Art expert Jeremy Stone, who lives in San Francisco and is Allan Stone's daughter, said her father «will probably be best known
as the art dealer who chose Wayne Thiebaud over Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns and Chuck Close.
Not exact matches
My concern is to draw a connection between the broader situation Gioia describes and the
dealer's observation, which cuts to the heart of
who I am,
as a Christian, and the work I do
as an
art critic, curator, and
art historian.
Based on The New York Times best - selling book, and recipient of the Dove Foundation seal of approval for ages 12 +, SAME KIND OF DIFFERENT
AS ME follows successful
art dealer Ron Hall (Greg Kinnear) and his wife Debbie (Renée Zellweger),
who seemingly have the perfect life.
Greta Gerwig stars in her idiot savant Annie Hall mode
as Maggie, a New York
art dealer who is trying to become a single mom using sperm donated by an old school contemporary
who is now making a fortune marketing pickles.
SAME KIND OF DIFFERENT
AS ME is based on the inspiring true story of international
art dealer Ron Hall (Greg Kinnear),
who befriends a homeless man (Djimon Hounsou) in hopes of saving his struggling marriage to Debbie (Renée Zellweger), a woman whose dreams will lead all three of them on the most remarkable journey of their lives.
But for me the dullest and most timid aspect of this year's Oscar list is its almost ignoring Tom Ford's brilliant, ruthlessly provocative thriller Nocturnal Animals, a double - narrative about an unhappy
art dealer (Amy Adams)
who gets the manuscript of an unpublished novel through the post from her estranged first husband (Jake Gyllenhaal), and the action of this explicit crime thriller is dramatised
as she imagines it, with this very ex-husband pictured in the lead.
Matthias Schoenaerts lends solid support
as a childhood friend of Einar, now a Parisian
art dealer,
who tries to help the Wegeners cope.
Directed by Michael Carney, the film is based on Same Kind of Different
As Me: A Modern - Day Slave, an International
Art Dealer, and the Unlikely Woman
Who Bound Them Together by Ron Hall, Denver Moore and Lynn -LSB-...]
The film is based on Ron Hall, Denver Moore and Lynn Vincent's Same Kind of Different
As Me: A Modern - Day Slave, an International
Art Dealer, and the Unlikely Woman
Who Bound Them Together and stars Greg Kinnear, Djimon Hounsou, -LSB-...]
Given the fascinatingly complex, ever - evolving central relationship it's no surprise that there's little room for substantial supporting characters, although Ben Whishaw pops up
as an admirer of Lili's, while Matthias Schoenaerts plays Hans, an
art -
dealer and old school - friend of Einar's
who provides Gerda with some much - needed masculine comfort — and the audience with the prospect of a conventional romantic resolution.
The film stars Johnny Depp
as the roguish Charlie Mortdecai, an
art dealer who finds himself in a race to recover a stole painting rumored to contain the...
It's based on the best selling memoir — steady yourself if you haven't heard this title — Same Kind of Different
As Me: A Modern - Day Slave, an International
Art Dealer, and the Unlikely Woman
Who Bound Them Together.
Based on the book by Ron Hall and Denver Moore, two polar opposite men
who are characters in the film, the story sees the former
as a wealthy international
art dealer and the latter a dangerous, African - American homeless man with a hauntingly real past.
Dennis Hopper (Easy Rider) oozes quirky menace
as an amoral American
art dealer who entangles a terminally ill German everyman, played by Bruno Ganz (Wings of Desire), in a seedy criminal underworld
as revenge for a personal slight — but when the two become embroiled in an ever - deepening murder plot, they form an unlikely bond.
The film stars Johnny Depp
as the roguish Charlie Mortdecai, an
art dealer who finds himself in a race to recover a stole painting rumored to contain the code to a lost bank account filled with Nazi gold.
Of special note are Paz Vega (Sex and Lucia),
as the (ridiculously flirtatious) girlfriend of a drug
dealer who first draws Webb's attention to the CIA connection, Tim Blake Nelson (O Brother, Where
Art Thou?)
Same Kind of Different
as Me: A Modern - Day Slave, an International
Art Dealer, and the Unlikely Woman
Who Bound Them Together by Ron Hall, Denver Moore, Lynn Vincent — $ 4.74 — 4.5 stars, 805 reviews.
His apartment in Vedado — another white - walled,
art - filled space — is packed with a motley assortment of edgy Cubans: a cool young photographer, a physical therapist, a taxi driver
who also doubles
as a pot
dealer.
As I dug deeper I was struck by the sense of outrage and loss this painting aroused in so many people: The family of Lea Bondi, determined to reclaim the stolen portrait she had failed to recover in her lifetime; the Manhattan District Attorney
who sent shock waves through the international
art world and enraged many of New York's most prominent cultural organizations when he issued a subpoena and launched a criminal investigation following the surprise resurfacing of Portrait of Wally; the New York
art dealer who tipped off a reporter about the painting during the opening of the Schiele exhibition at MoMA; the Senior Special Agent at the Department of Homeland Security
who vowed not to retire until the fight was over; the
art theft investigator
who unearthed the post-war subterfuge and confusion that ultimately landed the painting in the hands of a young, obsessed Schiele collector; the museum official
who testified before Congress that the seizure of Portrait of Wally could have a crippling effect on the ability of American museums to borrow works of
art; the Assistant United States Attorney
who took the case to the eve of trial; and the legendary Schiele collector
who bartered for Portrait of Wally in the early 1950s and fought to the end of his life to bring it home to Vienna.
For its 25th annual benefit, ArtTable, dedicated to the promotion of professional women leaders in the visual
arts, honors Marian Goodman,
who just celebrated her 40th anniversary
as a
dealer, and curator.
This vast archive includes photographs of Larry Rivers, Donald Judd, Jasper Johns, Marisol Escobar, Red Grooms, Jeff Koons, Adolph Gottlieb, Barnett Newman, Robert Rauschenberg, Dick Bellamy, Lucas Samaras, Jim Dine, David Hockney
as well
as influential
art dealers who shifted the perception of how to sell
art, such
as Leo Castelli.
The answer is long and complex, and has much to do with the radical shifts in culture that have occurred over the past 25 years or so, both in Britain and the world: the unstoppable rise of
art as commodity and the successful artist
as a brand; the ascendancy of a post-Thatcher generation of Young British Artists (YBAs)
who set out, unapologetically, to make shock -
art that also made money; the attendant rise of uber -
dealers such
as Jay Jopling in London and Larry Gagosian in New York; and the birth of a new kind of gallery culture, in which the blockbuster show rules and merchandising is a lucrative sideline.
Mr. Vergne will replace Jeffrey Deitch, the former New York
art dealer who generated fierce controversy
as the museum's director from 2010 until last summer.
Magda Sawon, the Polish
art dealer and Twitter wit
who has run this gallery for more than three decades, made headlines this month when she put out her cap for online donations — necessary, she wrote,
as art hardens into a winner - take - all market.
This document of artists,
art -
dealers and actresses, a
who's
who of the golden age of creative high society in New York, similarly uncovers Binion's personal history
as a disregarded black artist in an overwhelmingly white majority.
The objects, which were not sold, have been identified
as formerly belonging to the Switzerland - based Italian
art dealer Gianfranco Becchina,
who was convicted in Rome in 2011 of trafficking illegal antiquities.
The contemporaries of Andy Warhol and Francis Bacon are making a comeback to the
art market
as collectors and
dealers sourcing works from artists
who had been long overlooked.
At the same time, just
as importantly, there is a new generation of dynamic young
dealers who are very active in post-war Italian
art — doing a lot of research and promoting artists with catalogs, museum shows and major highly focused
art - fair booths.
When Bluhm returned to the United States in 1956, he settled in New York, where he joined Franz Kline, Robert Motherwell, Ad Reinhardt, Willem de Kooning, and others
as a member of the Club — the group of artists, writers, and
art dealers who would meet in an apartment at 39 East 8th Street — and became a regular at the Cedar Bar.
At least not in the opinion of
art dealer Robert Mnuchin,
who is fond of the specific body of work by Judd known
as «stacks»: the cool, vertical, wall - mounted arrangements of iron - and - Plexiglas boxes that are, in their industrial materials and repetitive form, evocative of skyscrapers and mass - produced goods.
Ends of the Earth examines the complex network of collectors, patrons,
art dealers and curators who were instrumental in establishing Land Art as an independent artistic gen
art dealers and curators
who were instrumental in establishing Land
Art as an independent artistic gen
Art as an independent artistic genre.
A friend of mine, an
art dealer named Julian Pretto
who had a genius for real estate, approached the owner of what is now known
as the Nobu building, and suggested that he be given the building to manage.
The Os Gêmeos work was one of the first in a series of artist murals that have been exhibited in the mural space on Houston Street at Bowery, beginning in 2008 when property developer Tony Goldman —
who was a pioneer of the revitalization of SoHo
as well
as Miami's Wynwood
Arts District — teamed up with
art dealer Jeffrey Deitch to commission the recreation of a Keith Haring mural that had been there decades earlier.
«Our relationship was not just of artist and
dealer — Leslie and I became good friends,» says artist Michael Craig - Martin, remembering the legendary British
art dealer who served
as chairman of Waddington Custot galleries, and whose personal collection, offered at Christie's on 4 October, is set to be a highlight of London Frieze Week.
-- Nikolay Oleynikov, Tsaplya Olga Egorova, Dmitry Vilensky, and others Claire Fontaine (fictional conceptual artist)-- A Paris - based collective including Fulvia Carnevale and James Thornhill CPLY — William N. Copley Diane Pruis (pseudonymous Los Angeles gallerist)-- Untitled gallery's Joel Mesler Donelle Woolford (black female artist)-- Actors hired to impersonate said fictional artist by white artist Joe Scanlan Dr. Lakra (Mexican artist inspired by tattoo culture)-- Jeronimo Lopez Ramirez Dr. Videovich (a «specialist in curing television addiction»)-- The Argentine - American conceptual artist Jaime Davidovich Dzine — Carlos Rolon George Hartigan — The male pseudonym that the Abstract Expressionist painter Grace Hartigan adopted early in her career Frog King Kwok (Hong Kong performance artist
who uses Chinese food
as a frequent medium)-- Conceptualist Kwok Mang Ho The Guerrilla Girls — A still - anonymous group of feminist artists
who made critical agit - prop work exposing the gender biases in the
art world Hennessy Youngman (hip - hop - styled YouTube advice dispenser), Franklin Vivray (increasingly unhinged Bob Ross - like TV painting instructor)-- Jayson Musson Henry Codax (mysterious monochrome artist)-- Jacob Kassay and Olivier Mosset JR — Not the shot villain of «Dallas» but the still - incognito street artist of global post-TED fame John Dogg (artist), Fulton Ryder (Upper East Side gallerist)-- Richard Prince KAWS — Brian Donnelly The King of Kowloon (calligraphic Hong Kong graffiti artist)-- Tsang Tsou - choi Klaus von Nichtssagend (fictitious Lower East Side
dealer)-- Ingrid Bromberg Kennedy, Rob Hult, and Sam Wilson Leo Gabin — Ghent - based collective composed of Gaëtan Begerem, Robin De Vooght, and Lieven Deconinck Lucie Fontaine (
art and curatorial collective)-- The writer / curator Nicola Trezzi and artist Alice Tomaselli MadeIn Corporation — Xu Zhen Man Ray — Emmanuel Radnitzky Marvin Gaye Chetwynd (Turner Prize - nominated artist formerly known
as Spartacus Chetwynd)-- Alalia Chetwynd Maurizio Cattelan — Massimiliano Gioni, at least in many interviews the New Museum curator did in the famed Italian artist's stead in the»90s Mr. Brainwash (Banksy - idolizing street artist)-- Thierry Guetta MURK FLUID, Mike Lood — The artist Mark Flood R. Mutt, Rrose Sélavy — Marcel Duchamp Rammellzee — Legendary New York street artist and multimedia visionary, whose real name «is not to be told... that is forbidden,» according to his widow Reena Spaulings (Lower East Side gallery)-- Artist Emily Sundblad and writer John Kelsey Regina Rex (fictional Brooklyn gallerist)-- The artists Eli Ping (
who now has opened Eli Ping Gallery on the Lower East Side), Theresa Ganz, Yevgenia Baras, Aylssa Gorelick, Angelina Gualdoni, Max Warsh, and Lauren Portada Retna — Marquis Lewis Rod Bianco (fictional Oslo galleris)-- Bjarne Melgaard RodForce (performance artist
who explored the eroticized associations of black culture)-- Sherman Flemming Rudy Bust — Canadian artist Jon Pylypchuk Sacer, Sace (different spellings of a 1990s New York graffiti tag)-- Dash Snow SAMO (1980s New York Graffiti Tag)-- Jean - Michel Basquiat Shoji Yamaguchi (Japanese ceramicist
who fled Hiroshima and settled in the American South with a black civil - rights activist, then died in a car crash in 1991)-- Theaster Gates Vern Blosum — A fictional Pop painter of odd image - and - word combinations
who was invented by a still - unnamed Abstract Expressionist artist in an attempt to satirize the Pop movement (and whose work is now sought - after in its own right) Weegee — Arthur Fellig What, How and for Whom (curators of 2009 Istanbul Biennial)-- Ana Dević, Nataša Ilić, Sabina Sabolović, Dejan Kršić, and Ivet Curlin The Yes Men — A group of «culture - jamming» media interventionists led by Jacques Servin and Igor Vamos
No, not the kind
who imagine the
art world
as a handful of
dealers, critics, collectors, and celebrity artists out to screw serious painters like them.
In an essay by Asher Edelman, an
art financier,
dealer, and gallerist (Edelman
Arts), Edelman emphasizes that it is Abbott
who influenced de Kooning, rather than the other way around
as is often thought:
«Certain that «no serious black artist today would accept to be include in an exclusively black show» and that any exhibition he organized would have to include nonblack artists
as well, (Peter) Bradley (an African American artist
who was also an
art dealer at the time) proposed a competing vision.
And it seems to be working,
as enthusiasm abounded across the participating twenty - two galleries in the 798 and Caochangdi
arts districts
as they welcomed an international crowd of curators,
dealers, and collectors
who came through, readying themselves for
Art Basel Hong Kong.
Allan Stone, a vital and respected New York
art collector and
dealer who ignored
art world fashion and embraced artists whose work stirred him personally — among them such masters
as Willem de Kooning, Barnett Newman, Joseph Cornell and Wayne Thiebaud — has died of heart failure at age 74.
One expects that from a
dealer of his integrity,
who has addressed
as well the growth of
art fairs, and his answer aimed to put things in perspective.
When he arrived, Tamayo spoke no English, but that didn't stop him from rapidly inserting himself into a number of creative communities — one of Mexican intellectuals
who hung out at the midtown bookstore run by poet Juan José Tablada; one of American artists
who lived near Tamayo's apartment in the Village, including Stuart Davis, Reginald Marsh, Raphael and Moses Soyer, and Yasuo Kuniyoshi; and a circle of
art dealers and impresarios including Walter Pach (
who had organized the 1913 Armory Show), Carl Zigrosser of Weyhe Gallery, and future gallerist and Surrealist promoter Julien Levy, then working
as an assistant to Zigrosser.
Others soon took note, such
as dealer Jeffrey Deitch — now the director of the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary
Art — and curators Dan Cameron and Klaus Kertess,
who featured Ward's work in the 1995 Whitney Biennial.
As for formative influences among collectors, Rebecca and Martin Eisenberg credited the dealer and tastemaker Jack Tilton, who passed away in May, as «a great inspiration» who taught them «how to look at art, where to find great art, and how to build a collection.&raqu
As for formative influences among collectors, Rebecca and Martin Eisenberg credited the
dealer and tastemaker Jack Tilton,
who passed away in May,
as «a great inspiration» who taught them «how to look at art, where to find great art, and how to build a collection.&raqu
as «a great inspiration»
who taught them «how to look at
art, where to find great
art, and how to build a collection.»
«David Teiger is the first person
who has come along
who has bought folk
art as art,» Fred Giampietro, a New York
dealer told The New York Times when the book was released.
The son of artist Julian Schnabel, he's an
art dealer and restaurateur
who's perhaps more widely known online right now
as «Heidi Klum's toy boy.»
Walter Hopps, an
art dealer and museum curator
who was instrumental in bringing the first generation of postwar Los Angeles artists to international prominence and whose 1963 retrospective of Dada artist Marcel Duchamp ranks
as a seminal event in modern museum history, died Sunday in Los Angeles after a brief hospitalization.
He's the closest thing we have to a legendary
dealer today - so much so that artist Urs Fischer and
art dealer Gavin Brown mounted an extraordinary exhibition at Tony Shafrazi Gallery this past summer that served
as a visual and intellectual biography of a man
who has lived a life that is literally fabulous.
He deferred to the
art dealer Larry Gagosian and the collector Eli Broad,
who each said
as little
as possible on camera.
This exhibition examines the life of a key
art dealer: Galka Scheyer,
who embraced Modern work early in the 20th century and was partly responsible for bringing the artists known
as the «Blue Four» to prominence in the United States.