonesian art scene and art market.
  • Christie's to hold sale of Wayne Thiebaud works to benefit Wayne Thiebaud Foundation.
  • Sotheby's sale of Australian art in Sydney goes well.
  • Sotheby's launches Museum Network to showcase videos and TV series made by art museums.
  • Thomas Hesse appointed CEO of Auctionata | Paddle8.
  • Evening Standard interviews Victoria Siddall about the Frieze art fair.
  • Artspace's list of the 9 of the Best Artworks at the 2016 Code Art Fair. They also highlight some of the rising stars being shown at the fair.
  • NADA Miami Beach will return to the Deauville Beach Resort for its 2016 edition.
  • Artnet visits the Art-O-Rama art fair on the Côte d’Azur.
  • A preview of the Governors Island Art Fair.
  • Alberto Mugrabi buys a $250k Mark Grotjahn work at Loic Gouzer’s Oceana benefit auction.
  • Sarah Thornton writes about venture capitalists that are collecting art.
  • Larry Gagosian will host Art for Hillary Auction 2016 at the Gagosian Gallery space on West 21st St.
  • Artnet looks at the fate of galleries that exhibited at the first NADA fair in Miami.
  • United Talent Agency unveils U.T.A. Artist Space in Boyle Heights.
  • 30 things Gina Fairley learned from working in a gallery.
  • Lars Bohman Gallery will merge with Galerie Forsblom.
  • Bendor Grosvenor's opinion on the current Old Masters market.
  • Financial Times writes about the business of artist estates.
  • Burger King in St. Petersburg names menu items after Pyotr Pavlensky works.
  • Is Robert Del Naja the real Banksy?
  • Dora Budor discusses images she finds intriguing.
  • Dylan Kerr interviews Ian Cheng.
  • Kim Schoenstadt organizes hundreds of female artists for group portrait at Hauser Wirth & Schimmel.
  • Artspace interviews Ai Weiwei.
  • A week in the life of Marisa Takal.
  • Forbes interviews Donald Sultan.
  • Financial Times interviews Sterling Ruby.
  • Terry Richardson to release book with photographs of his girlfriend Alex “Skinny” Bolotow. Paper Magazine interviews Richardson.
  • Hans Ulrich Obrist and seven others discuss what inspires them.
  • NPR talks Bob Ross.
  • Swiss Institute releases Simon Denny limited edition.
  • Artspace's guide to getting your own DIY MFA at home via books.
  • NY Times writes about the use of artwork in upscale hotels.
  • Artspace details 10 Surrealist Masterpieces You Need to Know.
  • A collection of photos from the first week of Burning Man.

Overtime: Sept 5 – Sept 11

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More stories from the week that ended Sept 11 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • David Shrigley's Memorial, his largest sculpture so far, installed in Central Park’s Doris C. Freedman Plaza.
  • RIP: Emilio Prini, who passed away at the age of 73.
  • 38 ex-workers, including art handlers and auctioneers, from the Drouot auction house get jail time for thefts.
  • Çanakkale Biennial cancelled for 2016 due to hostile climate towards artists and journalists in Turkey.
  • Michael Shvo charged with tax evasion on art and luxury purchases in New York.
  • Rebecca Moss stranded at sea and in limbo while participating in container ship residency.
  • Nicholas Serota steps down as director of Tate and will head Arts Council England.
  • Martin Roth to resign from V&A due to disillusionment stemming from Brexit vote.
  • Plan to build a Guggenheim museum on the Helsinki waterfront appears close to collapse.
  • Security for US Open tennis tournament forces temporary closure of Queens Museum.
  • Jho Low used Goldman Sachs to illicitly buy artwork, including work by Van Gogh.
  • Opera Gallery wins $2.4mil. court decision against Gailord Bovrisse.
  • Deborah De Robertis detained for nearly-nude performance at Musée Guimet.
  • Heirs of Greta Moll sue National Gallery London for return of allegedly stolen Matisse portrait of her.
  • The Washington Post explores artwork made by animals.
  • Officials unveil plans to build a performing arts center at the World Trade Center site.
  • Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery curators discover 1⁄4 of previous Magritte painting underlying another.
  • Ed and Danna Ruscha donate thirty works from their collection to University of Oklahoma Art Museum.
  • Ruth and Marvin Sackner donate 400 works to Pérez Art Museum Miami.
  • The Obamas to attend opening of National Museum of African American History and Culture.
  • Sean Scully mounts major new exhibition at the Guangdong Art Museum in Guangzhou.
  • Ragnar Kjartansson will have his first US museum show at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.
  • Robert Mapplethorpe show opens at Montreal Museum of Fine Arts.
  • David Berliner is Brooklyn Museum's new president and chief operating officer.
  • Ignacio Mattos and Thomas Carter to open Flora inside the Met Breuer.
  • Met's Manus x Machina: Fashion in the Age of Technology is its seventh most visited show of all time.
  • How museums are adapting to the popularity of social media.
  • Thaddaeus Ropac to sell Marcel Duchamp’s Porte-bouteilles (Bottle Rack, or Bottle Dryer) to a museum.
  • The works available at Gagosian's benefit for Hillary Clinton.
  • Sotheby's hires Martin Klosterfelde as a senior director and senior specialist.
  • RM Sotheby's results for Porsches from single-owner collection considered game-changing.
  • Marilyn Monroe's dress she wore while singing Happy Birthday to JFK in 1962 to be sold by Julien's Auctions.
  • Steve Jobs' NeXT brand turtleneck from his closet to be offered at auction by Julien's Live.
  • Exhibitors list revealed for Art Basel Miami Beach 2016.
  • Art Basel announces Buenos Aires as its first Art Basel City.
  • Ibid Gallery gets a new 13,000 sq ft space in Downtown Los Angeles.
  • Kamel Mennour to open gallery space in London.
  • Observer writes about Larry Gagosian.
  • Catherine G. Wagley writes about the Los Angeles collecting scene.
  • The positions, titles, and roles involved in a gallery space.
  • Artillery highlights female gallerists in Los Angeles.
  • Artspace interviews Aaron Curry.
  • Purple covers Torey Thornton and Erick Mack's show at Almine Rech.
  • Colin Gleadell writes about the Art Business Conference.
  • Artspace's list of 21 artists to watch this month.
  • Artnet's picks of 15 Gallery Shows Across Europe Everyone Should See This Fall.
  • ARTnews' list of 2016's top 200 art collectors.
  • Larry's List interviews Qiao Zhibing about Qiao Space.
  • Anish Kapoor discusses some of his recent  works, projects, and processes.
  • NY Times profiles Sally Mann and discusses her relationship with Cy Twombly.
  • Bob Dylan to install his first public work at MGM National Harbor in Maryland.
  • Amalia Ulman in keen on magazine.
  • Sterling Ruby interviews Ed Ruscha.
  • Phaidon takes you inside Yayoi Kusama's installation at Philip Johnson's Glass House.
  • Arthur Edelman recalls meeting Andy Warhol and offering him a job.
  • Doug Aitken plans underwater art installation off California coast.
  • Owen Duffy interviews Ajay Kurian.
  • Q&A with Ed Moses.
  • Daily Mail writes about Damien Hirst through pics from his girlfriend, Katie Keight.
  • 1stdibs profiles Rafael de Cárdenas.
  • Limited edition Dabsmyla book, hand drawn and signed by the artists, available online.
  • Absolut announces nominees for its 2017 Absolut Art Award in artwork and art writing.
  • A guide for New York City gallery opening crawls.
  • Michael Lutin's art world predictions for September 2016.
  • Steve McQueen awarded Johannes Vermeer Award by the Dutch culture minister Jet Bussemaker.
  • Yoko Ono to reissue remastered versions of her entire musical output from 1968 to 1985.
  • A look at the artists in Madonna's art collection.
  • The Hollywood Reporter interviews Lena Dunham and discusses the possibility of a gallery show.

Overtime: Sept 12 – Sept 18

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More stories from the week that ended Sept 18 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Blum & Poe website has images up for its Henry Taylor exhibition. LA Times profiles Henry Taylor's exhibition space Henry Taylor’s.
  • RIP: Ruth Braunstein, who passed away at the age of 93 after a short illness.
  • RIP: Greta Friedman, who passed away at the age of 92. She was nurse kissed in iconic V-J Day photo.
  • Mark Moore Gallery in Culver City will close at the end of the year.
  • Art16 art fair cancels its 2017 edition.
  • New details in Alec Baldwin's lawsuit against Mary Boone over Bleckner painting. Jonathan Jones has a different perspective than Baldwin's.
  • Antonio de Felipe sued by former assistant Fumiko Negishi, who claims authorship of his works.
  • Federico Castelluccio sued by James Sliman for non-payment of PR work related to Guercino painting.
  • Shantell Martin accuses Lane Bryant of stealing her designs.
  • Anish Kapoor shows work at Yinchuan Biennalel in China despite its censorship of Ai Weiwei.
  • Jerry Saltz writes about The Tyranny of Art History in Contemporary Art.
  • Long-disputed plaster figure may actually be a Degas.
  • NYC Department of Cultural Affairs financing paid internships at institutional organizations to improve diversity.
  • Germany's Culture Minister Monika Grütters has called for a fund for the purchase of nationally valuable art.
  • Berlin still ranked very high as a city for artists to live in, according to study.
  • Christian Viveros-Fauné writes about Detroit as a destination city for art.
  • The week in New York's art world.
  • Artnet says that Carmen Herrera’s retrospective at the Whitney Museum is a "must-see".
  • Tickets to National Museum of African American History and Culture booked until at least November.
  • Fondation Beyeler announces $84mil. expansion, overseen by Peter Zumthor.
  • MoMA makes digital archive of thousands of images available online.
  • Swiss Institute finds new home on St Marks Place and Second Avenue in the East Village, NY.
  • Museum Voorlinden, a new private art space, opens in the Netherlands with Ellsworth Kelly show and others.
  • Zoe Butt will be artistic director of the new Factory Contemporary Arts Centre after departing Sàn Art.
  • David Breslin named the director of the Whitney Museum collection.
  • Hamza Walker named new executive director of LAXART.
  • Maurizio Cattelan’s America, 18-karat golden toilet in a Guggenheim Museum bathroom, opens to the public.
  • The Art of Banksy exhibition to open in Oct at The Paddock in Melbourne’s Federation Square.
  • Nancy Olnick and Giorgio Spanu opening a private museum for their Arte Povera collection in Hudson Valley.
  • The Swiss Pavilion at 2017 Venice Biennale will pay homage to Alberto Giacometti.
  • Shanghai Biennale reveals its full list of participating artists.
  • Independent Curators International announces 2016 nominees for Independent Vision Curatorial award.
  • The food menu at the National Museum of African American History's Sweet Home Cafe.
  • Christie's to auction Kandinsky painting bought directly from the artist by Solomon Guggenheim.
  • Sotheby's will work with Taikang to “identify a qualified independent director to serve on the board.”
  • Sotheby’s will offer important group of prints by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner during auction of Prints and Multiples.
  • Sotheby's interviews T.O.P about his upcoming sale.
  • Artcurial has white glove sale of the Brollo Collection, with thirty works all by Diego Giacometti.
  • Heritage Auction to offer Morris Louis columnar work, Blue Pilaster.
  • How auction houses are providing negotiating incentives in a down market.
  • SVIT wins first NADA x Exhibitionary International Gallery Prize and will receive a booth at NADA Miami Beach.
  • Art Basel parent company MCH takes majority co-ownership stake in India Art Fair.
  • Gallery list for Paris Internationale 2016 released.
  • Artnet writes about 10 Things to Do and See at the New York Art Book Fair.
  • Autre covers Sexy Beast, the benefit at Ace Hotel, Los Angeles supporting Planned Parenthood Los Angeles.
  • Printed Matter celebrating 40th anniversary as 11th edition of New York Art Book Fair opens this month.
  • Art dealers that have discovered and succeeded in alternatives from the gallery model.
  • The trend of artists showing with galleries other than the ones they are represented by.
  • Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac showing 40 years of work by James Rosenquist across its two spaces.
  • Cecily Brown joins Paula Cooper Gallery.
  • Michael Slenske spends time with and profiles Abraham Cruzvillegas.
  • A Q&A with Aki Sasamoto on her SculptureCenter solo show.
  • Danh Vō's first show at White Cube, Hong Kong.
  • The Praemium Imperiale annouces 2016 Laureates, including Cindy Sherman and Annette Messager.
  • Eddie Peake stages a performance at Jeffrey Deitch's gallery.
  • National Medal of Arts announces 2015 recipients, including Jack Whitten and Ralph Lemon.
  • Pedro Reyes is inaugural Dasha Zhukova Distinguished Visiting Artist at MIT's first resident.
  • Artnet looks at 10 Shows by Groundbreaking Female Sculptors.
  • Artnet's list of 10 Exceptional Millennial Artists to Watch in 2016.
  • A look at the green color used on the Statue of Liberty.
  • Wolfgang Tillmans models for Hood By Air in New York.
  • George W Bush to release a book of his art.
  • Donald Trump used Donald J. Trump Foundation money to buy painting of himself by Michael Israel.
  • Artspace interviews John Varvatos.
  • Renovation complete at historic Cartier Mansion on New York’s Fifth Avenue.

Overtime: Sept 19 – Sept 25

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More stories from the week that ended Sept 25 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Karon Davis' Pain Management at Wilding Cran exhibition images are up on the gallery's website.
  • RIP: Annie Pootoogook, who passed away at the age of 47. Her death is being investigated.
  • RIP: Jan Statman, who passed away at the age of 81 after being involved in a vehicular accident.
  • RIP: Wilf Roberts, who passed away at the age of 75 following an illness.
  • RIP: Hassan Sharif, who passed away at the age of 65 due to cancer.
  • RIP: Hassan Sharif, who passed away at the age of 65.
  • RIP: William Louis-Dreyfus, who passed away at the age of 84.
  • RIP: Teodoro González de León, who passed away at the age of 90 due to a heart attack.
  • Fire breaks out at Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm and the entire building is feared destroyed.
  • Closure: Kansas gallery closes after five years.
  • Closure: Hokitika's Carnegie Gallery closes until further notice following seismic report.
  • Metropolitan Fine Arts & Antiques in NY busted for multimillion dollar illegal ivory operation.
  • Kelley Walker's work depicting police brutality showing at CAM in St Louis causes controversy.
  • Christopher Wool painting and more in dispute during Robert and Melissa Soros divorce proceedings.
  • Tara Subkoff wants $10mil. in her divorce from Urs Fischer.
  • Dutch court orders Marina Abramović to pay Ulay over €250k over disputed collaborative works.
  • Banksy's Love Plane removed from Liverpool street and will enter "street art museum".
  • Car crashes into Museum of Broken Relationships as two people are injured.
  • Stefan Kalmár leaves Artists Space to be director of ICA in London.
  • Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie's divorce could put their art collection in jeopardy.
  • Andrew Russeth does not like Thomas Heatherwick’s Hudson Yards public art piece.
  • How relationships with dealers and collectors have changed and evolved in recent times.
  • Sir Nicholas Serota tells residents living across Switch House that they should buy curtains if they want privacy.
  • French president François Hollande announces $100mil. fund to protect cultural heritage in the Middle East.
  • Markus Lüpertz calls Berlin’s cultural scene “completely overrated.”
  • Scott Reyburn writes about the struggles faced by Paris art fairs trying to get back on track.
  • Activists in Boyle Heights march, protest, and serve galleries with eviction notices.
  • Linda Yoblansky's weekend in Los Angeles.
  • High Museum of Art to reduce price of adult admission to $14.50.
  • Maurizio Cattelan and Pierpaolo Ferrari's Toiletpaper project at the Fondation Beyeler Summer Night’s Gala.
  • Jeffrey Gundlach gives $42.5mil. to Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
  • Dusseldorf’s state museums acquire over 200 works from gallery owners Dorothee and Konrad Fischer.
  • Tate acquires its earliest picture by a female artist, a work by Joan Carlile.
  • Laura Sparks named first woman president of Cooper Union.
  • Aria Dean brought in as new assistant curator of net art at Rhizome.
  • Manuel Rabaté appointed director of Louvre Abu Dhabi.
  • Socrates Sculpture Park to get first permanent building and design is revealed.
  • Smithsonian Institution’s Archives of American Art wins the first Don Tyson Prize and $200k.
  • 2017 Venice Biennale will focus on artists and not on big themes.
  • Newly-discovered sketch leaf by Beethoven for “Emperor” concerto to be offered at auction by Sotheby’s.
  • Katya Kazakina reports on the Phillips New Now sale.
  • Original painting for E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial movie poster to be offered at Heritage Auctions.
  • What it feels like to conduct an auction.
  • Scott Indrisek previews EXPO Chicago and writes about what you might want to buy there. Artnet's list of the top ten booths at EXPO Chicago.
  • Exhibitor list released for NADA Miami Beach 2016.
  • Rirkrit Tiravanija and Tomas Vu to Open Surf Shop at UNTITLED's fair in Miami Beach.
  • Brexit could provide an advantage for the UK art market.
  • How Victoria Miro is managing sales for Njideka Akunyili Crosby's works.
  • Andrew Russeth writes about the golden age of art dealing.
  • Niels Kantor and Stefan Simchowitz discuss the market for young artists previously hot at auction.
  • Stefan Simchowitz installs rotating display of art in the new ICM Partners offices.
  • Why investors are looking at Sotheby's stock performance and the art market in general.
  • What Loretta Würtenberger, founder of the Institute for Artists’ Estates, is doing for artist estates.
  • Part 1 of Kenny Schachter's summer art and car adventures. And also part 2.
  • Art Jobs interviews Ken Harman.
  • Larry's List interviews Amy Phelan.
  • Theaster Gates acquires gazebo at the site of where Tamir Rice was shot. The Art Newspaper talks to David Adjaye and Theaster Gates.
  • Mary Reid Kelley and Lauren Redniss among the winners of 2016 MacArthur “Genius” grants.
  • Artnet profiles Manuel Mathieu.
  • Julie Mehretu appears on The Modern Art Notes podcast.
  • Josh Faught and Ruth Laskey win San Francisco Artadia Awards and $10k each.
  • LA Times visits Larry Clark's show at UTA Artist Space.
  • Arnet interviews Harmony Korine.
  • Frieze visits Rachel Rose's show at Pilar Corrias.
  • Artspace has a Q&A With Jorge Pardo.
  • Paper Mag interviews Sasha Frolova.
  • Flaunt Magazine profiles and talks to Chris Coy.
  • Artinfo has a Q&A with Sara VanDerBeek.
  • Artnet writes about the Os Gemeos show currently at Lehmann Maupin.
  • Solveig Settemsdal wins the Jerwood Drawing Prize and £8k.
  • Roger Hiorns wins 2016 edition of the Faena Prize for the Arts and gets $75k to create work.
  • Artspace surveys folks about what artists should and should not do during a studio visit.
  • Artnet covers the week in art events.
  • TOILETPAPER x Daft Punk limited edition vinyl record now available.
  • Page Six previews Alberto Mugrabi's wedding to Colby Jordan.
  • Michael Kohn's model train collection.
  • Whitney Museum shop sells limited edition honey.
  • A look at Sophia Coppola's art collection.
  • Madame Tussauds separates wax figures of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie in their exhibit.
  • Kanye West joins Instagram and says it will be his art.
  • Jared Leto to star as Andy Warhol in upcoming Hollywood film.
  • Whoopi Goldberg wears a Vetements hoodie on the View

Overtime: Sept 26 – Oct 2

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More stories from the week that ended Oct 2 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • Conceptual Fine Arts discusses Michael Rey's show at ZERO.
  • RIP: Nils Erik Gjerdevik, who passed away suddenly at the age of 54.
  • RIP: Shirley Jaffe, passes away at the age of 93.
  • Candice Hopkins writes an Elegy for Annie Pootoogook (1969–2016).
  • Render Stetson-Shanahan stabs roommate Carolyn Bush to death. Both artists were recent Bard graduates.
  • Activists in Russia force closure of Jock Sturges's show over child porn.
  • Police investigating whether Annie Pootoogook's death could have resulted from a homicide.
  • Ahmad Al-Faqi Al-Mahdi sentenced to nine years in prison for destroying Timbuktu mausoleums.
  • The Anti-Defamation League declares Pepe the Frog to be a hate symbol.
  • Metropolitan Museum of Art lays off 34 employees due to possible $40mil. deficit.
  • Tax evasion trial of Wildenstein family will continue, as presiding judge rejects defendants’ request for a stay. Artnet covers the first day of the trial.
  • Wim Pijbes steps down from his position as general director of Museum Voorlinden.
  • Uffizi Gallery director Eike Schmidt denies hosting wild bachelor party at Palazzo Pitti.
  • Artnet reports that sales during EXPO Chicago were slow coming. Judd Tully's report is a little more optimistic.
  • The Economist writes about how forgotten African-American artists are coming back into the mainstream.
  • Peter Brant and Loic Gouzer each suffered injuries before Alberto Mugrabi's wedding.
  • Anish Kapoor thinks that vandalism of his work at Palace of Versailles was an "inside job".
  • Damon Davis calls out Kelley Walker for not being a responsible artist.
  • More and more artists and bohemians are leaving San Francisco for Los Angeles.
  • Thomas Campbell takes control of hot dog vendor situation in front of Met Museum.
  • How the Mona Lisa became so overrated.
  • Artnet explores the gallerina stereotype.
  • Sam Moyer leaves Rachel Uffner Gallery and joins Sean Kelly.
  • Blockchain technology could revolutionize the system of provenance in the art world.
  • Two van Gogh paintings stolen in 2002 are recovered by Naples police.
  • The first readymade may have been first created three million years by an ape-like humanoid in Africa.
  • Cologne to return Menzel drawing that was sold in duress in 1939 to Hildebrand Gurlitt.
  • Meleager and Atalanta by Jacob Jordaens, worth up to £3 mil., discovered in a storeroom in Swansea.
  • Long-lost painting by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema found on Antiques Roadshow. The show also values panties drawn on by Andy Warhol to be worth a six-figure value.
  • US-China Museum Summit gathers American and Chinese museum leaders to discuss cooperation.
  • East Building of Washington DC’s National Gallery of Arts reopens after 3-year, $69mil. renovation.
  • Jeff Koons Coloring Book sculpture goes up at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento.
  • Turner Prize 2016 exhibition opens at Tate Britain.
  • David Shrigley's Really Good goes up on the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square.
  • Edmund de Waal & Ai Weiwei team up for Kneaded Knowledge: The Language of Ceramics at Kunsthaus Graz.
  • George Takei donating huge collection of personal items to the Japanese American National Museum.
  • The Harvard Crimson interviews Scott Rothkopf.
  • Basrah Museum opens inside a converted former palace of Saddam Hussein.
  • Glenstone about to become one of America's biggest museums after 2018 expansion.
  • Painting After Postmodernism, curated by Barbara Rose, opens in Brussels.
  • British Museum acquires 19 more Picasso prints.
  • Jonathan Horowitz's Hillary Clinton is a Person Too sculpture now at Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit.
  • Andrew M. Goldstein interviews Hans Urich Obrist about painting.
  • Stephanie Smith appointed new chief curator of the Institute for Contemporary Art at VCU.
  • Eric Clapton to offer his third Gerhard Richter abstract canvas at Christie's.
  • Sotheby's to offer David Hockney Yorkshire landscape painting at an estimate of $9-12mil.
  • Sotheby’s Irish Art auction sale performs very well.
  • Recently merged Auctionata | Paddle8 will now be known simply as Paddle8.
  • Marian Goodman to open a second Paris location, with a show of works by Annette Messager.
  • Wall Street Journal writes about Elizabeth Dee's move to Harlem.
  • Cardi Gallery opens a location in London.
  • Martos Gallery in Los Angeles to be renamed as second outpost of Shoot the Lobster.
  • Team Gallery opening a second space in Venice, CA, called Team Satellite.
  • Artinfo interviews Victoria Siddall about what to expect during Frieze, London. Artnet previews what dealers will be bringing to the fairs. They also advise you on whom to network with at the fairs.
  • Untitled announces exhibitor list for Miami Beach 2016 fair.
  • Artinfo looks at the market for Lee Lozano's work and also for Martha Rosler.
  • The sneaker market discussed in Artforum.
  • Henry Taylor's show at Blum & Poe is an Artforum Critic's Pick.
  • LA Weekly reviews Karon Davis' show at Wilding Cran Gallery.
  • Pierre Huyghe wins the 2017 Nasher Prize and $100k.
  • Fruit of the Forest interviews Heather Guertin.
  • Thomas Duncan interviews Julien Nguyen.
  • Arteviste interviews Hayal Pozanti.
  • David Hockney's thoughts on certain issues, including selfies and art history.
  • Artspace writes about Ella Kruglyanskaya, Mernet Larsen, and Louisa Gagliardi.
  • Flash Art interviews Cory Arcangel.
  • Emily Mae Smith gathers together her favorite fantasy figures from art history.
  • Artspace interviews Sterling Ruby.
  • Frieze Magazine visits Jessica Stockholder's show at Mitchell-Innes & Nash.
  • Daniel Arsham adds color to his work thanks to corrective lenses.
  • Julie Mehretu discusses her influences, auction pressure, and new paintings
  • Mathew Cerletty talks about Jean-Michel Basquiat.
  • Antony Gormley discusses the hopefulness in his artwork.
  • Tino Sehgal wins the 2016 Hans Molfenter Prize and $18k.
  • Olivian Cha shares and reviews some exhibitions currently up in Los Angeles.
  • Christie's looks back at the YBAs.
  • Elms Lesters releases new Adam Neate print.
  • Wooster Group founder Elizabeth LeCompte wins the Gish Prize and $300k.
  • The art world reacts in real time to the Clinton Trump debate.
  • Vogue covers Colby Jordan’s wedding to Alberto “Tico” Mugrabi. Artnet also writes about the events.
  • Alex Rodriguez hangs out with his buddy Jeff Koons.

Overtime: Oct 3 – Oct 9

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More stories from the week that ended Oct 10 (click on bolded words for more information):
  • The '90s are alive at Frieze. Artnet's list of what to see in London during Frieze week. The Art Newspaper  also has five picks of things to see. Artspace chooses five rising stars that are exhibiting work. The fair may benefit from a weak pound. Artnet picks the top 15 booths at the fair. Andrew Goldstein picks ten works from Frieze. Lorena Muñoz-Alonso has a sales report from Frieze. Artnet also looks at what sold. Artinfo gets in on the acquisitions action as well and provides an update. [pictured above: Aaron-Garber Maikovska's work at Frieze London Focus]
  • RIP: Walter Darby Bannard, who passed away at the age of 82.
  • RIP: Daphne Odjig, who passed away at the age of 97.
  • RIP: Elaine Lustig Cohen, who passed away at the age of 89.
  • RIP: Yusuf Arakkal, who passed away at the age of 71.
  • RIP: Andrew Vicari, who passed away at the age of 84.
  • RIP: George Barris, who passed away at the age of 94.
  • RIP: Joseph Wheelwright, who passed away at the age of 68.
  • Marcus Omar Glenn sentenced to 2-15 years in prison for drunken driving death of his wife’s best friend.
  • Contemporary Art Museum staff member verbally and nearly physically attacked due to Kelley Walker show.
  • Photojournalism show in Moscow centered on pictures of Ukrainian soldiers attacked by right-wing protesters.
  • France to increase funding for museums and acquisitions in 2017 budget in wake of terror attacks in Paris.
  • Institute of Contemporary Art Miami temporarily closes due to Hurricane Matthew.
  • Police in Greece arrest 26 in bust of alleged antiquities smuggling ring and recover more than 2,000 objects.
  • Christopher Knight criticizes MOCA's Pesce show for having guest curator who owns most of work on view.
  • Estate of Paul Leffmann say Picasso's The Actor, currently in Met's collection, was originally sold under duress.
  • Recent Old Masters forgery discovery could lead to up to £200mil. worth of fakes.
  • Wildenstein trial reveals feuds within the family. The trial gets rowdy during the second week.
  • Dash Snow estate sues McDonald's for copyright infringement for using a SACE tag inside their restaurant.
  • Guerrilla Girls target super-wealthy collectors that own private museums. They handed out stickers at Frieze before being stopped.
  • Dr. Thomas J. Berghuis steps down from his position as museum director of MACAN.
  • Alexander Gilkes splits up with his wife Misha Nonoo.
  • 60 Minutes has a program about Pierre and Danielle Le Guennec Picasso trove.
  • Painting previously valued at $26 turns out to be authentic Raphael after Dr Bendor Grosvenor spots it.
  • When artists use biological "materials" in their artwork.
  • Eventbrite Rally's list of 5 Provocative Art Exhibits Opening This Fall in LA.
  • James Turrell’s Meeting Skyspace reopens at MoMA PS1.
  • Tate to exhibit major Bruce Nauman retrospective in 2019.
  • The Color Line at the Musée du Quai Branly brings African American art to Paris.
  • Holland Cotter reviews the Agnes Martin show at the Guggenheim Museum.
  • London to get first major Jean-Michel Basquiat exhibition in over 20 years, at Barbican Centre.
  • Kohl’s donates $1.5mil. to the Milwaukee Art Museum.
  • Heiner Bastian and his family will give their house to the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation.
  • The Portland Art Museum to expand, connecting the museum’s two freestanding buildings.
  • New York Public Library for the Performing Arts acquires the archive of Michael Holman.
  • The Museu de Arte, Arquitetura e Tecnologia (Maat), directed by Pedro Gadanho, is opening in Lisbon.
  • The Art Newspaper discusses why museum leaders are curating and organizing shows for private collectors.
  • NY Times looks at the auction vs. primary market for artwork during Frieze week.
  • Colin Gleadell analyzes the sale of Leslie Waddington's collection at Christie's. Judd Tully also reports on the sale. Anny Shaw also writes about the auction.
  • Judd Tully analyzes the Phillips evening sale. Colin Gleadell also has a report.
  • Colin Gleadell examines the Christie's evening sale. Judd Tully writes about the auction as well.
  • PAD fair returns to London's Berkeley Square with a tribute to Zaha Hadid.
  • When the provenance and previous ownership of works enhance its value.
  • Artsy explores how young artists price their work.
  • Hauser & Wirth now represents the estate of Arshile Gorky.
  • Leo Villareal now represented by Pace Gallery.
  • Christian Viveros-Fauné interviews Cristin Tierney.
  • Cultured covers John Wolf's Human Condition show.
  • The second part of Artnet's Mysteries of the ‘Gallery Girl' series.
  • Larry's List interviews T.O.P.
  • Carrie Mae Weems creates and shares pro-Hillary Clinton video.
  • Mousse Magazine interviews Michael Rey.
  • The Fader interviews Dread Scott.
  • Zoe Leonard's I want a president installed at the High Line in NY.
  • Lisa Barense, aka Loyola Condenser, gets gallery show of her Instagram prints at Lawrence and Clark Gallery.
  • Dan Nadel writes about Joe Bradley's Krasdale show.
  • Ren Hang's photographs in Purple Magazine.
  • Rana Begum wins 2017 Abraaj Group Art Prize and $100k.
  • Jeff Koons show opens at Almine Rech in London.
  • Lena Dunham and Laurie Simmons in conversation.
  • aqnb reviews Julien Nguyen's show at Freedman Fitzpatrick.
  • The Sunday Painter brings Samara Scott project to Four Six One Nine in Los Angeles.
  • David Hockney and David Gayford talk about pictures.
  • Rachel Rose signs to Creative Artists Agency (CAA) and they will help manage her feature film career.
  • Shepard Fairey puts up murals on the streets of Hong Kong and has a show at The Pulse.
  • Laura Owens will design a lift ticket for the upcoming ski season in Aspen.
  • Damien Hirst's Myth and Legend sculpture editions available from Other Criteria.
  • 3Arts announces the ten recipients of its ninth annual 3Arts Awards.
  • Artnet profiles 10 Female Designers Breaking the Mold.
  • Lucian Wintrich organizes a pro-Trump art show in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
  • Shia LaBeouf's next art performance.
  • A look at David Bowie's collection.
  • Snoop Dogg gives Martha Stewart an original painting of a dog.
  • A look at what artists the Beckham family collects.
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