According to its press office, Christie's, at this writing, has not yet decided whether to go ahead with the sale tomorrow night of the blue-period Picasso owned by Andrew Lloyd Webber's foundation, in the wake of an unsuccessful attempt in U.S. District Court to stop the sale. Here is the latest statement released by Christies: Christie's is pleased that Judge Rakoff has … [Read more...] about The Latest on Lloyd Webber’s Picasso
Archives for November 2006
David Norman Does It Right
CultureGrrl has heard the best museum curators around the country expound on the masterpieces in their museums, but no one beats David Norman, Sotheby's head of Impressionist and modern art, when it comes to a close reading of what to admire in a painting. If you don't believe me, just surf to Sotheby's engaging online multimedia presentation of the highlight of tonight's sale, … [Read more...] about David Norman Does It Right
This Just In: Judge Allows Sale of Lloyd Webber’s Picasso
The AP reported, just minutes ago, that U.S. District Judge Jed S. Rakoff has just ruled that the sale tomorrow night at Christie's of Andrew Lloyd Webber's blue-period Picasso can proceed. The AP story gave further details about the allegations surrounding the Nazi-era history of the painting. Now the question is whether this last-minute ownership controversy will have any … [Read more...] about This Just In: Judge Allows Sale of Lloyd Webber’s Picasso
More on the Upcoming Auctions
Bloomberg's Linda Sandler outstrips CultureGrrl today in extracting more detailed information about the amounts of Sotheby's and Christie's guarantees in its evening sales. She reports that Sotheby's guarantees for tonight's sale total $93 million. Christie's, for tomorrow night's sale, has granted guarantees totaling $165 million, Sandler reports. But buried in her story is a … [Read more...] about More on the Upcoming Auctions
How Frick Built His Art Palace
Simple but elegant. That apparently was industrialist Henry Clay Frick's governing principle in planning the 70th-Street abode for his family and his art---a 1914 mansion that still stands as a monument to his taste and his art collection. At a time when prominent Philadelphians are intent on dismantling the creation of Albert Barnes, it is instructive to read about the … [Read more...] about How Frick Built His Art Palace
Art in the Rag Mags
Any doubts that art is in fashion are laid to rest by the November issues of "W" and "Men's Vogue." This month's oversized "W" is "The Art Issue," sporting yet another photo spread of Brice Marden's real estate. It contains some good reads: profiles of artworld movers and shakers such as Michael Govan, the Wildensteins and the Glimchers, and features devoted to such art stars … [Read more...] about Art in the Rag Mags
Lawyers Seize the Gold Ring at the Whitney-Go-Round
Who should CultureGrrl run into, gazing appreciatively at Klimt's "Apple Tree I" at the presale exhibition for Christie's Nov. 8 Impressionist/modern sale, but the dean of New York City land-use attorneys, Samuel Lindenbaum. Sandy is the go-to guy for getting the necessary government approvals on just about every major museum expansion project in the city. The Whitney Museum … [Read more...] about Lawyers Seize the Gold Ring at the Whitney-Go-Round
Guarantee Spree: Auction Sellers Are “Just Nervous”
Do the sellers at the series of major fall art sales beginning tomorrow in New York know something that the auctioneers don't? They are unloading property with an extraordinarily high estimated value at the upcoming evening sales of Impressionist, modern and contemporary art. But at the same time, many of these sellers have also exacted an extraordinary amount of protection on … [Read more...] about Guarantee Spree: Auction Sellers Are “Just Nervous”
COMING TOMORROW: Guarantee Spree—Auction Sellers Get Cautious
Auction Indiscretion: The Not-So-Confidential Reserve
One paragraph leaped out at me from the long article by Greg Allen in tomorrow's NY Times "Arts & Leisure" section about art-auction protocol: "Let me put it this way," said Tobias Meyer, worldwide head of contemporary art at Sotheby's. "If I were in the luxurious position of spending a large sum of money on art, I would like to have as much information as possible." That means … [Read more...] about Auction Indiscretion: The Not-So-Confidential Reserve
Face-Off at Christie’s: Klimts vs. Schieles
Part of Christie's Presale Installation of the Bloch-Bauer Klimts and the Neue Galerie Schieles In case there was any doubt about the connection between the four Bloch-Bauer Klimts and the Neue Galerie's three Schieles, Christie's has installed them facing each other at its presale exhibition, which opened today. They've been given their own room, its walls embellished with … [Read more...] about Face-Off at Christie’s: Klimts vs. Schieles
Does the NY Times Have Too Many Cultural Reporters?
It sure seems that way, when it dispatches one of them to "all but take up residence...for several months" on 25th Street. The assignment: to hang out in the Chelsea art scene, "watching its rites and rituals, talking to its pioneers and newcomers, its ground-floor gods and high-floor hopefuls." Maybe Randy Kennedy should go back to stalking the "ground-floor gods" at the Met's … [Read more...] about Does the NY Times Have Too Many Cultural Reporters?
The Neue Galerie’s Hot-Potato Schieles
The more I learn about the recent ownership history of the three Schieles that the Neue Galerie is selling on Wednesday at Christie's, the more complicated it becomes. The museum is marketing these works to help pay for its purchase of Klimt's "Adele Bloch-Bauer I." If they sell, they will have changed hands three times within about three years. What's more, Scott Gutterman, … [Read more...] about The Neue Galerie’s Hot-Potato Schieles
Can a Museum Show Manet and Be Modern?
Question: Speaking of "internal confusion," what's Manet doing at the Museum of Modern Art? Answer: He's there because chief curator John Elderfield wants him to be. Elderfield's monographic show, Manet and the Execution of Maximilian is undeniably engrossing, but it makes you wonder how the museum could justify past deaccessions of works that supposedly didn't fit in with the … [Read more...] about Can a Museum Show Manet and Be Modern?
Vertigo at the Vertical Museum
In reading Nicolai Ouroussoff's trenchant appraisal in today's NY Times of the "self-doubt and internal confusion" evidenced by the Whitney Museum's revolving-door directors and architects, I realized that his (and Whitney director Adam Weinberg's) critique of Renzo Piano's design for the Whitney's all-but-aborted on-site expansion could also apply to what Roberta Smith, in … [Read more...] about Vertigo at the Vertical Museum