Tag Archives: Art

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­Ecce Homo fresco ‘restorer’ auctions her painting for charity

­Ecce Homo fresco ‘restorer’ auctions her painting for charityGet short URLLink copied to clipboardemail story to a friendprint version

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Published: 13 December, 2012, 19:36

TAGS:Art,
Auction

A combination of two documents provided by the Centre de Estudios Borjanos on August 22, 2012 shows the original version of the painting Ecce Homo (L) by 19th-century painter Elias Garcia Martinez and the restored version by an elderly woman in Spain. (AFP Photo/CENTRO DE ESTUDIOS BORJANOS)The would-be Spanish artist Celia Gimenez responsible for the ‘restoration’ of the Ecce Homo fresco in a small town church is auctioning off one of her paintings on eBay for charity.”);
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Gimenez is selling off her oil painting “Borja’s Wine Cellar” and the bidding has feverishly reached $808, twice the starting price. The sale ends on Monday.The description of the lot on eBay notes that proceedings from the sale will be transferred to the Catholic charity organization Caritas.Celia Gimenez, 80, became a media sensation in August after she took it upon herself to restore a fresco of Christ in a church in the northern Spanish agricultural town of Borja, ruining the original and making Christ look more like an ape, than a man.Her ‘work’ became notorious across the world, with enthusiasts launching sales of souvenirs and t-shirts with the images of Gimenez’s work. The fresco itself became a popular tourist attraction prompting the use of the picture on t-shirts, wine labels and souvenirs.Image from www.abc.es Read More

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Magnified by Lens: The Louvre’s new branch to open in former mining town

Magnified by Lens: The Louvre’s new branch to open in former mining town

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Published: 04 December, 2012, 12:33

TAGS:
Art,
Architecture,
France

The Louvre-Lens Museum in the French northern city of Lens (AFP Photo / Philippe Huguen)

A former mining town in Northern France is to become a “home away from home” for the Louvre, as the Paris museum is opening its new headquarters in the town of Lens, about an hour by train from the capital.

­According to the Louvre-Lens’ director, the challenge is to attract up to 700,000 visitors during the first year, and at least half a million per year afterwards, as compared to nine million annual visitors for the Louvre itself.

“We recognize that it is not easy,” the Louvre’s director Henri Loyrette told AFP. “When we started with the project the words Louvre and Lens just didn’t fit together – a great Parisian institution and a town ravaged by war and industrial crisis.”

“Two things would spell failure in my eyes,”Loyrette added. “The first would be if the population don’t take ownership of the museum. The second would be if the Louvre’s existing visitors don’t go.”

President Francois Hollande will cut the ribbon on the €150 million Japanese-designed museum on Tuesday, and will open to the public on December 12.

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­To mark the occasion, Leonardo Da Vinci’s newly restored masterpiece “The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne” will leave the Louvre for the first time in two centuries to spend three months at the new site in the Nord-Pas-De-Calais region

For its first five years, the museum’s 125-metre central gallery will showcase 200 works from Antiquity to 1850, masterpieces by Delacroix and Raphael among them, offering a walk through the history of the Louvre, AFP reported.

Picture of the stock room of the Louvre-Lens Museum (AFP Photo / Philippe Huguen)

­According to the Louvre-Lens’ director, the challenge is to attract up to 700,000 visitors during the first year, and at least half a million per year afterwards, as compared to nine million annual visitors for the Louvre itself.

“We recognize that it is not easy,” the Louvre’s director Henri Loyrette told AFP. “When we started with the project the words Louvre and Lens just didn’t fit together – a great Parisian institution and a town ravaged by war and industrial crisis.”

“Two things would spell failure in my eyes,”Loyrette added. “The first would be if the population don’t take ownership of the museum. The second would be if the Louvre’s existing visitors don’t go.”

President Francois Hollande will cut the ribbon on the €150 million Japanese-designed museum on Tuesday, and will open to the public on December 12.

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DIY Nail Art: Chanel Spring 2013 ‘Tweed’ Manicure (PHOTO)

With this DIY nail art, it’s certainly possible. Read More…
More on DIY Nail Art

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‘The Art I’ve Lived With’: Mikhail Baryshnikov shows off his collection

‘The Art I’ve Lived With’: Mikhail Baryshnikov shows off his collection

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Published: 03 December, 2012, 19:45

TAGS:
Art,
USA,
Exhibition

Mikhail Baryshnikov (Reuters/Nir Elias)

Russian-born ballet legend Mikhail Baryshnikov has also had life long passion for art. Opening this week in New York “The Art I’ve Lived With” is an exhibition of his collection and it is tipped to travel to Moscow.

­Baryshnikov has been collecting art ever since defecting from the Soviet Union in 1974, when the 26-year-old dancer requested political asylum in Toronto while on a tour with the Bolshoi Theater. He joined the National Ballet of Canada before moving to America to become principal dancer with the American Ballet Theatre and later its artistic director. In 1990, Baryshnikov co-founded the White Oak Dance Project and became artistic director there. In 2005, he opened the Baryshnikov Arts Center in New York.

Mikhail Baryshnikov takes part in the rehearsal for “An evening of Dance” IAFP Photo/Pierre-Philippe Marcou)

­“I never called myself a collector…I was just assembling pieces that caught my eye,”  64-year-old Baryshnikov noted.

Apart from ballet, cinema has caught the artist’s eye a number of times. The role in the 1977 drama “The Turning Point” earned the versatile artist an Oscar nomination. In 2003 he appeared in the last season of Sex and the City TV series playing Carrie Bradshaw’s Russian lover. In one of the episodes Baryshnikov took her to his “Russian Samovar” restaurant that the dancer once opened with the Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky.

Sex and the City (Still from YouTube video/missvee812000)

­Earlier this year he received the $100,000 Vilcek Prize as a lifetime achievement award for his contribution to American culture.

But, according to Baryshnikov, having his art collection on show is “the most private thing I’ve done in my life in the United States.”

“It’s even more revealing than to go on stage. I am a performer. I go on stage and make a fool of myself. Pictures can tell a story,” Baryshnikov wrapped up.

It’s hoped that next year his collection will travel to the Russian capital to tell his personal story at the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts.

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­A hundred works from Baryshnikov’s four decades of collecting have never been shown to the public before. The dancer first started collecting works relating to ballet, but later expanded his interests.

“I never spent hundreds of thousands dollars on the pieces, because I never had that kind of money,” Baryshnikov told Bloomberg during an interview at the ABA Gallery which is hosting his exhibition. “A good Bakst or Cocteau would be a couple of thousands of dollars. But something like a little working sketch of Benois you could buy for a couple of hundred dollars. Now it’s 20 times more,” he explained.

Mikhail Baryshnikov (R) and ballerina Aszune Barton from Canada perform during a rehearsal of his company’s, Baryshnikov Dance Center (Reuters/Sergio Perez)

­Baryshnikov has been collecting art ever since defecting from the Soviet Union in 1974, when the 26-year-old dancer requested political asylum in Toronto while on a tour with the Bolshoi Theater. He joined the National Ballet of Canada before moving to America to become principal dancer with the American Ballet Theatre and later its artistic director. In 1990, Baryshnikov co-founded the White Oak Dance Project and became artistic director there. In 2005, he opened the Baryshnikov Arts Center in New York.

Mikhail Baryshnikov takes part in the rehearsal for “An evening of Dance” IAFP Photo/Pierre-Philippe Marcou)

­“I never called myself a collector…I was just assembling pieces that caught my eye,”  64-year-old Baryshnikov noted.

Apart from ballet, cinema has caught the artist’s eye a number of times. The role in the 1977 drama “The Turning Point” earned the versatile artist an Oscar nomination. In 2003 he appeared in the last season of Sex and the City TV series playing Carrie Bradshaw’s Russian lover. In one of the episodes Baryshnikov took her to his “Russian Samovar” restaurant that the dancer once opened with the Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky.

Sex and the City (Still from YouTube video/missvee812000)

­Earlier this year he received the $100,000 Vilcek Prize as a lifetime achievement award for his contribution to American culture.

But, according to Baryshnikov, having his art collection on show is “the most private thing I’ve done in my life in the United States.”

“It’s even more revealing than to go on stage. I am a performer. I go on stage and make a fool of myself. Pictures can tell a story,” Baryshnikov wrapped up.

It’s hoped that next year his collection will travel to the Russian capital to tell his personal story at the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts.

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Video games really are art, MoMA says

Video games really are art, MoMA says The Museum of Modern Art, in New York, has finally confirmed what gaming geeks have known for years: That the best video games are fine art.  Beginning in March of next year, the MoMA will mount a permanent exhibition in its Philip Johnson Galleries, curator…

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Game show: Iconic video games displayed by major US modern art museum

Game show: Iconic video games displayed by major US modern art museumGet short URLLink copied to clipboardemail story to a friendprint versionPublished: 01 December, 2012, 12:05

TAGS:USA,
Exhibition,
Design

Screenshot from the game Pac-manAre video games art? The most influential museum of modern art in the world, Manhattan’s MoMA, believes they sure are. The museum has acquired a selection of 14 video games for a new category of artworks in its extensive collection.­”The games are selected as outstanding examples of interaction design—a field that MoMA has already explored and collected extensively, and one of the most important and oft-discussed expressions of contemporary design creativity,” the museum’s website explained. Screenshot of an average city made in SimCity 2000­The acquisition allows the Museum to “study, preserve, and exhibit video games” as part of its Architecture and Design collection.”Our criteria, therefore, emphasize not only the visual quality and aesthetic experience of each game, but also the many other aspects—from the elegance of the code to the design of the player’s behavior—that pertain to interaction design,” MoMa added.Sreenshot from the game Myst­Over the next few years, the museum is set to complete its initial selection with one of the earliest-known digital computer games, Spacewar!; an assortment of games for the Magnavox Odyssey console; one of the first video games to reach mainstream popularity, Pong; one of the earliest shooting games Space Invaders; Asteroids, one of the most popular and influential games of the Golden Age of Arcade Games, selling 70,000 arcade cabinets; as well as Zork, Tempest, Donkey Kong, Yars’ Revenge, M.U.L.E., Core War, Marble Madness, Super Mario Bros., The Legend of Zelda, NetHack, Street Fighter II, Chrono Trigger, Super Mario 64, Grim Fandango, Animal Crossing and Minecraft.If the duration of the game is short enough, it could be made playable in its entirety at the museum, as was the case in MoMA’s Talk to Me: Design and the Communication between People and Objects exhibition, when visitors had a chance to play Passage.Screenshot from the game Eve Online-Empyrean Age­For games that take longer to play but require interaction for full appreciation, an interactive demonstration in which the game can be played for a limited amount of time will be available.MoMa noted that since some of the games that have been acquired, such as Dwarf Fortress and EVE Online, take years and millions of people to manifest fully, the museum will work with players and designers to create guided tours of these alternate worlds, to provide visitors with a chance to appreciate the extent of the gameplay.”);
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­MoMa is planning to get hold of 40 more games in the near future.This initial group, to be installed in the Museum’s Philip Johnson Galleries in spring, features the two icons of the 1980s popular culture, Pac-Man and Tetris, as well as such immensely popular games as Another World, once considered highly-innovative in its use of cinematic effects, Myst, SimCity 2000, The Sims, Katamari Damacy, EVE Online, Portal, flOw, Passage, Canabalt and the extremely challenging Dwarf Fortress, which prompted its fans to create the slogan “Losing is fun.” screenshot from the game Megadrive another world­”The games are selected as outstanding examples of interaction design—a field that MoMA has already explored and collected extensively, and one of the most important and oft-discussed expressions of contemporary design creativity,” the museum’s website explained. Screenshot of an average city made in SimCity 2000­The acquisition allows the Museum to “study, preserve, and exhibit video games” as part of its Architecture and Design collection.”Our criteria, therefore, emphasize not only the visual quality and aesthetic experience of each game, but also the many other aspects—from th
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e elegance of the code to the design of the player’s behavior—that pertain to interaction design,” MoMa added.Sreenshot from the game Myst­Over the next few years, the museum is set to complete its initial selection with one of the earliest-known digital computer games, Spacewar!; an assortment of games for the Magnavox Odyssey console; one of the first video games to reach mainstream popularity, Pong; one of the earliest shooting games Space Invaders; Asteroids, one of the most popular and influential games of the Golden Age of Arcade Games, selling 70,000 arcade cabinets; as well as Zork, Tempest, Donkey Kong, Yars’ Revenge, M.U.L.E., Core War, Marble Madness, Super Mario Bros., The Legend of Zelda, NetHack, Street Fighter II, Chrono Trigger, Super Mario 64, Grim Fandango, Animal Crossing and Minecraft.If the duration of the game is short enough, it could be made playable in its entirety at the museum, as was the case in MoMA’s Talk to Me: Design and the Communication between People and Objects exhibition, when visitors had a chance to play Passage.Screenshot from the game Eve Online-Empyrean Age­For games that take longer to play but require interaction for full appreciation, an interactive demonstration in which the game can be played for a limited amount of time will be available.MoMa noted that since some of the games that have been acquired, such as Dwarf Fortress and EVE Online, take years and millions of people to manifest fully, the museum will work with players and designers to create guided tours of these alternate worlds, to provide visitors with a chance to appreciate the extent of the gameplay. Read More

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Solid gold sculpture worth $800,000 stolen from Christie’s

Scottish artist Douglas Gordon (Reuters/Miro Kuzmanovic)A sculpture by Turner Prize winner Douglas Gordon made of solid gold has been stolen from the Christie’s auction house. The artwork titled the Left Hand and Right Hand Have Left One Another worth around $800,000 belonged to the artist whose works are owned by the world’s top contemporary art museums including the Tate and New York’s Museum of Modern Art. According to the Guardian newspaper the artist fears the sculpture was stolen for the value of the gold which is estimated at some $400,000. “I don’t think this is an art theft,” Gordon told the Guardian. “I’m pretty sure it has been melted down.”Gordon said he was irritated that Christie’s confirmed the artwork had been stolen only after he learnt about it elsewhere. While he first heard of the matter last week, Christie’s informed him 16 days after the crime was reported to the police.”It is like someone borrowing your car, and then you finding out from a neighbour that it has been crashed,” he said. “It looks like I am the last person in the chain to know.”Scotland Yard is now investigating the theft of the artwork. “This matter is under investigation and we are in contact with all parties involved. We cannot comment further,” a Christies’s spokesman is quoted by the Guardian as saying, adding that Gordon’s gallery had been informed right away. Read More