irl1
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Dec 14, 2021 19:33:56 GMT 1, Thinkspace Projects is pleased to present the fifth and final colorway of the 'Gaia' figure from Hebru Brantley. Released in support of his museum exhibition 'Saints & Shepherds' at the Fort Wayne Museum of Art in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Initially only available for in-person sales at the museum's gift shop, now that the opening week of the show has passed, we are issuing the remaining copies online so that fans around the world can have a chance to complete their set.
HEBRU BRANTLEY “GAIA” vinyl figure 'Black and Gold edition' 7.5 x 5.5 x 5.5 inches Edition of 250 $225
The fifth and final color way for ‘Gaia’. Only 100 copies available for this special online drop to help benefit the FWMoA's gift shop and the museum's educational programming.
Available this Wednesday, December 15 at 10am Los Angeles / 1pm New York City via our web shop. Link below.
Figures WILL NOT ship until late JANUARY 2022. These are NOT available to ship until after the holidays. Please do not purchase and expect to give as a gift. Thank you.
shop.thinkspaceprojects.com/
Thinkspace Projects is pleased to present the fifth and final colorway of the 'Gaia' figure from Hebru Brantley. Released in support of his museum exhibition 'Saints & Shepherds' at the Fort Wayne Museum of Art in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Initially only available for in-person sales at the museum's gift shop, now that the opening week of the show has passed, we are issuing the remaining copies online so that fans around the world can have a chance to complete their set. HEBRU BRANTLEY “GAIA” vinyl figure 'Black and Gold edition' 7.5 x 5.5 x 5.5 inches Edition of 250 $225 The fifth and final color way for ‘Gaia’. Only 100 copies available for this special online drop to help benefit the FWMoA's gift shop and the museum's educational programming. Available this Wednesday, December 15 at 10am Los Angeles / 1pm New York City via our web shop. Link below. Figures WILL NOT ship until late JANUARY 2022. These are NOT available to ship until after the holidays. Please do not purchase and expect to give as a gift. Thank you. shop.thinkspaceprojects.com/
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kjg
Junior Member
🗨️ 4,388
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December 2014
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by kjg on Dec 15, 2021 10:43:52 GMT 1, David Kordansky will be showing new works by Jonas Wood. The exhibition Plants and Animals will open on January 22.
David Kordansky will be showing new works by Jonas Wood. The exhibition Plants and Animals will open on January 22.
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irl1
Full Member
🗨️ 9,274
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 1, 2022 13:43:36 GMT 1, And were off, sorry no NFT's (non-fungible tat) here
ARCA TIME-LIMITED EDITION (SIGNED)
Hand-signed by ARCA and the AI
Time-limited #CIRCAECONOMY Edition
Only Available Until Midnight 31 January
shop.circa.art/
And were off, sorry no NFT's (non-fungible tat) here ARCA TIME-LIMITED EDITION (SIGNED) Hand-signed by ARCA and the AI Time-limited #CIRCAECONOMY Edition Only Available Until Midnight 31 January shop.circa.art/
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irl1
Full Member
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 4, 2022 18:28:50 GMT 1, A few David Shrigley originals left at Stephen Friedman Gallery
DAVID SHRIGLEY Untitled, 2021 Acrylic on paper 76 x 56cm (30 x 22in) Framed: 82 x 62cm (32 1/4 x 24 1/2in)
£ 5,500
privateviews.artlogic.net/2/fda48a2733e020f218cc7f/
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irl1
Full Member
🗨️ 9,274
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 6, 2022 18:10:09 GMT 1, BRAD PHILLIPS
Untitled (Sex, Drugs, and...), 2022
Watercolor and archival pigment print on 350 gsm Hahnemuhle museum etching paper with deckled edge • 13.25" x 10" • Hand-embellished series of 20 + 3 APs + 2 PPs • Signed, numbered, and dated en verso
$300
exhibitiona.com/collections/untitled-sex-drugs-and?
BRAD PHILLIPS Untitled (Sex, Drugs, and...), 2022 Watercolor and archival pigment print on 350 gsm Hahnemuhle museum etching paper with deckled edge • 13.25" x 10" • Hand-embellished series of 20 + 3 APs + 2 PPs • Signed, numbered, and dated en verso $300 exhibitiona.com/collections/untitled-sex-drugs-and?
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by amputeerich on Jan 7, 2022 20:57:57 GMT 1,
I actually really like this. Really eerie and atmospheric. Will try to check it out for sure, thanks for the heads up.
I actually really like this. Really eerie and atmospheric. Will try to check it out for sure, thanks for the heads up.
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Deleted
🗨️ 0
👍🏻
January 1970
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by Deleted on Jan 7, 2022 21:22:14 GMT 1, Thanks so much for the heads up. I have just had a look and absolutely love these
Thanks so much for the heads up. I have just had a look and absolutely love these
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irl1
Full Member
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 8, 2022 17:26:35 GMT 1, 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY On view at Phillips New York, 13 January - 20 February 2022
About the Exhibition Phillips is pleased to present 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY, an important and exciting exhibition spanning over fifty years of graffiti, curated by Arnold Lehman, with Elizabeth Wallace. The exhibition opens on 13 January 2022, running through 20 February, in Phillips’ New York headquarters at 432 Park Avenue. GRAFFITI includes works by a broad cross section of those who forged the graffiti centers of New York and Los Angeles. Comprising about 150 works consigned by artists, galleries and private collectors, the exhibition represents both the long history and broad scope of graffiti. GRAFFITI also includes major loans from the Sidney Janis collection at the Brooklyn Museum.
“Graffiti is the only artform with which every single American has firsthand experience. It elicits a response in people from all backgrounds, ranging across a spectrum from reverence to outrage. 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY aims to turn the page, shifting the paradigm, as we embrace graffiti’s contributions to 20th and 21st century contemporary art. It is important to elevate this cultural phenomenon and recognize all the great artists who participated in its development, including Jean-Michel Basquiat, Chaz Bojórquez, CRASH, Al Díaz, EKLIPS, Fab 5 Freddy, FUTURA, Keith Haring, HAZE, KAWS, KRUSH, Lady Pink, Mister Cartoon, Lee Quiñones, and so many others. We look forward to celebrating these works in New York, a city that has played such a significant role in graffiti’s history. 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY will kick off the Spring season at PHILLIPS.” – Arnold Lehman
www.phillips.com/graffiti?
Jean-Michel Basquiat collaboration with Keith Haring, FUTURA, et al., Untitled (Fun Fridge), 1981-1985
1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY On view at Phillips New York, 13 January - 20 February 2022 About the Exhibition Phillips is pleased to present 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY, an important and exciting exhibition spanning over fifty years of graffiti, curated by Arnold Lehman, with Elizabeth Wallace. The exhibition opens on 13 January 2022, running through 20 February, in Phillips’ New York headquarters at 432 Park Avenue. GRAFFITI includes works by a broad cross section of those who forged the graffiti centers of New York and Los Angeles. Comprising about 150 works consigned by artists, galleries and private collectors, the exhibition represents both the long history and broad scope of graffiti. GRAFFITI also includes major loans from the Sidney Janis collection at the Brooklyn Museum. “Graffiti is the only artform with which every single American has firsthand experience. It elicits a response in people from all backgrounds, ranging across a spectrum from reverence to outrage. 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY aims to turn the page, shifting the paradigm, as we embrace graffiti’s contributions to 20th and 21st century contemporary art. It is important to elevate this cultural phenomenon and recognize all the great artists who participated in its development, including Jean-Michel Basquiat, Chaz Bojórquez, CRASH, Al Díaz, EKLIPS, Fab 5 Freddy, FUTURA, Keith Haring, HAZE, KAWS, KRUSH, Lady Pink, Mister Cartoon, Lee Quiñones, and so many others. We look forward to celebrating these works in New York, a city that has played such a significant role in graffiti’s history. 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY will kick off the Spring season at PHILLIPS.” – Arnold Lehman www.phillips.com/graffiti?Jean-Michel Basquiat collaboration with Keith Haring, FUTURA, et al., Untitled (Fun Fridge), 1981-1985
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Deleted
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👍🏻
January 1970
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by Deleted on Jan 10, 2022 18:19:25 GMT 1,
This looks good
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by inefficiency of on Jan 10, 2022 18:49:08 GMT 1, Thanks for the link irl, nice read.
Does anyone have any suggestions for anything going on in London this Thursday? Any exhibitions to visit? There for the day on my own for a new tattoo and then want to explore afterwards.
Thanks for the link irl, nice read.
Does anyone have any suggestions for anything going on in London this Thursday? Any exhibitions to visit? There for the day on my own for a new tattoo and then want to explore afterwards.
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irl1
Full Member
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 10, 2022 19:03:29 GMT 1, Thanks for the link irl, nice read. Does anyone have any suggestions for anything going on in London this Thursday? Any exhibitions to visit? There for the day on my own for a new tattoo and then want to explore afterwards. Might be something in here for you
www.artsy.net/shows/london-united-kingdom
Thanks for the link irl, nice read. Does anyone have any suggestions for anything going on in London this Thursday? Any exhibitions to visit? There for the day on my own for a new tattoo and then want to explore afterwards. Might be something in here for you www.artsy.net/shows/london-united-kingdom
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irl1
Full Member
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 11, 2022 15:17:13 GMT 1, Sandra Chevrier
First we’d like to wish you a happy new year and we hope everyone will work together so we and our loved ones can enjoy a brighter future. 2022 is the 10th anniversary of the series “Cages” and we wanted to start the year with a special print release of a Triptych so not one but 3 prints!
Release date and time: on Tuesday, January 18 at noon (New York Time / Eastern Time)
Dimensions of each print / Dimensions de chaque print : 19” x 14,5”
Medium / Médium : Giclée on Watercolour Canson 100% Coton, 310 g. / Giclée sur papier Aquarelle Canson 100%coton 310g.
Signed and numbered / Signés et numérotés
Edition of / de 100
Price/Prix en USD for the 3 prints : $1200 USD
Comes with a Certificate of authenticity / Sera accompagné d'un certificat d’authenticité
SHIPPING / EXPÉDITION
Canada / USA. $40 USD
International $50 USD
www.sandrachevrier.com/blog/2022/1/8/triptych-release
Sandra Chevrier First we’d like to wish you a happy new year and we hope everyone will work together so we and our loved ones can enjoy a brighter future. 2022 is the 10th anniversary of the series “Cages” and we wanted to start the year with a special print release of a Triptych so not one but 3 prints! Release date and time: on Tuesday, January 18 at noon (New York Time / Eastern Time) Dimensions of each print / Dimensions de chaque print : 19” x 14,5” Medium / Médium : Giclée on Watercolour Canson 100% Coton, 310 g. / Giclée sur papier Aquarelle Canson 100%coton 310g. Signed and numbered / Signés et numérotés Edition of / de 100 Price/Prix en USD for the 3 prints : $1200 USD Comes with a Certificate of authenticity / Sera accompagné d'un certificat d’authenticité SHIPPING / EXPÉDITION Canada / USA. $40 USD International $50 USD www.sandrachevrier.com/blog/2022/1/8/triptych-release
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irl1
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 11, 2022 19:40:29 GMT 1, Dallas Contemporary
We are proud to announce a new limited edition relief print by artist Peter Halley made for and benefitting dallas contemporary. "twelve cells" utilizes a highly innovative digital flat-bed printing technique that, through multiple passes of ink, allows the artist to build up his forms to achieve the kind of low relief surface that characterizes his paintings. twelve cells launches in conjunction with the artist's current solo exhibition, CELL GRIDS, on view at the museum through march 2022.
Peter Halley twelve cells, 2021 low relief UV inkjet print on 6 mm dibond 30.5 h x 23.5 w x .24 d inches edition size: 60 + 10 APs unframed. signed on verso $4000 + shipping
To purchase please click below to email shop@dallascontemporary.org and inquire about the work's availability.
www.dallascontemporary.org/peter-haley
Dallas Contemporary We are proud to announce a new limited edition relief print by artist Peter Halley made for and benefitting dallas contemporary. "twelve cells" utilizes a highly innovative digital flat-bed printing technique that, through multiple passes of ink, allows the artist to build up his forms to achieve the kind of low relief surface that characterizes his paintings. twelve cells launches in conjunction with the artist's current solo exhibition, CELL GRIDS, on view at the museum through march 2022. Peter Halley twelve cells, 2021 low relief UV inkjet print on 6 mm dibond 30.5 h x 23.5 w x .24 d inches edition size: 60 + 10 APs unframed. signed on verso $4000 + shipping To purchase please click below to email shop@dallascontemporary.org and inquire about the work's availability. www.dallascontemporary.org/peter-haley
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irl1
Full Member
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 15, 2022 16:25:41 GMT 1, SPECIAL LIMITED EDITION LAUNCH by JAN KALAB
Celebrating the New Year 2022 as well as the upcoming tiger Year, Danysz gallery will be pleased to unveil and launch a new limited edition Jan Kalab shape painting. The launch will be announced on our Instagram @danyszgallery account on Tuesday 18 January at noon (Paris time).
As it is a very limited series a lucky draw is organized to give a preview access the morning before to the lucky 50 winners of the draw
danyszgallery.com/
Email to be included in draw
info@danyszgallery.com
SPECIAL LIMITED EDITION LAUNCH by JAN KALAB Celebrating the New Year 2022 as well as the upcoming tiger Year, Danysz gallery will be pleased to unveil and launch a new limited edition Jan Kalab shape painting. The launch will be announced on our Instagram @danyszgallery account on Tuesday 18 January at noon (Paris time). As it is a very limited series a lucky draw is organized to give a preview access the morning before to the lucky 50 winners of the draw danyszgallery.com/Email to be included in draw info@danyszgallery.com
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irl1
Full Member
🗨️ 9,274
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 17, 2022 18:28:19 GMT 1, DAMIEN HIRST
Forgiving and Forgetting
January 20–February 26, 2022
541 West 24th Street, New York
This exhibition features sculptures and new paintings by Damien Hirst never before seen in the US, including representations of iconic Disney cartoon characters carved out of pink Portuguese marble and white Carrara marble from the artist’s Treasures series.
gagosian.com/exhibitions/2022/damien-hirst-forgiving-and-forgetting/?
Damien Hirst, Mickey, 2017
DAMIEN HIRST Forgiving and Forgetting January 20–February 26, 2022 541 West 24th Street, New York This exhibition features sculptures and new paintings by Damien Hirst never before seen in the US, including representations of iconic Disney cartoon characters carved out of pink Portuguese marble and white Carrara marble from the artist’s Treasures series. gagosian.com/exhibitions/2022/damien-hirst-forgiving-and-forgetting/?Damien Hirst, Mickey, 2017
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irl1
Full Member
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 18, 2022 11:12:32 GMT 1, New KAWS print
KAWS
SHARE
2021
screen print on Stonehenge gray paper
20 x 16 inches
50.8 x 40.6 cm
Edition of 500, with 100 AP
signed, numbered, and dated
(Inv #8437)
£3,640 + VAT
To purchase this edition, please email:
editions@serpentinegalleries.org
On the occasion of the project KAWS: NEW FICTION presented by SERPENTINE x ACUTE ART x FORTNITE, KAWS has produced a limited edition print.
New KAWS print KAWS SHARE 2021 screen print on Stonehenge gray paper 20 x 16 inches 50.8 x 40.6 cm Edition of 500, with 100 AP signed, numbered, and dated (Inv #8437) £3,640 + VAT To purchase this edition, please email: editions@serpentinegalleries.org On the occasion of the project KAWS: NEW FICTION presented by SERPENTINE x ACUTE ART x FORTNITE, KAWS has produced a limited edition print.
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irl1
Full Member
🗨️ 9,274
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 18, 2022 19:18:30 GMT 1, A huge congratulations to Lydia Pettit on her upcoming exhibition with White Cube this January
"Building on the artist’s previous paintings that explored Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, this new series comprising of works in oil, embroidery and quilting are centred on the alienation we experience within our bodies" - White Cube.
Lydia's screenprint edition 'I Never Could Cross My Legs', is currently on display at Jealous East until 30th January as part of our 'Back To Skool' exhibition.
You can also purchase the artwork through the Jealous website.
Head to White Cube's website to see the online exhibition 'Introductions | Lydia Pettit' between 28th January - 8th March 2022, at whitecube.com.
jealousgallery.com/products/i-never-could-cross-my-legs?
A huge congratulations to Lydia Pettit on her upcoming exhibition with White Cube this January "Building on the artist’s previous paintings that explored Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, this new series comprising of works in oil, embroidery and quilting are centred on the alienation we experience within our bodies" - White Cube. Lydia's screenprint edition 'I Never Could Cross My Legs', is currently on display at Jealous East until 30th January as part of our 'Back To Skool' exhibition. You can also purchase the artwork through the Jealous website. Head to White Cube's website to see the online exhibition 'Introductions | Lydia Pettit' between 28th January - 8th March 2022, at whitecube.com. jealousgallery.com/products/i-never-could-cross-my-legs?
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irl1
Full Member
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 18, 2022 21:47:21 GMT 1, MTN Limited Editions - Madsaki
€50.00
Produced by Montana Colors 20.7 x 7 x 7 cm Limited edition of 500 copies Color : Dharma Green 2021
Please note that orders are limited to one spray can per person and that parcels can be shipped exclusively inside European Union. All orders that don't respect these indications will be cancelled and refunded
shop.legrandj.eu/products/mtn-limited-editions-madsaki?
MTN Limited Editions - Madsaki €50.00 Produced by Montana Colors 20.7 x 7 x 7 cm Limited edition of 500 copies Color : Dharma Green 2021 Please note that orders are limited to one spray can per person and that parcels can be shipped exclusively inside European Union. All orders that don't respect these indications will be cancelled and refunded shop.legrandj.eu/products/mtn-limited-editions-madsaki?
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irl1
Full Member
🗨️ 9,274
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Jan 20, 2022 18:53:02 GMT 1, 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY On view at Phillips New York, 13 January - 20 February 2022 About the Exhibition Phillips is pleased to present 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY, an important and exciting exhibition spanning over fifty years of graffiti, curated by Arnold Lehman, with Elizabeth Wallace. The exhibition opens on 13 January 2022, running through 20 February, in Phillips’ New York headquarters at 432 Park Avenue. GRAFFITI includes works by a broad cross section of those who forged the graffiti centers of New York and Los Angeles. Comprising about 150 works consigned by artists, galleries and private collectors, the exhibition represents both the long history and broad scope of graffiti. GRAFFITI also includes major loans from the Sidney Janis collection at the Brooklyn Museum. “Graffiti is the only artform with which every single American has firsthand experience. It elicits a response in people from all backgrounds, ranging across a spectrum from reverence to outrage. 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY aims to turn the page, shifting the paradigm, as we embrace graffiti’s contributions to 20th and 21st century contemporary art. It is important to elevate this cultural phenomenon and recognize all the great artists who participated in its development, including Jean-Michel Basquiat, Chaz Bojórquez, CRASH, Al Díaz, EKLIPS, Fab 5 Freddy, FUTURA, Keith Haring, HAZE, KAWS, KRUSH, Lady Pink, Mister Cartoon, Lee Quiñones, and so many others. We look forward to celebrating these works in New York, a city that has played such a significant role in graffiti’s history. 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY will kick off the Spring season at PHILLIPS.” – Arnold Lehman www.phillips.com/graffiti?Jean-Michel Basquiat collaboration with Keith Haring, FUTURA, et al., Untitled (Fun Fridge), 1981-1985 Check the pieces in this
1970s / GRAFFITI / TODAY
www.phillips.com/store/1970s-graffiti-today?
1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY On view at Phillips New York, 13 January - 20 February 2022 About the Exhibition Phillips is pleased to present 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY, an important and exciting exhibition spanning over fifty years of graffiti, curated by Arnold Lehman, with Elizabeth Wallace. The exhibition opens on 13 January 2022, running through 20 February, in Phillips’ New York headquarters at 432 Park Avenue. GRAFFITI includes works by a broad cross section of those who forged the graffiti centers of New York and Los Angeles. Comprising about 150 works consigned by artists, galleries and private collectors, the exhibition represents both the long history and broad scope of graffiti. GRAFFITI also includes major loans from the Sidney Janis collection at the Brooklyn Museum. “Graffiti is the only artform with which every single American has firsthand experience. It elicits a response in people from all backgrounds, ranging across a spectrum from reverence to outrage. 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY aims to turn the page, shifting the paradigm, as we embrace graffiti’s contributions to 20th and 21st century contemporary art. It is important to elevate this cultural phenomenon and recognize all the great artists who participated in its development, including Jean-Michel Basquiat, Chaz Bojórquez, CRASH, Al Díaz, EKLIPS, Fab 5 Freddy, FUTURA, Keith Haring, HAZE, KAWS, KRUSH, Lady Pink, Mister Cartoon, Lee Quiñones, and so many others. We look forward to celebrating these works in New York, a city that has played such a significant role in graffiti’s history. 1970S / GRAFFITI / TODAY will kick off the Spring season at PHILLIPS.” – Arnold Lehman www.phillips.com/graffiti?Jean-Michel Basquiat collaboration with Keith Haring, FUTURA, et al., Untitled (Fun Fridge), 1981-1985 Check the pieces in this 1970s / GRAFFITI / TODAY www.phillips.com/store/1970s-graffiti-today?
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mojo
Junior Member
🗨️ 2,190
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May 2014
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by mojo on Jan 28, 2022 15:45:29 GMT 1, John Brandler, elbowing his way into the Banksy spotlight yet again and pissing off the community. link
‘It will stay in our hearts’: Port Talbot prepares to bid farewell to its Banksy
They sang, recited poems and reminisced fondly about that wonderful winter’s day when the town of Port Talbot woke to find a mural by the street artist Banksy on the walls of a steelworker’s garage.
Three years on, the piece – Season’s Greetings – is on the brink of leaving this industrial corner of south Wales, and residents gathered to bid farewell to an artwork they have come to love.
“We knew this day would come,” said Bev Simmonds-Owen, one of the organisers of a candlelit vigil arranged to mark the end of an era. “We’ve been lucky to have it for three years and wherever it goes it will always be the Port Talbot Banksy. It will stay in our hearts.”
A local poet, Derek Davies, performed his bittersweet piece: Port Talbot’s Got a Banksy. Children sang Little Snowflake, the tune Banksy’s people dubbed over video footage of the mural. Speeches were made calling for it to be left in Port Talbot.
But Simmonds-Owen preferred to be optimistic, pointing out that the Banksy had given a huge boost to the cultural life of the town, prompting others to take up spray cans and leading to the creation of an ever-expanding street art trail.
“We can claim to be the street art capital of Wales. We may not have the funding to build a big, fancy art gallery, but we have the power to turn our streets into a gallery,” she said.
“Port Talbot has a reputation of being an industrial town, a grey town, the colour of concrete, the colour of steel. But I think it’s a beautiful thing to make it a colourful town.”
The Banksy appeared just before Christmas 2018 in the Taibach area of the town, close to the Tata steelworks (and the childhood home of Richard Burton). From one angle it shows a child apparently enjoying a snow shower and trying to catch the flakes on their tongue. From another it becomes clear that what is falling on the child is ash.
Tens of thousands of people visited. Round-the-clock security had to be introduced to protect the artwork, and it created a cottage industry in souvenirs – mugs, coasters, keyrings – carrying images of the work.
An Essex art dealer, John Brandler, bought the piece from the garage owner and in May 2019 the Banksy, all 4.5 tonnes of it, was moved to a former police station in the town. But the owner of the building now wants its space back and Neath Port Talbot council is not prepared to meet the cost of transferring it to another venue. Any day now the Banksy will be trucked out of Wales.
Brandler said he was sad it was having to leave Wales, and said it may next surface in the east of England, or could even head out of the UK.
There are some who argue the council should do more. The Plaid Cymru councillor Nigel Hunt said that if his party were in power it would buy the Banksy and build a gallery around it. “Banksy is a modern master,” he said. “For this town to lose such a wonderful piece of art is a travesty.”
So many people have a story about the piece. Steve Bevan, a decorator, was passing on his bicycle on the morning of the Banksy’s appearance when he saw a member of the artist’s team filming drone footage. “I nearly fell off my bike when I saw it,” he said. At the vigil, Bevan sang his song Black Smoke, honouring Banksy and the mural’s public health theme.
Paul Jenkins, a Cardiff theatre director, has been collecting reactions to Port Talbot for a play telling the story of the town’s Banksy and has secured funding for ARTwalk, which has given a platform for local artists and has also commissioned works from internationally renowned artists such as the Bristol-based HazardOne, who has created a mural of Richard Burton and is set to do one of another Hollywood star who hails from Port Talbot, Michael Sheen.
“We feel the Banksy has opened the door for Port Talbot,” said Jenkins. “There’s no reason why Port Talbot can’t be known for art and creativity as well as industry.”
A local street artist, Steve Jenkins, has just finished a mural on the garage used by Banksy. Called Speedings Greetings, it draws attention to the air quality problems caused by vehicles on the nearby M4.
“There is a sadness that it is going,” he said. “Many in this area feel it belongs in Port Talbot, but there are plenty of local artists that will help out brightening up the town.”
John Brandler, elbowing his way into the Banksy spotlight yet again and pissing off the community. link‘It will stay in our hearts’: Port Talbot prepares to bid farewell to its Banksy They sang, recited poems and reminisced fondly about that wonderful winter’s day when the town of Port Talbot woke to find a mural by the street artist Banksy on the walls of a steelworker’s garage. Three years on, the piece – Season’s Greetings – is on the brink of leaving this industrial corner of south Wales, and residents gathered to bid farewell to an artwork they have come to love. “We knew this day would come,” said Bev Simmonds-Owen, one of the organisers of a candlelit vigil arranged to mark the end of an era. “We’ve been lucky to have it for three years and wherever it goes it will always be the Port Talbot Banksy. It will stay in our hearts.” A local poet, Derek Davies, performed his bittersweet piece: Port Talbot’s Got a Banksy. Children sang Little Snowflake, the tune Banksy’s people dubbed over video footage of the mural. Speeches were made calling for it to be left in Port Talbot. But Simmonds-Owen preferred to be optimistic, pointing out that the Banksy had given a huge boost to the cultural life of the town, prompting others to take up spray cans and leading to the creation of an ever-expanding street art trail. “We can claim to be the street art capital of Wales. We may not have the funding to build a big, fancy art gallery, but we have the power to turn our streets into a gallery,” she said. “Port Talbot has a reputation of being an industrial town, a grey town, the colour of concrete, the colour of steel. But I think it’s a beautiful thing to make it a colourful town.” The Banksy appeared just before Christmas 2018 in the Taibach area of the town, close to the Tata steelworks (and the childhood home of Richard Burton). From one angle it shows a child apparently enjoying a snow shower and trying to catch the flakes on their tongue. From another it becomes clear that what is falling on the child is ash. Tens of thousands of people visited. Round-the-clock security had to be introduced to protect the artwork, and it created a cottage industry in souvenirs – mugs, coasters, keyrings – carrying images of the work. An Essex art dealer, John Brandler, bought the piece from the garage owner and in May 2019 the Banksy, all 4.5 tonnes of it, was moved to a former police station in the town. But the owner of the building now wants its space back and Neath Port Talbot council is not prepared to meet the cost of transferring it to another venue. Any day now the Banksy will be trucked out of Wales. Brandler said he was sad it was having to leave Wales, and said it may next surface in the east of England, or could even head out of the UK. There are some who argue the council should do more. The Plaid Cymru councillor Nigel Hunt said that if his party were in power it would buy the Banksy and build a gallery around it. “Banksy is a modern master,” he said. “For this town to lose such a wonderful piece of art is a travesty.” So many people have a story about the piece. Steve Bevan, a decorator, was passing on his bicycle on the morning of the Banksy’s appearance when he saw a member of the artist’s team filming drone footage. “I nearly fell off my bike when I saw it,” he said. At the vigil, Bevan sang his song Black Smoke, honouring Banksy and the mural’s public health theme. Paul Jenkins, a Cardiff theatre director, has been collecting reactions to Port Talbot for a play telling the story of the town’s Banksy and has secured funding for ARTwalk, which has given a platform for local artists and has also commissioned works from internationally renowned artists such as the Bristol-based HazardOne, who has created a mural of Richard Burton and is set to do one of another Hollywood star who hails from Port Talbot, Michael Sheen. “We feel the Banksy has opened the door for Port Talbot,” said Jenkins. “There’s no reason why Port Talbot can’t be known for art and creativity as well as industry.” A local street artist, Steve Jenkins, has just finished a mural on the garage used by Banksy. Called Speedings Greetings, it draws attention to the air quality problems caused by vehicles on the nearby M4. “There is a sadness that it is going,” he said. “Many in this area feel it belongs in Port Talbot, but there are plenty of local artists that will help out brightening up the town.”
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mojo
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by mojo on Jan 29, 2022 14:56:54 GMT 1, link ‘Huge mess of theft and fraud:’ artists sound alarm as NFT crime proliferates The digital marketplace for NFTs grew to an estimated $22bn last year but companies face challenges monitoring stolen art
‘It is much easier to make forgeries in the blockchain space than in the traditional art world,’ says Tina Rivers When Lois van Baarle, a Dutch artist, scoured the biggest NFT marketplace for her name late last year, she found more than 100 pieces of her art for sale. None of them had been put up by her.
Van Baarle is a popular digital artist, with millions of followers on social media. She’s one of a growing number of artists who have had online images of their art stolen, minted as unique digital assets on a blockchain, and offered up to trade in cryptocurrency on the NFT platform OpenSea.
The rise in such thefts comes as the market for non-fungible tokens, or NFTs, exploded last year, growing to an estimated $22bn, attracting Sotheby’s and Christie’s, and driving multimillion-dollar auctions for these new certificates of ownership of digital assets.
OpenSea has grown at a dizzying pace, and is now valued at $13bn. But amid its spectacular rise, the company is doing far too little to prevent the trade in fraudulent NFTs, some artists charge, and is placing much of the burden of policing art fraud on the artists themselves.
OpenSea said in a statement: “It is against our policy to sell NFTs using plagiarized content,” adding that it regularly delisted and banned accounts that did so. The company said it was working to build new image recognition and other tools that would quickly recognize stolen content and protect creators, and that it planned to launch some of them in the first half of this year.
A boon and nightmare for artists In theory, blockchain technology was supposed to make it easier for digital artists to sell unique tokens of ownership, offering buyers a permanent record of ownership linked to the work.
For some artists, the technology opened up a new way to earn money : Kenny Schachter, a New York-based video artist and art writer, embraced NFTs early and said he has made hundreds of thousands of dollars in the past year, after three decades working within an art world in which video art rarely sold.
“We’re in an incredible mushrooming of opportunity for digital artists,” said Schachter. “It’s 1,000% better than a year ago, two years ago, when there was no marketplace for any of this art.”
But other artists say that the past year’s crypto boom has been a nightmare. Among the problems is that anyone can “mint” a digital file as an NFT, whether or not they have rights to it in the first place, and the process is anonymous by default.
“It is much easier to make forgeries in the blockchain space than in the traditional art world. It’s as simple as right-click, save,” said Tina Rivers Ryan, a curator and expert in digital art at the Albright-Knox gallery in Buffalo, New York. “It’s also harder to fight forgers. How do you sue the anonymous holder of a crypto wallet? In which jurisdiction?”
DeviantArt, a decades-old online community for digital artists that hosts half a billion pieces of digital art, began monitoring the blockchain for copies of their users’ work last fall after NFTs based on stolen work by Qing Han, a beloved artist who died in 2020 after publicly chronicling her struggle with cancer, were found for sale on OpenSea.
DeviantArt has sent 90,000 alerts about possible fraud to thousands of their users since then, company executives said. It’s now scanning for fraud across 4m newly minted NFTs each week. The number of alerts doubled from October to November, and grew by 300% from November to mid-December.
In December, bots began attacking the site, Moti Levy, DeviantArt’s chief operations officer said, scraping whole galleries of artists’ works. The pieces would later appear on NFT marketplaces, often with artists’ names and watermarks still attached.
The attacks have focused on DeviantArt’s most popular artists, measured by likes and comments, Levy said, rather than any particular aesthetic.
“Bots are bots,” he said.
‘How much of their valuation is from stolen art?’ Aja Trier, a Texas-based artist who has found viral fame for painting riffs on Van Gogh’s Starry Night featuring various breeds of dog, said she discovered 87,000 NFTs based on images of her work for sale on OpenSea, many of them priced at $9.88 each.
Trier said 500 listings of her stolen work were added in a single night, suggesting the theft was being automated and carried out by bots.
The recourse she has as the legitimate creator of the work, she said, is to write individual copyright infringement takedown requests to OpenSea and to manually monitor for new fraudulent listings – all time-consuming work.
The most effective way to get the company to take down their stolen work, Trier and several other artists said, has been by tweeting angrily about the problem or talking to media outlets.
At least 37 NFTs made based on Trier’s stolen work were bought before OpenSea took down the fraudulent listings, Trier said, and she has not seen any of that money come back to her, even though OpenSea makes a 2.5% commission on each sale.
“It seems to me that they’re making some money on illicit behavior,” Trier said. “They have a $13bn valuation and they’re trying to go public. How much of their valuation is from stolen art?”
The kind of fraud artists were complaining about made up only a small fraction of its transactions, OpenSea said. It took enforcement action on 3,500 collections of NFTs every week for counterfeit or copyright reasons, it said, which represents 0.175% of the platform’s more than 2m total collections. It said the site now lists more than 80m individual NFTs.
But the problem of plagiarism, whatever its scale, was an important one, the company acknowledged: “We are constantly evaluating new ways to do our part.”
At least 37 NFTs made based on Trier’s stolen work were bought before OpenSea took down the fraudulent listings, said artist Aja Trier. ‘One huge mess of theft and fraud and inauthenticity’ The current reporting process for artists whose stolen work is turned into NFTs is confusing and laborious, confirmed Ashli Weiss, a Silicon Valley lawyer who specializes in intellectual property and works with blockchain companies, adding that there is currently little incentive for OpenSea and other marketplaces to fix the problem. “OpenSea is getting paid with each transaction.”
OpenSea disputed the view that it did not have an incentive to tackle art theft and plagiarism: “For more people to join OpenSea or other Web3 communities, these issues must be addressed head-on,” a spokesperson said.
More than half of the company’s current staff works either full-time or extensively on issues of plagiarism and content moderation, OpenSea said, and it is developing “smart moderation” tools to speed up the company’s response to reports of plagiarism.
But the company also defended some of the policies that artists would like to change as essential to its mission. While some artists would like to see a crackdown on bots, creating hundreds or thousands of NFTs at one time is normal for the space, OpenSea said, noting that there are 10,000 “Bored Apes” and more than 8,000 “Pudgy Penguins”, two of the most prominent and commercially successful NFT collections.
Van Baarle, the Dutch digital artist, said that she has seen OpenSea’s process for reporting art fraud improve somewhat over the past year. In the early months of trying to flag her stolen art on the platform the site had a “report” button that never generated any response to her at all. By late December, she said, it had introduced a reporting form that made it substantially easier to log the fraud, and each attempt at least generated an email response.
But the company can still do more to verify an NFT’s legitimacy before the token is offered up for sale, she said, rather than having artists play whack-a-mole with an endless sequence of anonymous grifters.
“For a concept that is supposedly about authenticity, to me it looks like the opposite,” Van Baarle said. “From where I’m standing, it looks like one huge mess of theft and fraud and inauthenticity.”
link‘Huge mess of theft and fraud:’ artists sound alarm as NFT crime proliferates The digital marketplace for NFTs grew to an estimated $22bn last year but companies face challenges monitoring stolen art ‘It is much easier to make forgeries in the blockchain space than in the traditional art world,’ says Tina Rivers When Lois van Baarle, a Dutch artist, scoured the biggest NFT marketplace for her name late last year, she found more than 100 pieces of her art for sale. None of them had been put up by her. Van Baarle is a popular digital artist, with millions of followers on social media. She’s one of a growing number of artists who have had online images of their art stolen, minted as unique digital assets on a blockchain, and offered up to trade in cryptocurrency on the NFT platform OpenSea. The rise in such thefts comes as the market for non-fungible tokens, or NFTs, exploded last year, growing to an estimated $22bn, attracting Sotheby’s and Christie’s, and driving multimillion-dollar auctions for these new certificates of ownership of digital assets. OpenSea has grown at a dizzying pace, and is now valued at $13bn. But amid its spectacular rise, the company is doing far too little to prevent the trade in fraudulent NFTs, some artists charge, and is placing much of the burden of policing art fraud on the artists themselves. OpenSea said in a statement: “It is against our policy to sell NFTs using plagiarized content,” adding that it regularly delisted and banned accounts that did so. The company said it was working to build new image recognition and other tools that would quickly recognize stolen content and protect creators, and that it planned to launch some of them in the first half of this year. A boon and nightmare for artists In theory, blockchain technology was supposed to make it easier for digital artists to sell unique tokens of ownership, offering buyers a permanent record of ownership linked to the work. For some artists, the technology opened up a new way to earn money : Kenny Schachter, a New York-based video artist and art writer, embraced NFTs early and said he has made hundreds of thousands of dollars in the past year, after three decades working within an art world in which video art rarely sold. “We’re in an incredible mushrooming of opportunity for digital artists,” said Schachter. “It’s 1,000% better than a year ago, two years ago, when there was no marketplace for any of this art.” But other artists say that the past year’s crypto boom has been a nightmare. Among the problems is that anyone can “mint” a digital file as an NFT, whether or not they have rights to it in the first place, and the process is anonymous by default. “It is much easier to make forgeries in the blockchain space than in the traditional art world. It’s as simple as right-click, save,” said Tina Rivers Ryan, a curator and expert in digital art at the Albright-Knox gallery in Buffalo, New York. “It’s also harder to fight forgers. How do you sue the anonymous holder of a crypto wallet? In which jurisdiction?” DeviantArt, a decades-old online community for digital artists that hosts half a billion pieces of digital art, began monitoring the blockchain for copies of their users’ work last fall after NFTs based on stolen work by Qing Han, a beloved artist who died in 2020 after publicly chronicling her struggle with cancer, were found for sale on OpenSea. DeviantArt has sent 90,000 alerts about possible fraud to thousands of their users since then, company executives said. It’s now scanning for fraud across 4m newly minted NFTs each week. The number of alerts doubled from October to November, and grew by 300% from November to mid-December. In December, bots began attacking the site, Moti Levy, DeviantArt’s chief operations officer said, scraping whole galleries of artists’ works. The pieces would later appear on NFT marketplaces, often with artists’ names and watermarks still attached. The attacks have focused on DeviantArt’s most popular artists, measured by likes and comments, Levy said, rather than any particular aesthetic. “Bots are bots,” he said. ‘How much of their valuation is from stolen art?’ Aja Trier, a Texas-based artist who has found viral fame for painting riffs on Van Gogh’s Starry Night featuring various breeds of dog, said she discovered 87,000 NFTs based on images of her work for sale on OpenSea, many of them priced at $9.88 each. Trier said 500 listings of her stolen work were added in a single night, suggesting the theft was being automated and carried out by bots. The recourse she has as the legitimate creator of the work, she said, is to write individual copyright infringement takedown requests to OpenSea and to manually monitor for new fraudulent listings – all time-consuming work. The most effective way to get the company to take down their stolen work, Trier and several other artists said, has been by tweeting angrily about the problem or talking to media outlets. At least 37 NFTs made based on Trier’s stolen work were bought before OpenSea took down the fraudulent listings, Trier said, and she has not seen any of that money come back to her, even though OpenSea makes a 2.5% commission on each sale. “It seems to me that they’re making some money on illicit behavior,” Trier said. “They have a $13bn valuation and they’re trying to go public. How much of their valuation is from stolen art?” The kind of fraud artists were complaining about made up only a small fraction of its transactions, OpenSea said. It took enforcement action on 3,500 collections of NFTs every week for counterfeit or copyright reasons, it said, which represents 0.175% of the platform’s more than 2m total collections. It said the site now lists more than 80m individual NFTs. But the problem of plagiarism, whatever its scale, was an important one, the company acknowledged: “We are constantly evaluating new ways to do our part.” At least 37 NFTs made based on Trier’s stolen work were bought before OpenSea took down the fraudulent listings, said artist Aja Trier. ‘One huge mess of theft and fraud and inauthenticity’ The current reporting process for artists whose stolen work is turned into NFTs is confusing and laborious, confirmed Ashli Weiss, a Silicon Valley lawyer who specializes in intellectual property and works with blockchain companies, adding that there is currently little incentive for OpenSea and other marketplaces to fix the problem. “OpenSea is getting paid with each transaction.” OpenSea disputed the view that it did not have an incentive to tackle art theft and plagiarism: “For more people to join OpenSea or other Web3 communities, these issues must be addressed head-on,” a spokesperson said. More than half of the company’s current staff works either full-time or extensively on issues of plagiarism and content moderation, OpenSea said, and it is developing “smart moderation” tools to speed up the company’s response to reports of plagiarism. But the company also defended some of the policies that artists would like to change as essential to its mission. While some artists would like to see a crackdown on bots, creating hundreds or thousands of NFTs at one time is normal for the space, OpenSea said, noting that there are 10,000 “Bored Apes” and more than 8,000 “Pudgy Penguins”, two of the most prominent and commercially successful NFT collections. Van Baarle, the Dutch digital artist, said that she has seen OpenSea’s process for reporting art fraud improve somewhat over the past year. In the early months of trying to flag her stolen art on the platform the site had a “report” button that never generated any response to her at all. By late December, she said, it had introduced a reporting form that made it substantially easier to log the fraud, and each attempt at least generated an email response. But the company can still do more to verify an NFT’s legitimacy before the token is offered up for sale, she said, rather than having artists play whack-a-mole with an endless sequence of anonymous grifters. “For a concept that is supposedly about authenticity, to me it looks like the opposite,” Van Baarle said. “From where I’m standing, it looks like one huge mess of theft and fraud and inauthenticity.”
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irl1
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December 2017
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by Ravnur 2020 on Feb 5, 2022 15:54:05 GMT 1, SHAPESHIFTERS
Saturday, February 5, 2022 2:17 PM Sunday, July 31, 2022 2:17 PM Kunstlinie Esplanade 10 Almere The Netherlands
From 5 February onwards, Kunstlinie Almere and Vroom & Varossieau Gallery present the exhibition Shapeshifters, an exhibition about groundbreaking artists that changed the world of street art. Street artists come from different backgrounds, and they all have different methods of expressing themselves. The result of this is that street
art comes in many different forms, and the aim of Shapeshifters is to show the raw beauty of the genre and all the different forms it comes in: from murals and sculptures to collectibles and sneakers. That is the beauty of street art: it goes beyond the conventional paintings on canvas and finds its way on every object imaginable, while respecting the traditional methods at times. The exhibition is in collaboration with the top-tier art gallery Vroom & Varossieau Gallery, which has been active in the street art scene for many years and is well-respected for it.
The exhibition covers a wide variety of artists, ranging from prestigious names such as Futura and Banksy, while also giving a platform to rather up-and-coming artists. The prestigious, as well as the up-and-coming artist, have one thing in common; they are all known to have changed the world of street art in one way or another. Some of the artists have introduced a new medium of expression, while others have transformed the medium itself in a way that can be considered groundbreaking. Artists in the exhibition have used art styles such as graffiti, 3D, and abstract to express themselves in their preferred way. One thing is for certain; the artists have all earned their place in the exhibition that is Shapeshifters, and Kunstlinie and Vroom & Varossieau Gallery are proud to present such a fine selection of artists.
http://instagram.com/p/CZkaC1HoyWz
SHAPESHIFTERS Saturday, February 5, 2022 2:17 PM Sunday, July 31, 2022 2:17 PM Kunstlinie Esplanade 10 Almere The Netherlands From 5 February onwards, Kunstlinie Almere and Vroom & Varossieau Gallery present the exhibition Shapeshifters, an exhibition about groundbreaking artists that changed the world of street art. Street artists come from different backgrounds, and they all have different methods of expressing themselves. The result of this is that street art comes in many different forms, and the aim of Shapeshifters is to show the raw beauty of the genre and all the different forms it comes in: from murals and sculptures to collectibles and sneakers. That is the beauty of street art: it goes beyond the conventional paintings on canvas and finds its way on every object imaginable, while respecting the traditional methods at times. The exhibition is in collaboration with the top-tier art gallery Vroom & Varossieau Gallery, which has been active in the street art scene for many years and is well-respected for it. The exhibition covers a wide variety of artists, ranging from prestigious names such as Futura and Banksy, while also giving a platform to rather up-and-coming artists. The prestigious, as well as the up-and-coming artist, have one thing in common; they are all known to have changed the world of street art in one way or another. Some of the artists have introduced a new medium of expression, while others have transformed the medium itself in a way that can be considered groundbreaking. Artists in the exhibition have used art styles such as graffiti, 3D, and abstract to express themselves in their preferred way. One thing is for certain; the artists have all earned their place in the exhibition that is Shapeshifters, and Kunstlinie and Vroom & Varossieau Gallery are proud to present such a fine selection of artists. http://instagram.com/p/CZkaC1HoyWz
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u%hdjfka c
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by u%hdjfka c on Feb 19, 2022 11:06:44 GMT 1, Francis Bacon Triptych Portfolio Box
This impressive portfolio features three giclée reproduction prints of a triptych by Francis Bacon. The ultimate takeaway piece to remember your visit to the Francis Bacon: Man and Beast exhibition.
Exclusive to the RA Shop, these are printed in the UK on Somerset Enhanced 100% cotton rag paper with hand finished edges. Individually wrapped in tissue paper and presented in a black box.
£90
shop.royalacademy.org.uk/ra-edit/exhibitions/francis-bacon-collection/portfolio-box-tryptych-red
Francis Bacon Triptych Portfolio Box This impressive portfolio features three giclée reproduction prints of a triptych by Francis Bacon. The ultimate takeaway piece to remember your visit to the Francis Bacon: Man and Beast exhibition. Exclusive to the RA Shop, these are printed in the UK on Somerset Enhanced 100% cotton rag paper with hand finished edges. Individually wrapped in tissue paper and presented in a black box. £90 shop.royalacademy.org.uk/ra-edit/exhibitions/francis-bacon-collection/portfolio-box-tryptych-red
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tidybut
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by tidybut on Feb 19, 2022 11:28:32 GMT 1, This is pretty cool too.
This is pretty cool too.
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eyectopus
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by eyectopus on Feb 19, 2022 19:22:57 GMT 1, Francis Bacon Triptych Portfolio Box This impressive portfolio features three giclée reproduction prints of a triptych by Francis Bacon. The ultimate takeaway piece to remember your visit to the Francis Bacon: Man and Beast exhibition. Exclusive to the RA Shop, these are printed in the UK on Somerset Enhanced 100% cotton rag paper with hand finished edges. Individually wrapped in tissue paper and presented in a black box. £90 shop.royalacademy.org.uk/ra-edit/exhibitions/francis-bacon-collection/portfolio-box-tryptych-red
Thanks for the heads up. These look like a nice set.
Francis Bacon Triptych Portfolio Box This impressive portfolio features three giclée reproduction prints of a triptych by Francis Bacon. The ultimate takeaway piece to remember your visit to the Francis Bacon: Man and Beast exhibition. Exclusive to the RA Shop, these are printed in the UK on Somerset Enhanced 100% cotton rag paper with hand finished edges. Individually wrapped in tissue paper and presented in a black box. £90 shop.royalacademy.org.uk/ra-edit/exhibitions/francis-bacon-collection/portfolio-box-tryptych-redThanks for the heads up. These look like a nice set.
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irl1
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Art News Exhibitions Museums Releases, by irl1 on Feb 23, 2022 14:33:26 GMT 1, HE 8 X JEFF KOONS - New BMW Collaboration - 2022
The 8 X JEFF KOONS is expressive, striking and handcrafted with excellence. With over 200 hours spent on the exterior paint for each model, the BMW M850i xDrive Gran Coupé has literally been used as a blank canvas. Inspired by the world of pop art and showcasing strong connections with former BMW Art Car creator Roy Lichtenstein, Koons has successfully paired his bold visual style with the powerful BMW design elements. Koons' craftsmanship and purpose can be seen and felt in every detail, from the artist’s lasered signature to the luxurious seats.
"I am really thrilled and honoured about the opportunity to work with BMW again and to create a special edition car. I was thinking very intensely about it: What is the essence of the 8 Series Gran Coupé? What is the essence of power? How to create something that exemplifies all the energy of the BMW 8 Series that is also able to touch upon the human element?” – Jeff Koons.
Medium: BMW M850i xDrive Gran Coupé with custom designed exterior. Edition of 99 Hand signed COA Price: $ 350,000
You can register for this incredible Jeff Koons X BMW artwork at
discover.bmw.co.uk/iframes/pdi_bmw_i3352_dc
HE 8 X JEFF KOONS - New BMW Collaboration - 2022 The 8 X JEFF KOONS is expressive, striking and handcrafted with excellence. With over 200 hours spent on the exterior paint for each model, the BMW M850i xDrive Gran Coupé has literally been used as a blank canvas. Inspired by the world of pop art and showcasing strong connections with former BMW Art Car creator Roy Lichtenstein, Koons has successfully paired his bold visual style with the powerful BMW design elements. Koons' craftsmanship and purpose can be seen and felt in every detail, from the artist’s lasered signature to the luxurious seats. "I am really thrilled and honoured about the opportunity to work with BMW again and to create a special edition car. I was thinking very intensely about it: What is the essence of the 8 Series Gran Coupé? What is the essence of power? How to create something that exemplifies all the energy of the BMW 8 Series that is also able to touch upon the human element?” – Jeff Koons. Medium: BMW M850i xDrive Gran Coupé with custom designed exterior. Edition of 99 Hand signed COA Price: $ 350,000 You can register for this incredible Jeff Koons X BMW artwork at discover.bmw.co.uk/iframes/pdi_bmw_i3352_dc
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