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times square statue thomas j price statue debate 1234741944

A 12-foot-tall bronze statue of a Black woman by British sculptor Thomas J. Price, titled *Grounded in the Stars* (2023), has been installed in Times Square, sparking a polarized public reaction. Online, conservative commentators and social media users have labeled the work a sign of a "very sick society" and a "death of civilization," with racist AI-generated and Photoshopped images circulating. In person, the sculpture has drawn both affirming responses—such as a Black woman mimicking its defiant pose—and disrespectful acts, including a white man groping the statue's buttocks for a photo. The work, which stands near permanent monuments to white male figures, will be on view until June 17.

sally mann warns of government censorship 1234753655

Photographer Sally Mann has spoken out about government censorship after her photographs were seized from the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth in Texas earlier this year. The controversy stemmed from her 1990s images of her children, which included nude depictions that some critics characterized as "child porn," leading to their removal from an exhibition following an open letter from the conservative Christian advocacy group Danbury Institute. Though the photos were returned and charges dropped, Mann expressed deep concern about the future of American museums, warning of a "new era of culture wars" and describing the situation as "Orwellian." She noted that social media has given censors more tools, and that the Trump administration is actively rolling out policies targeting museum programs, including a review of the Smithsonian.

sothebys to host major sale in abu dhabi larry gagosian talks discreet art dealing curator flees thailand over arrest fear and more morning links for september 25 2025 1234753625

Sotheby's will host a landmark exhibition in Abu Dhabi on October 1-2, 2025, at the Bassam Freiha Art Foundation, showcasing masterworks by Vincent van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, Frida Kahlo, Edvard Munch, René Magritte, and Camille Pissarro, collectively valued at $150 million. This marks the first public fine art exhibition ever staged by Sotheby's in Abu Dhabi and the most valuable presentation the auction house has held in the Middle East. Separately, Larry Gagosian discussed the art market recession at Puck's Art of Influence conference, noting that private sales are rising as collectors shy away from auction houses. Other news includes controversy over Cai Guo-Qiang's performance in Tibet, a curator fleeing Thailand over arrest fears, and declining sales at Sydney Contemporary.

thomas kellein kunsthalle basel chinati foundation dead 1234753427

Thomas Kellein, a curator and art historian known for leading museums in Europe and the US, died in Berlin at age 70 following a serious illness. He directed the Kunsthalle Basel (1988–1995), organizing shows for Cindy Sherman, Mike Kelley, and Rachel Whiteread, and later led the Kunsthalle Bielefield (1996–2010) with exhibitions of Caspar David Friedrich, Jeff Koons, and others. He briefly directed the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas (2010–2012) before resigning, and subsequently led the Written Art Collection in Germany, commissioning text-based works by Lawrence Weiner, Jenny Holzer, and Qiu Zhijie.

morning links september 24 2025 1234753424

Kenny Schachter, an artist, collector, and art world commentator, writes for Artnet that Larry Gagosian has no succession plan for his mega-gallery, claiming that after Gagosian's death the business will not survive. This contradicts earlier reports that Gagosian had assembled a board of directors—including Evan Spiegel, Jenny Saville, J. Tomilson Hill, Glenn Fuhrman, and Delphine Arnault—to plan for the future. Separately, new research suggests Rembrandt's *The Night Watch* (1642) may include imagery borrowed from a lesser-known Dutch artist, with a barking dog in the painting closely resembling an illustration from a 17th-century manual on resisting sexual temptation. The UK art market is also facing increased anti-money laundering enforcement, with HMRC issuing significant fines, including a £158,679 penalty to London-based DYS44 Art Gallery Limited for procedural failures.

centre pompidou close renovation 1234752875

The Centre Pompidou in Paris will close on September 22 for five years of renovation work, leaving the Paris art scene without one of its major institutions. Before closing, visitors have three more days to see the photography exhibition “Wolfgang Tillmans: Nothing could have prepared us – Everything could have prepared us,” which occupies 65,580 square feet in the Bibliothèque Publique d’Information. During the closure, the Pompidou will continue its “Constellation” program, dispersing collection holdings to partner institutions including Centre Pompidou-Metz, West Bund Museum in Shanghai, H’ART Museum in Amsterdam, the Grand Palais, and the future Centre Pompidou Francilien.

new gagosian director marian goodman edith dekyndt 1234752584

Marian Goodman Gallery has taken on representation of artist Edith Dekyndt, whose multidisciplinary practice spans video, sculpture, installation, and performance, with plans to debut her work at Art Basel Paris in October. In other industry moves, Salon 94 now represents Raven Halfmoon, Timothy Taylor Gallery represents Martha Tuttle, Templon adds Martial Raysse, Acquavella Galleries represents Harumi Klossowska de Rola, and Gagosian has hired Aaron Baldinger as a director. Additionally, Jennie Goldstein has been named the inaugural Kippy Stroud Curator at the Whitney Museum, and Sotheby's will sell a tranche of artworks from the collection of the late Leonard Lauder, including Gustav Klimt's Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer, estimated at over $150 million.

robert longo pace gallery review 1234752550

Artist Robert Longo presents a new exhibition at Pace Gallery, featuring his signature large-scale, hyperrealistic drawings that address themes of brutality, conflict, and protest. The show is a revised version of a 2023 exhibition at the Milwaukee Art Museum, with works based on media images of events such as the war in Ukraine, Black Lives Matter protests, and migrant crises. The article critically examines several pieces, including "Untitled (Ferguson Police, August 13, 2014)" and "Untitled (Refugees at Mediterranean Sea, Sub-Saharan Migrants, July 25, 2017)," arguing that Longo's manipulations of source photographs result in melodramatic and dishonest representations.

christies sale david hockney christopher isherwood 1234752644

Christie’s will offer David Hockney’s double portrait *Christopher Isherwood and Don Bachardy* (1968) as a marquee lot in its 20th-century evening sale in New York this November. The painting depicts the English writer Christopher Isherwood and his American artist partner Don Bachardy in their Santa Monica home, and is the first of Hockney’s seven double portraits. No estimate has been announced. The work was previously featured in the “David Hockney 25” survey at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris and in a 2017–18 Hockney retrospective that traveled from Tate Britain to the Centre Pompidou and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

david lynch home studio sale 1234751869

The Hollywood Hills home of the late filmmaker, musician, and artist David Lynch has been listed for sale at $15 million. The 2.3-acre compound, originally built in 1963 by Lloyd Wright (son of Frank Lloyd Wright), was expanded by Lynch over his 35 years of residence to include two neighboring lots. It features 10 bedrooms, 11 bathrooms, an art studio, a workshop, and a private screening room. The property served as both living quarters and workspace, and was even used as a film set for Lynch's 1997 movie *Lost Highway*. The listing shows that the home survived the recent destructive fires in the area, from which Lynch had evacuated shortly before his death in January 2025.

art historian dieter buchart lvmh jean michel basquiat art world 1234751799

Art historian Dieter Buchhart, a leading expert on Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring, will debut a new Basquiat exhibition titled “Signs: Connecting Past and Future” at the Dongdaemun Design Plaza in Seoul, opening September 23 and running through January 31, 2026. In a recent interview with Jing Daily, Buchhart discussed the growing convergence of branding, fashion, and art, highlighting the role of luxury companies like LVMH in underwriting major exhibitions, citing their sponsorship of the 2023 show “Basquiat x Warhol. Painting 4 Hands” without special requests, though the exhibition premiered at LVMH’s Fondation Louis Vuitton.

frieze seoul 2025 sales report 1234750751

The fourth edition of Frieze Seoul opened with strong collector turnout and solid first-day sales, despite a turbulent global art market. High-profile attendees included MoMA PS1 director Connie Butler, Hawai‘i Triennial 2025 cocurator Wassan Al-Khudhairi, and Top 200 Collectors Lonti Ebers, Yassmin Ghandehari, and Qiao Zhibing, alongside K-pop stars Lisa (BLACKPINK), RM (BTS), and The8 and Vernon (Seventeen). Major sales included Hauser & Wirth’s $4.5 million sale of Mark Bradford’s triptych "Okay, then I apologize" (2025) and a George Condo painting for $1.2 million, while White Cube, Thaddaeus Ropac, Pace Gallery, and others reported significant transactions. International blue-chip galleries with Seoul spaces are doubling down, presenting top-tier shows of star artists like James Turrell, Antony Gormley, and Lee Bul, with Korea’s private museums also mounting blockbuster exhibitions.

sally mann black men photographs art work memoir 1234751527

Photographer Sally Mann reveals in her new memoir *Art Work* that she now has reservations about her series “Men,” which features Black men photographed between 2004 and 2018. She writes that she removed 14 of those images from her 2018 exhibition at the National Gallery of Art after the 2017 Whitney Biennial controversy over Dana Schutz’s painting of Emmett Till’s open casket, which made Mann reconsider the ethics of a white artist representing Black subjects. Mann describes the series as “problematic” and acknowledges that historically marginalized people should tell their own stories. She currently has 150 unshown works from the series, which will not appear in a planned 2027 survey.

kadist san francisco gallery closes 1234750754

Kadist, a Paris-based nonprofit art organization, announced the closure of its San Francisco gallery after 14 years of operation. The space, which opened in 2011, was known for commissioning and exhibiting works by international artists such as Hank Willis Thomas, Jota Mombaça, and Ad Minoliti. Joseph Del Pesco, Kadist’s Americas director, stated that the closure was not due to funding issues but rather a strategic shift toward international collaborations with museums across the Americas and beyond. The organization will continue to operate its original space in Paris and maintain its collection of over 2,000 artworks.

an insiders guide to frieze seoul newly found nazi loot goes missing a look at the new national museum of uzbekistan and more morning links for august 28 2025 1234750337

A Nazi-looted painting, *Portrait of a Lady* by Giuseppe Ghislandi, was spotted in a house in Argentina via real estate photos, but vanished before police could seize it. The work once belonged to Jewish dealer Jacques Goudstikker and was linked to SS officer Friedrich Kadgien. Separately, Egyptian doctor Ashraf Eldarir was jailed in the US for smuggling 590 ancient artifacts, using fabricated provenance. Other news includes the upcoming National Museum of Uzbekistan designed by Tadao Ando, a Banksy work moving to London Museum, and an insider's guide to Frieze Seoul.

morning links august 27 2025 1234750043

Bolding Gallery, co-directed by Esme Blair and Sam Lincoln, has carved a niche in London's art scene over the past nine months by staging exhibitions in overlooked architectural spaces. Since its launch in December 2024, the gallery has held nine shows across two venues, featuring 15 artists and prioritizing experimental performance and research-driven practices. Meanwhile, Artnet reports optimism for art fairs in Japan and South Korea, noting that Japan's art auction sales declined only 19% in 2024 to $149.8 million—better than the global 27.3% drop—with a 73.9% sell-through rate, the highest in a decade. Rising artist Yu Nishimura saw his auction total surge from $272,264 to over $2.25 million in 2025.

ole faarup collection christies sale doig ofili 1234749450

Christie’s will host a single-owner sale of the contemporary art collection of Danish businessman Ole Faarup in October, featuring works by Peter Doig, Chris Ofili, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and others. The sale, estimated at up to £22 million, is anchored by two major Doig paintings—Country Rock (1998–99) and Ski Jacket (1994)—and Ofili’s Blossom (1997). Proceeds will fund the newly formed Ole Faarup Art Foundation, which aims to promote Danish art internationally and bring international works to Danish museums.

frick collection enlists steve martin chinas ucca in financial trouble morning links for august 7 2025 1234749053

The Frick Collection has enlisted comedian Steve Martin to create a playful video tour of its newly renovated Fifth Avenue building, aiming to attract visitors after a $220 million revamp. Separately, the UCCA Center for Contemporary Art in China is facing a severe financial crisis, with staff wages withheld for six months due to tightened corporate backing and government restrictions on art that does not align with Communist Party values.

hisachika takahashi rauschenberg assistant artist dead 1234748942

Hisachika Takahashi, an artist who worked as an assistant to Robert Rauschenberg and earlier to Lucio Fontana, has died at age 85. His death was announced by Misako & Rosen, a Tokyo gallery collaborating with Hong Kong's Empty Gallery on a current exhibition of his work. Takahashi remained relatively obscure for decades despite close ties to major figures like Jasper Johns, Brice Marden, and Gordon Matta-Clark, whom he enlisted for his project "From Memory Draw a Map of the United States." He also introduced sushi and sashimi to the menu at Food, the famed artist-run restaurant in New York. In recent years, his work gained renewed attention through efforts by artist Yuki Okumura, leading to exhibitions at WIELS Centre for Contemporary Art in Brussels and Fondazione Prada in Milan.

france bill looted artworks museums ethics morning links 1234748621

France's government has introduced a bill aimed at accelerating the return of artworks looted during the colonial era to their countries of origin, covering items acquired through theft, looting, or forced transfers between 1815 and 1972. The legislation, set for Senate debate in September, seeks to bypass current French laws that have slowed restitution processes. Separately, a new book by Gareth Harris titled 'Towards the Ethical Art Museum' argues that museum ethics codes are often insufficient and calls for a shift in mindset around restitution and provenance.

morning links july 30 2025 1234748534

The article reports on a generational shift in the art world, with younger gallerists (millennials and Gen Z) redefining success away from the traditional empire-building model. It highlights the recent closures of Venus Over Manhattan and Tim Blum's gallery, but notes that emerging dealers like Bridget Donahue and Matthew Brown are prioritizing collaboration, transparency, and a sustainable pace—attending fewer art fairs and building tight-knit communities rather than large client bases. Separately, the article covers Hauser & Wirth's announcement of a new gallery in Palo Alto, California, set to open in spring 2026, marking the mega-gallery's first Bay Area location and its third in California.

multimedia artist raymond saunders dies at 90 1234747890

Raymond Saunders, a multimedia artist known for his enigmatic, sociopolitical paintings and assemblage style, has died at age 90. His passing was announced jointly by his representing galleries—Casemore, Andrew Kreps, and David Zwirner—on Instagram. Saunders's work often explored the Black American experience through extensive use of black paint and complex narratives, as articulated in his influential 1967 essay "Black Is a Color." His first career-spanning retrospective, "Flowers from a Black Garden," recently closed at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, his hometown. Saunders had a long teaching career in the Bay Area and received numerous honors, including a Rome Prize Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship.

rashid johnson painting howard lutnick tequila video 1234747564

United States Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick posted a video on social media showing off a new tequila bottle, but the backdrop featured a painting from Rashid Johnson's "Anxious Red" series. The artwork, confirmed by Hauser & Wirth as an authentic Johnson piece purchased on the secondary market, sparked criticism online due to the irony of Lutnick—a Trump appointee whose administration has cut public health funding—owning a work born from pandemic-era anxiety. The series originally supported the WHO's Covid-19 Solidarity Response Fund through a 2020 charity auction, the same organization Trump withdrew the U.S. from on his first day in office.

jordan wolfson little rooms basel fondation beyeler review 1234745590

Jordan Wolfson's new virtual reality artwork "Little Room" at the Fondation Beyeler in Basel, Switzerland, immerses participants in a multi-stage experience that begins with a full-body scan and proceeds to a VR encounter designed to be "morally and emotionally challenging." The piece combines elements from Wolfson's earlier puppet-based works with his notorious VR piece "Real Violence" (2017), which sparked controversy at the Whitney Biennial for depicting a brutal beating. Participants are paired, scanned, and guided through the experience by assistants, with early reactions suggesting the work provokes strong emotional responses.

middle east art fair race doha dubai and abu dhabi art basel 1234744406

Art Basel has announced a surprise deal to launch a new art fair in Qatar next year, partnering with Qatar Sports Investments (QSI) and QC+, a subsidiary of Qatar's sovereign wealth fund and commercial arm of Qatar Museums. The fair will debut with around 50 galleries in Doha, intentionally smaller than Basel's other fairs, with a distinct character aimed at building a long-term, sustainable event. The deal comes after rumors that Basel might take over Abu Dhabi Art, and as the region's art scene intensifies, with Art Dubai recently poaching Basel's global head of gallery relations Dunja Gottwies as its new director.

frieze london frieze masters 2025 exhibitor lists 1234744374

Frieze has announced the exhibitor lists for its two concurrent October fairs in London: Frieze London and Frieze Masters, which will run from October 15 to 19 in Regent's Park. Frieze London will feature around 160 galleries, including blue-chip names like Gagosian, Pace, Hauser & Wirth, and David Zwirner, alongside 58 London-based galleries. Frieze Masters, with some 120 exhibitors, will be the first edition under the direction of Emanuela Tarizzo. Curated sections include Artist-to-Artist at Frieze London, where artists nominate peers, and Spotlight at Frieze Masters, organized by Valerie Cassel Oliver. Frieze Sculpture, curated by Fatoş Üstek, will run from September 17 to November 2 in the English Gardens.

hauser wirth represents cristina iglesia rio de janeiros national museum of brazil temporarily reopens tel aviv museum of art staffers protest morning links for june 3 2025 1234744138

Hauser & Wirth has announced global representation of Spanish sculptor Cristina Iglesias, who will depart Marian Goodman Gallery after over two decades. The gallery will feature her new work "Entwined VI" at Art Basel this month and host a solo exhibition at its London gallery in October. Separately, Rio de Janeiro's National Museum of Brazil is temporarily reopening three galleries seven years after a devastating fire destroyed 90% of its collection, showcasing surviving artifacts like the Bendegó meteorite. Meanwhile, staff at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art have been protesting daily since April over the war in Gaza, reflecting broader protests across Israel.

lorna simpson met museum painting survey review 1234743323

Lorna Simpson's paintings are the subject of a new survey exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, titled "Source Notes," on view through November 2. The show features over 20 paintings created between 2014 and 2024, marking the first exhibition to survey Simpson's output in this medium. Curated by Lauren Rosati, the exhibition aims to provide an overview of her painterly practice while connecting it to her collage work, with two vitrines displaying her collages to illustrate the fluidity between the two practices. Simpson, best known for her photography from the 1980s, debuted her paintings at the 2015 Venice Biennale organized by the late curator Okwui Enwezor.

estate of susan rothenberg who fused symbolism with abstraction joins hauser wirth 1234742725

Hauser & Wirth, the mega-gallery with locations across three continents, has announced its representation of the estate of Susan Rothenberg, the influential painter who died in 2020. Rothenberg, known for her psychologically charged works featuring horses, disembodied limbs, and uncanny landscapes, was previously represented by Sperone Westwater gallery from 1987 until her death. The gallery will debut Rothenberg's work at Art Basel in June 2025, followed by her first solo exhibition with Hauser & Wirth in New York in September 2025.

christies 21st century auction may 2025 marlene dumas 1234742219

Christie's 21st century evening sale on May 14, 2025, generated $96.4 million against a presale low estimate of $79.5 million, with 39 lots offered and a sell-through rate of 90% before withdrawals. The top lot was Jean-Michel Basquiat's 'Baby Boom' (1982), which sold for $23.4 million with fees, consigned by collector Peter M. Brant. Marlene Dumas's 'Miss January' (1997) achieved $13.6 million, setting a new record for the most expensive living female artist, surpassing Jenny Saville's previous record. Other notable sales included Simone Leigh's 'Sentinel' (2020) at $5.7 million, while works by Ellsworth Kelly and Felix Gonzalez-Torres failed to sell.