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VISUAL

Immersive Art Shows Have Become Big Business. Can Museums Get In On It? Should They?

Serious institutions might legitimately turn up their noses at the immersive van Gogh or Monet "experiences," but nearly half of the immersive art shows out there have been designed by artists themselves, from Meow Wolf to teamLab to David Hockney. Should museums join in, despite the expensive equipment required? - ARTnews

Washington Post Axes “In The Galleries” Local Art Review Column

"In an email sent to several DC-area art exhibition spaces on Monday, column author and critic Mark Jenkins announced the series would shut down after the last iteration runs in this Sunday’s print edition. Jenkins, a freelance critic, authored the column for 13 years. It ran online each Friday." - Hyperallergic

The Genius Of Banksy’s London Animal Murals

The murals have captured the public imagination, not because they’re artistic masterpieces, but because they play with something beyond the world of pop art – our love, fear and fascination with animals. - The Conversation

Anatomy Of An Artworld Fraud

Describing a particularly vertiginous exchange in which “somewhere between $125k and $175k is created out of thin air, a few phone calls and an expensive dinner,” Whitfield outlines two possible responses to making money like that: it can make you feel very clever, or it can make you feel like a fraud. - The New Yorker

Mark Zuckerberg’s Epically Bad Statue Of His Wife

The sculpture by Daniel Arsham, a brand-friendly New York-based artist with his own fashion line, is really bad — but it’s interestingly bad. When you look at it, it just sort of collapses in your brain, like a bouncy castle pierced by a falling tree branch. - Washington Post

Attendance At The Louvre Sank During The Paris Olympics

During the Games themselves (July 27-August 11), visitor numbers fell by 22% from the previous year. In the 11 days leading up to the event, admissions were down 45% from the same time in 2023 — not least because the museum was entirely closed July 25-26 as a security measure. - ARTnews

Do We Now Know Where The Long-Lost Leonardo “Salvator Mundi” Has Been Stashed?

During a BBC profile of Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman, a friend of the ruler said that the painting, purchased in 2017 for $450 million, is currently in a Geneva storage facility and that MBS intends it to be the centerpiece of a Louvre-like museum to be built in Riyadh. - Euronews

Artists Using AI For Images Of A More Sustainable Climate

“Something different happens in the mind when you create something that defies even your own expectations or ideas. I don’t think anybody who plugs in the prompts for this ship necessarily imagined that this was going to come up.” - Los Angeles Times

Why So Much Renaissance Art Turned Up In American Museums

Rather than collecting domestic works, people of means wanted art with a richer historical past. They were seduced by the appeal of Europe’s long history of artistic production and its canonical creators. - JSTor

Why AI Art Looks So Much “Of A Type”

“We see a lot of fantasy-style art and stock photography, which then trickles into the models themselves,” Zivvy Epstein, a scientist at the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI, told me. There are also only so many good data sets available for people to use to build image models. - The Atlantic

The Not Insignificant Costs Of “Hosting” A Banksy

Two disgruntled landlords spoke out in 2021 when Banksy sprayed a large herring gull on to the side of a Suffolk house they let to tenants. Garry and Gokean Coutts claimed that protecting the bird and repairing vandalism would cost them nearly £40,000 a year.

How Collapsing Art Sales Prices Have Brought Young Artists Down

Over the last year, as money drained from the art market, young art stars around the world experienced dramatic setbacks that submerged their careers. - The New York Times

A Massive Ancient Monument 500 Years Older Than The Pyramids

Located in Brú na Bóinne, a historical park north of Dublin, Ireland, Newgrange is thought to have been built around 3,200 B.C.E., making it 1,000 years older than Stonehenge and 500 years older than the Great Pyramids of Giza. - Artnet

Netflix Founder Plans To Turn Utah Ski Area Into Sculpture Park

 “We aim to transform Powder into a multi-season destination that blends recreation, art, and meaningful connection for our entire community.” - ARTnews

Goldberger: Architecture Criticism Is In “Chaos”

The transition from print to online journalism has led to "chaos" within architecture criticism that has upsides as well as downsides, author Paul Goldberger tells Dezeen. - Dezeen

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