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Zachary Buehner: The Ascent
Zachary Buehner has no reference to being a graffiti artist on his website, for obvious reasons (In the US and elsewhere, graffiti is considered a form vandalism or destruction of private property and many graffiti artists have served time in jail when caught painting, hence their anonymity), but that is how he began as an artist.
George Bellows (1882-1925): Modern American Life
Royal Academy of Art, London, until 9 June 2013
Such is the historical window and nature of George Bellows’ rather short career that it seems unavoidable to think of his work in relation to the artistic and social transformations of the early 20th century.
Frieze New York 2013
Randall's Island, Manhattan, 10–13 May 2013
They had predicted that all those who signed on for last year’s daunting and costly round trip to a derelict sports field on Randall’s Island, to be met by an overlit tent sheltering too few galleries and too long lines for a $7 cup of coffee, were not going to return this year for more punishment.
Patrick Hughes: Superspectivism
Flowers Cork Street, London, until 18 May 2013
Patrick Hughes talks to Anna McNay about his unique technique of reverspective.
Dancing Around the Bride: Cage, Cunningham, Rauschenberg and Duchamp
Barbican Art Gallery, London, until 9 June 2013.
This is not the first time we have “danced around the bride”. It is now well acknowledged that since the Bride rose to fame, art practice has been dancing around this mysterious figure first envisioned in Duchamp’s (in)famous work The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even (1915-23) in one way or another.
Liane Lang: Fallen
Liane Lang’s works combine a mixture of photography and grotesquely lifelike silicon and rubber sculpture. Having recently undertaken a residency at the Memento Sculpture Park in Budapest, where she found herself amidst the supersized discarded sculptures of heroes from the Socialist era, her new works, currently on display at Art First, play with scale, status, and the act of iconoclasm.
Architecture for All, Without Limits: Toyo Ito at 72
One of the superstar architects of the century, Toyo Ito, who turns 72 in June, said he now faces a new challenge: to “open up” architecture to a wider audience. In fact, Ito has been doing just that since 1971, when he founded his own studio, Urbot (Urban Robot), in Tokyo.
Barbara Hepworth: The Hospital Drawings
Pallant House Gallery, Chichester, until 2 June 2013.
Pallant House Gallery in Chichester, West Sussex, is showing Barbara Hepworth: The Hospital Drawings. The show coincides with the 65th anniversary year of the launch of Britain’s pioneering National Health Service in 1948. A groundbreaking change within Post-War Britain society, the NHS was embraced by artists like Hepworth, who supported the broad left ideals behind the social reconstruction of Britain, to develop a fairer, more inclusive society.
Inside the Ordinary-Fantastic World of a Pop Artist
A new book published by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), Claes Oldenburg: Writing on the Side 1956–1969, collects a portion of Oldenburg’s thousands of pages of writings but fully demonstrates that writing was an essential part of his practice from the start.
Godwin Bradbeer: Pentimenti
Pentimenti, Godwin Bradbeer’s new show in Melbourne presents work in a figurative mode, for which he is now well-known, as well as works in media less frequently associated with his practice.
Coming Soon: Qatar and the Emirates
New Order: British Art Today at the Saatchi Gallery; Pae White: Too Much Night, Again at the South London Gallery; Rock on Top of Another Rock at the Serpentine Gallery.
Coming Soon: Qatar and the Emirates
Linked by a coastline, by ambition, by energy and by sudden wealth, Qatar, Dubai and Abu Dhabi are powering a futureworld that only feels real to the first-time visitor on contact with its burgeoning infrastructure.
A Choice Collection of Latin American Art Comes Home
Cantos Cuentos Colombianos – “Colombian Songs and Tales”; Para (saber) escutar – “To (know how to) listen”, Casa Daros, Rio de Janeiro, until 8 September 2013
With its inauguration in March, Casa Daros became the largest space dedicated to Latin American Art in its own continent. Erected in 1866, the neoclassical mansion housing the nearly 1,200-work collection seeding Casa Daros has been undergoing a long-term, intense restoration process.
A Post-Modern Renaissance Rooted in Tradition
Against the Grain: Wood in Contemporary Art, Craft and Design, Museum of Arts and Design, New York City, until July 2013.
Wood as an artistic medium can be humble or exalted, functional or sculptural, stripped down or decorative, or any combination of these qualities in a single art work.
Jay Defeo: a Retrospective
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, until 2 June 2013.
DeFeo herself, by all accounts, undertook her defining work, The Rose, as something of a pilgrimage, albeit into the recesses of her soul, embarking on the 12-foot high canvas in 1956 and coming to the end of the first phase after a full seven years. She still didn’t considered it finished, stopping a year later only because the work was removed when her rental was up.

The Bloomberg Commission: Giuseppe Penone

Giuseppe Penone. Installation View. Photograph: David Parry/PA Wire.

Delicate and poised, spidery and animated, these bronze casts of tree trunks, hollowed out and painted with a radiant gold-leaf interior, seem to prowl the gallery on their spindly branched limbs. This new site-specific work for the Bloomberg Commission, Spazio di Luce (Space of Light) (2012), was created by the youngest artist to have been admitted to the Arte Povera group, Giuseppe Penone (b1947), using the time-old technique of Lost Wax casting, deliberately reversing the interior and exterior of the trees.

The Whitechapel Gallery, London, until September 2013

Haroon Mirza: Untitled Song

Haroon Mirza. Installation view, Spike Island (Jan–Mar 2012), Untitled Song featuring Untitled Works by James Clarkson, 2012 (detail). Courtesy the artist and Spike Island. Photograph: Stuart Whipps.

Retro furniture, disembodied speakers, bits of drum kit, wires and LEDs, Untitled Song is a sculptural installation that traverses boundaries between sound and vision, sculpture and music, analogue and digital. A collaborative effort between James Clarkson and Haroon Mirza, there are few clues as to what to expect from this exhibition, but it certainly promises an intriguing experience.

MIMA, Middlesborough, until 6 June 2013.

Pacific Standard Time Presents: Modern Architecture in LA

View aft through the fuselage of the Hughes Flying Boat under construction from the cargo deck. Photo from the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum Collection. © Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum.

While Los Angeles’ modern residential architecture is world renowned, the innovative nature of its infrastructure and urban planning, commercial and civic buildings, housing experiments, and other architectural forms is less well-known. Initiated by the Getty, Pacific Standard Time Presents: Modern Architecture in LA, comprising 11 exhibitions and a range of accompanying events in and around the city, celebrates precisely this. Taking a wide-ranging look at the region’s modern architectural heritage, as well as the significant contributions of LA architects to national and global developments, it examines a diverse group of practitioners, from internationally known figures such as Richard Neutra and Frank Gehry, to others who have helped shape Southern California’s distinctive profile, such as A. Quincy Jones and Eric Owen Moss. 

Seventeen cultural institutions in and around Los Angeles, April–July 2013.

Kara Walker’s Silhouettes

Kara Walker. Rise Up Ye Mighty Race!, 2013. View of debut installation at the Art Institute of Chicago.

The Art Institute of Chicago has inaugurated a newly commissioned installation, Rise Up Ye Mighty Race!, made by American artist Kara Walker, who is known for her use of simple black cut-paper silhouettes to explore provocative themes. With her shadowy figures, reminiscent of popular 19th-century cartoon characters, Walker tells stories that recall such atrocities as slavery or violence against woman. Also on view are five of Walker’s large graphite drawings and 40 smaller mix-media works.

Gallery 293, Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, until 11 August 2013.

Un Lugar sin Reposo/A Place with no Rest

Perdida en su pensamiento, 2011. Luis González Palma. Painted photograph on watercolour paper, 25.25 x 25.25 in. Courtesy of Schneider Gallery.

The Guatemalan photographer Luis González Palma, now a resident of Argentina, has a solo exhibition opening at the Art Museum of the Americas (AMA) in Washington, DC, at the end of the month. AMA’s mission is to show artists whose work involves and elicits social and political discourse. Un Lugar sin Reposo/A Place with no Rest consists of photographs in which the artist juxtaposes elements creating narratives that reference his cultural heritage. The repetition of themes and images in the portraits and scenarios conveys the idea of time passing.

Art Museum of the Americas, Washington, DC, 28 March–26 May 2013.

Antony Gormley in Belgium

Anthony Gormley. Photograph of the installation of Firmament III (2009) in the Middelheim Museum. © Joris Casaer

The sculpture Firmament III (2009) by Antony Gormley has been acquired for the permanent collection of the Middelheim Museum in Antwerp, Belgium. The title of the work is rooted in an ancient word denoting the sky, and Gormley fashioned the three-dimensional shape to be similar to a star cluster and to reflect the lights of the firmament. The stainless steel bars outline a sort of giant hollow man that is the centre of the constellation. To mark the occasion when the monumental artwork was unveiled to the public, the open-air museum also premiered Gormley's series of polyhedral sculptures at the museum’s new exhibition pavilion, Het Huis (The House).

Firmament and Other Forms, Middelheim Museum, Antwerp, until 5 May 2013. 

Monir Farmanfarmaian 2004–2013

Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian. Convertible Series, 2010. Mirror and reverse glass painting on plaster and wood. Variable size. All images must be credited to the Artist and The Third Line.

Work created in the last decade by Iranian artist Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian is the focus of a show at The Third Line, a contemporary Middle Eastern art gallery in Dubai. Nearly 90 years old, Farmanfarmaian still tirelessly produces her eclectic pieces by combining a myriad of materials and styles, from mirrored mosaics and coloured glass to geometric patterns and ancient Persian symbols. The artist, who lived as an exile in New York before returning to Teheran in 2004, has exhibited in many International shows, including three editions of the Venice Biennale, and has made commissioned works for the Victoria & Albert Museum, London and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. This show also follows the development of a new series in which she investigates cosmological representations.

The Third Line, Dubai, until 19 April 2013.

Man Ray Portraits

Man Ray. Solarised Portrait of Lee Miller, c.1929. The Penrose Collection © Man Ray Trust/ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2012, courtesy The Penrose Collection. Image courtesy the Lee Miller Archives.

Man Ray, whose work helped elevate the status of photography to fine art, is celebrated in a retrospective exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery covering more than 60 years of his career. While living between New York and Paris, Man Ray associated with some of the most important artists and writers in the Surrealist, Dada and Modernist movements: Marcel Duchamp, Andre Breton, Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, James Joyce, Henri Matisse, Salvador Dali, Le Corbusier and Virginia Woolf. Portraits of these leaders in the avant-garde and other famous contemporaries can been seen at the show together with Man Ray’s nudes and more experimental work in the medium.

National Portrait Gallery, London, until 27 May 2013.

Giorgio Morandi: Lines of Poetry

Giorgio Morandi. Still Life, 1933. Courtesy Galleria d’Arte Maggiore. G.A.M., Bologna (Italy).

To celebrate its 15th anniversary year, the Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art is hosting a career-spanning exhibition of one of its most popular artists: Giorgio Morandi (1890-1964). Focusing on his works on paper, and including around 80 drawings, watercolours and etchings, the exhibition captures the spirit of an artist keen to experiment with a variety of mark-making processes, and with an uncanny ability to capture the essence of a scene and render it with minimal detail, abstracted even, often focusing more on the negative space between objects, and thus forcing viewers to use and combine their skills of perception and imagination.

Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art, London, until 7 April 2013.


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