NEWS
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Friday, September 7, 2012
COMMUNITY UNITES TO REBUILD CLOCK TOWER DESTROYED BY EARTHQUAKE
Community unites to rebuild clock tower destroyed by
earthquake
Thousands of fragments of medieval Torre dei Modenesi are
sifted
By Ermanno Rivetti. Web only
Published online: 09 August 2012
The Torre dei Modenesi, a 13th-century clock tower
destroyed in May by the two powerful earthquakes that rocked the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy , has become a symbol of the damage
done to the country's heritage. Teams of volunteers from across the country
have now travelled to the small town of Finale
Emilia to help salvage, collect and catalogue
fragments of the 32 metre high tower, with a view to restoring it to its former
glory.
This is a contrast to the situation in the similarly
quake-damaged city of l’Aquila , Italy ,
where more than three years on residents have still not been allowed to return
to their homes.
Volunteers have so far sifted through around 7,000 fragments
of the tower, from red terracotta bricks and pieces of the clock to parts of
the bell itself. The fragments are being stored in pallets in the courtyards of
local primary schools, and it is expected that they will be transferred to a
warehouse for the winter, where they will be studied further.
A spokesperson for the Direzione Regionale per i Beni
Architettonici e Paesaggistici (the regional arm of Mibac, the Italian ministry
of culture) has acknowledged the presence of civilian volunteers in Finale but has
also stated that the official response teams are still evaluating the
widespread damage to the region’s heritage and are not specifically focusing on
the tower at this time. He added, however, that where it is possible “our
priority is to rebuild damaged sites with the original pieces”.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
SURPRISING TEHRAN SHOW OF ART INSPIRED BY THE STATIONS OF THE CROSS
Surprising Tehran
show of art inspired by the Stations of the Cross
Günther Uecker exhibition will focus on human rights abuses
By Gareth Harris. Web only
Published online: 08 August 2012
In a surprise move, an exhibition focusing on human rights
abuses is due to open at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art next month. The
show, dedicated to the German sculptor and kinetic artist Günther Uecker,
includes 14 works from the series "The Human Abused: 14 Pacified
Implements", which was commissioned in 1992 by the Berlin-based Institute
for Foreign Cultural Relations (IFA), a cultural organisation funded by the
German government. The use of violence against foreigners based in Germany
prompted Uecker to make the Arte Povera-esque works, incorporating materials
such as nails, stones and ash.
"In these works, [Uecker] expresses his visions of
life and life's suffering and tries to reveal, in his sensitive setting of
signs, basic human drives: aggression, injury, destruction, setting against
them gestures of reconciliation," says the institute's website, adding
that the "injury of human being by human being" is the focus of the
series. The works are based on the Stations of the Cross. These elements of
Christian iconography may, however, raise eyebrows in the Iranian capital.
The exhibition (16 September-31 October) is also due to
include 88 works provided by the artist who joined the Zero Group in 1961, an
avant-garde Düsseldorf-based collective that declared art should be ultra
minimalist, starting from "point zero". The show is funded by IFA,
the German Embassy, the Goethe-Institut and the German publishing company Geuer
& Breckner.
CRANACH’S MADONNA UNDER THE FIR TREE RETURNED TO POLAND
Cranach’s Madonna under the Fir Tree returned to Poland
The painting, which was copied and stolen by a German
priest, makes its way back to Wroclaw
after 70 years
By Paul Jeromack. Web only
Published online: 07 August 2012
Lucas Cranach the Elder’s Madonna under the Fir Tree, 1510,
has been returned to the Cathedral of St John in Wroclaw , where it had hung since the 16th
century. This follows the news that Poland ’s Ministry of Foreign
Affairs’ Office for the Restitution of Cultural Goods knows that Raphael’s
Portrait of a Young Man “is in a bank vault in a certain country”.
Unlike the Raphael, which for some time had been feared
destroyed, art historians and Polish authorities knew the Cranach had survived
the war. In 1978, it was noted in the revised edition of Max Friedlander and
Jakob Rosenberg’s The Paintings of Lucas Cranach that “just when and how the
original vanished is obscure, but according to credible testimony it survives
and has been reportedly offered for sale on the international art market”.
According to Poland ’s
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the painting was taken from the cathedral in Wroclaw , then known as Breslau
and part of German territory, to protect it from Allied air raids. Cranach was
known to be one of Hitler’s favourite artists and it is possible that it was
ear marked for inclusion in the planned Führermuseum, Linz .
After the war, the picture was returned to the Diocesan Museum ,
Wroclaw rather
than the war-damaged cathedral. It had been broken in two and officials decided
to have it restored. Siegfried Zimmer, a German priest and amateur art
collector and painter, was commissioned to take care of the restoration work,
but he instead had a copied made between 1946 to 1947 and stole away to Berlin
with the actual Cranach. The hoax was not uncovered until 1961, when a Polish
conservator examined the picture and found it to be a modern copy. The original
passed through private hands until it made its way to an unnamed Swiss
collector who held it until his recent death, when it was left to the Diocese
of St Gallen.
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
PORTLAND GETS SET FOR TIME-BASED ART
By Eric Magnuson. Web only
Published online: 06 August 2012
A rock ‘n’ roll tribute to the utopian designer Buckminster
Fuller is one of the eclectic projects included in the Time-Based Art Festival,
organised by the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art in Oregon (6-16 September). “There’s a lot of
risk and potential failure and that’s what’s pushed us forward in the
festival,” says its visual art curator, Kristan Kennedy.
This year’s festival, which includes performance art,
theatre, dance, film and music and is held in venues throughout the city,
features both international and local artists. Newcomers to the festival
include the San Francisco
filmmaker Sam Green, who is presenting his recent documentary The Love Song of
R. Buckminster Fuller, complete with a live score from the experimental rock
band Yo La Tengo. To celebrate the tenth edition, the artistic director Angela
Mattox also wanted to include artists who participated in previous years, such
as Laurie Anderson, who will be performing her personal and political work
Dirtday! and the choreographer Miguel Gutierrez, who is weaving together a
comic monologue and dance.
Describing how the festival differs from other art events,
Kennedy says that the “artists are often in the room and the audience is
invited to be in concert with them”. She has concentrated on the idea that
physical works need not exist in a digital age for the exhibition “End Things”.
As part of the show, the Italian artist Alex Cecchetti will tell a story
through words, objects and drawings, which will then be retold throughout the
festival by other artists, each passing the story onto the next. “It’s like a
game of telephone [or Chinese whispers],” Kennedy says. “When Alex returns, the
story isn’t his anymore.”
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
CONSERVATORS ALSO OPPOSE PLAN TO SIDELINE BERLIN’S OLD MASTERS
Conservators also oppose plan to sideline Berlin 's Old Masters
One of world's greatest collections to be replaced by
Modern art
By Julia Michalska. Web only
Published online: 03 August 2012
Conservators in Germany
have joined the protest over plans to relocate the world-famous collection of
Old Masters in Berlin 's
Gemäldegalerie. Under the Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz's (Prussian
Cultural Heritage Foundation) plan, the estimated 3,000 works will move into
the much smaller Bode
Museum to make way for
modern art including the collection of Ulla and Heiner Pietzsch. Any Old Master
that cannot be displayed in the smaller space will go into storage for an
estimated six years until a new space is found for the collection on the
capital's Museum Island .
The move, which was announced at the beginning of July,
poses a “significant conservation risk”, said a statement released by the
Bonn-based Verband der Restauratoren (Association of Restorers) on 19 July. The
association, which has around 2,500 members, argues that the Pietzsch
collection should move into the Gemäldegalerie only when a suitable location
has been found to accommodate the Old Masters. “Only then can transport be
reduced and the possibility that large parts of the collection will disappear
into stores for years be avoided,” the statement said. “Any handling, packaging
and transportation—even within the building—means mechanical stress and
climatic changes to the works, which weakens their substance.”
Around 12,000 people, including Prince Georg Friedrich of Prussia , have
signed a petition against emptying the Gemäldegalerie of its Old Masters. The
petition was set up by Jeffrey Hamburger, an art historian at Harvard University .
Earlier, the Verband Deutscher Kunsthistoriker (Association of German Art
Historians) wrote an open letter to Germany 's minister of culture,
Bernd Neumann, protesting “vehemently” against the plans. But the Bundestag has
already made €10m available for the renovation of the Gemäldegalerie, setting
the wheels in motion for the move.
Monday, September 3, 2012
HIGH LINE OVER-UNDERSTATES JOHN CAGE COMMEMORATION
High Line over-understates John Cage commemoration
The composer’s minimalist film and sound work is somewhat
lost in a small passageway on the elevated park
By Helen Stoilas. Web only
Published online: 03 August 2012
A screening of John Cage’s One11 and 103, 1992, opened
without much fanfare on Thursday on the High Line, the elevated park along Manhattan ’s West Side .
Installed to celebrated what would be the composer and artist’s 100th birthday,
the piece itself is a contemplative melding of sound and light, but its
installation in a dim passageway detracts from the experience of viewing the
work.
On the hot, late afternoon of the opening, the High Line was
teeming with visitors, lounging on the wooden benches or strolling down the
former elevated railway, enjoying the riverside views. After tearing ourselves
away from the inviting refuge of wildflowers, it took a few minutes to actually
locate Cage’s work. The piece is installed in the High Line’s 14th Street
Passage, a corridor still under construction that cuts through the surrounding
buildings. A screen is hung between two concrete pillars, on which Cage’s film,
One11, is being shown while his composition 103 serves as the soundtrack.
Very few passersby seemed to realise they were walking by
an art work (one visitor in fact was found napping on a nearby table) perhaps
because for much of the film, the screen is blank or lit by simple, white
shapes that could look like falling sunlight. Cage decribed One11 as “a film
without subject. There is light but no persons, no things, no ideas about
repetition and variation. It is meaningless activity which is nonetheless
communicative, like light itself, escaping our attention as communication
because it has no content to restrict its transforming and informing power.”
Sometimes you can pick out snatches of notes or tones from the composition, but
it is often difficult to hear the subtle music clearly over the low din of Chelsea traffic.
Sunday, September 2, 2012
MOBILE UNIT IN HUNT FOR RUSSIA’S BEST SELF-TAUGHT ARTISTS
Mobile unit in hunt for Russia ’s best self-taught artists
The Museum of Everything is running a five-city talent
search for outsider art show at Moscow ’s Garage Center
By Eric Magnuson. Web only
Published online: 02 August 2012
The Museum of Everything, the largest travelling exhibition
of outsider art, is taking its country-hopping roadshow to the streets of Russia for the
first time. Throughout August, the museum is parking its mobile exhibition unit
in a different city across western Russia , where it will become
something like a talent-show stage, seeking out the country’s best,
undiscovered self-taught and non-professional artists. The five-city tour ends
in September in Moscow ,
where the city’s Garage Center of Contemporary Culture is due to show the
museum’s top finds in a new pavilion.
“Russian self-taught artists are still relatively unknown
outside the region and contemporary ones even more so,” says James Brett, the
curator and founder of the Museum of Everything. “The museum hopes that this
project will help give these artists the visibility they deserve so that we can
bring them to the attention of the general public and curators and museums
worldwide.”
Amateur artists at each stop will be asked to submit their
work before the critical eyes of a variety of artists and curators, including
the Russian artist Leonid Tishkov, the Ukrainian photographer Sergey Bratkov
and curators such as Tamara Galeeva, who is the dean of art and culture studies
at Ural State University .
“International artists may also join us on the way,” Brett says. “It’s a
flexible project and will depend on the [Russian airline] Aeroflot timetable.”
Saturday, September 1, 2012
CHRISTIE’S “CONSIDERING ITS OPINIONS” AFTER RUSSIAN PAINTING SETBACK
Christie's “considering its options” after Russian painting
setback
Judge orders auction house to refund £1.7m to buyer of
Odalisque
By Riah Pryor. Web only
Published online: 01 August 2012
Christie's is standing by its attribution of a painting to
the Russian artist Boris Kustodiev, which is at the centre of a long-running
authenticity battle after a judge in London
ruled last week (28 July) that “the likelihood is that Odalisque was not
painted by Kustodiev”.
Christie's was ordered to refund £1.7m to Aurora Fine Arts,
a company owned by the Russian billionaire Viktor Vekselberg, which purchased
the work in 2005. The judge cleared the auction house of claims of negligence
and misrepresentation.
A spokesman for the auction house says: “We are surprised
and disappointed,” adding that it stands by its attribution to Kustodiev. When
asked whether the company would appeal he says it is “considering its options.”
The painting is dated 1919 and depicts a nude woman asleep.
It is known to have been exhibited in Riga , Latvia , in 1932 and first sold at Christie's London salesroom for
£19,000 in 1989. It was sold again by the auctioneer to Aurora Fine Arts in
2005. Doubts are thought to have been raised by an art dealer soon afterwards.
By 2010, Aurora
had filed its lawsuit.
During the 20-day hearing, Alisa Borisovna Lyubimova, a
research fellow at the State Russian Museum, St Petersburg, said she was
“almost 200% sure” that the work is not genuine. The judge also noted in his
summing up that she would not change her view even if shown contemporary
documents tending to suggest authenticity. Max Rutherston, who works as a consultant
for Bonhams, argued that the quality of work by artists is not always
consistently high and concluded that the painting was by Kustodiev's hand.
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