Pace Splits with Wildenstein
After 17 years, the gallery we have known as PaceWildenstein will be no more. In April 2010, Pace and Wildenstein announced that the partnership has been amicably dissolved. The Pace Gallery, regaining its independence, is also celebrating its 50th year. The two companies jointly stated that they would continue to pursue business opportunities together. Pace … Continued
The Painting Center Moves to Chelsea
After 16 years in SoHo, the Painting Center opens its doors in Chelsea at a new location at 547 West 27th Street on the 5th Floor. Their inaugural show opens on April 13 with a group invitational show titled Continuing Color Abstraction, curated by Rella Stuart-Hunt the main gallery and Phillis Ideal: Recent Paintings in … Continued
American Academy of Arts and Letters Announces New Members and Award Recipients
Each year, the American Academy of Arts and Letters honors of 50 composers, artists, architects and writers with cash awards ranging from $5000 to $75,000. This year’s winners are to be announced in a private ceremony that takes place on May 16, 2010. In addition, four Honorary Members will be inducted into the Academy: the … Continued
Kenneth Noland Estate is now represented by Mitchell-Innes & Nash
New York gallery Mitchell-Innes & Nash announced that it now exclusively represents the estate of American Color Field painter Kenneth Noland. Noland, who died in January 2010 of kidney cancer in his home in Port Clyde, Maine, was one of the best-known Color Field painters to emerge in the 1960s. Art critic Clement Greenberg championed … Continued
Memorial Celebrates Life and Work of Nancy Spero (1926-2009)
Cooper Union hosted a public commemoration of the life and work of Nancy Spero, pioneering feminist artist, on April 18, at 3pm. Speakers were slated to include friends, artists, arts professionals and writers: Benjamin Buchloh, Donna De Salvo, writer Christopher Lyon, Bartomeu Marí, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Kiki Smith, Robert Storr, and Nora York, among others, … Continued
Loose Talk Costs $$$
Can sharing a bit of gossip cost you $8 million? It might if you are high-powered art dealer and gallery owner David Zwirner. It all started when Miami collector Craig Robins resold a painting, Reinhardt’s Daughter, (1994) by Margaret Dumas through David Zwirner’s Chelsea gallery in 2004. Zwirner apparently told the South African artist about … Continued
Literally, the End of Metaphor
The downtown Brooklyn gallery, Metaphor Contemporary Art had its final show in March 2010. The owners, Rene Lynch and Julian Jackson, have been wearing two hats since the gallery space opened in October 2001—both artist and dealer/curator. After almost a decade of the balancing act of “being both” they have decided to dissolve the physical … Continued
Ordway Winners Announced
Hazma Walker, writer/curator, and Polish video artist Artur Zmijewski are the winners of the 2010 Ordway Prize. The award, named for naturalist, philanthropist and arts patron Katherine Ordway, comes with an unrestricted $100,000 cash prize. It acknowledges the contributions of a mid-career curator/arts writer and artist whose work has had significant impact on the field … Continued
New Chief for Frick Reference Library
The Frick Collection announces the appointment of Dr. Stephen J. Bury to the post of Andrew W. Mellon Chief Librarian and the Frick Art Reference Library. Dr Bury has been at the British Library, the national library of the United Kingdom, as the Deputy Director and Head of European and American Collections, Maps, Music and … Continued
Joan Mitchell Remembered in a Three-Day Symposium
A three-day symposium in New Orleans celebrates the life and work of Joan Mitchell April 9-11, 2010. Co-organized by Tulane University’s Newcomb Art Gallery and the Joan Mitchell Foundation, this gathering will feature art historians, friends of Mitchell and film screenings. Additionally, three exhibitions bring together the three major bodies of her work: paintings at … Continued