• New art purchases

    Last night we went to one of our favorite art benefits, the DUMBO Arts Center winter auction. We did quite well. You can click on the artist names on that link to see smallish images. We got work by Dan Golden, Federico Solmi, and Matt Dojny. We met the first two at the event.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Animal Magazine show at Chelsea Market shut down

    Via Wooster Collective, I learned that the Animal Magazine show at Chelsea Market was shut down. Apparently this image (by Chris Savido I believe):

    Savido-BushMonkeys3.jpg

    was too controversial. Our friend Eric Doeringer was part of the show.

    UPDATE:

    I asked Eric what he knew about the show. It sounds as if Chelsea Market reserved the right to veto some works, and did so, before the show opened. Therefore it seems odd (or stupid) that they then decided to close the show after having had a veto over art works in the show.

    Many of the pieces from the magazine are currently on display at the ANIMAL Gallery, 437 East 9th Street (btw. 1st & A). Their hours (theoretically Tues-Sun 1-7) are inconsistent, so call them at 212-460-8125 to make sure they are open before heading over.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Mistress of Modernism

    mistress-of-modernism.jpg

    I checked this book out of the library today. If you’ve seen our apartment, you can understand why I’m trying to read more library books and buy a few less.

    The previous reader had left some things in the book: The MoMA Nov/Dec 2004 calendar, and a press release from the John Baldessari show at Marian Goodman,

    ·

    Categories:
  • People of Crete unite to buy work of El Greco

    getty_christ3.jpg
    The Baptism of Christ by Domenikos Theotokopoulos, the Cretan better known by his Spanish name, El Greco. Photo: Ian Waldie/Getty

    I love this story! First, how it started, from The Guardian.

    Domenikos Theotokopoulos may have left long ago but the people of Crete are forever trying to make up for his absence.

    Today they hope to put right what they regard as a wrong when a hitherto unknown work by the artist, better known as El Greco, goes up for auction.

    Buying the painting, entitled The Baptism of Christ, would help islanders reclaim a citizen too often identified with Spain.

    “He is the most important person Crete has ever produced,” says Manolis Vassilakis, who is overseeing fundraising for the panel at Heraklion town hall. “It upsets us that _ so many think he is from Spain.”

    The work, owned by a Spanish family since the 19th century and unexpectedly found in a brown enve lope last year, would be the second painting to return to El Greco’s native island.

    The first, an oil and tempera on wood entitled View of Mount Sinai, was bought at auction 14 years ago.

    The Baptism of Christ is believed to have been painted in Venice, shortly after El Greco left Crete in 1567. Christie’s describes it as a “scintillating example of the great artist’s work at this most exciting, formative moment of his career”.

    For weeks, children, union members, businessmen and churchgoers have been raising funds for the work, with priests using sermons to call for people to help buy the painting. With banks also guaranteeing a loan, officials predict they will easily raise the £600,000 Christie’s expects at the auction

    They succeeded in buying it at auction in London, for £789,250.

    This is one of my favorite works of El Greco.

    [image from The Guardian]

    ·

    Categories:
  • Barry McGee: Smash the State

    ba_graffiti.jpg

    Article via contrasts.net.

    San Francisco Board of Supervisors President Matt Gonzalez, who has thumbed his nose at the establishment before, let a graffiti artist spray paint his City Hall office walls with the bright orange message: “SMASH THE STATE.”

    There is irony. There is art appreciation. There are raised eyebrows.

    Gonzalez, who has hosted monthly art installations in his office by unknown and known artists for the last four years, offered up this graffiti for one of his last exhibits before he exits City Hall on Jan. 8. Gonzalez did not seek re-election.

    The artist’s message in traffic-cone orange that appears behind Gonzalez’s desk was painted by Barry McGee, an internationally known San Francisco artist whose work first appeared anonymously in the 1980s on outdoor walls and tunnels.

    McGee, whose City Hall wall work was unveiled last Friday, included some of his trademark cartoonish faces of sad sack characters, including a man with bulging eyes. A second element includes painted blocks of wood, arranged in a way that is reminiscent of parquet.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Koch scholarships

    From Crain’s

    Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Thursday announced the establishment of the Edward I. Koch scholarships at the City College of New York, the former mayor’s alma mater.

    The announcement came during festivities at Gracie Mansion marking Mr. Koch’s 80th birthday.

    According to college officials, a $100,000 gift will be used to establish five 4-year scholarships at City College. The college has yet to determine who will be eligible for the scholarships, although it is likely that they will be for undergraduates. The identity of the donor was not disclosed.

    No word yet on whether the criteria include being a semi-closeted right-wing homosexual.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Please, just make it stop

    First it was cows, then apples, and now kangaroos.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Human Rights Campaign

    HRC, the gay rights organization too in the closet to have something like gay in its name, and whose symbol of an equal sign is also designed to be as un-gay as possible, thinks it’s going to advance gay rights by asking for less and being more “moderate.”

    Revolting.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Scalia To Synagogue – Jews Are Safer With Christians In Charge

    Bishops-salute-Hitler.jpg
    Catholic Bishops giving the Nazi salute in honor of Hitler

    From Common Dreams

    Antonin Scalia, the man most likely to be our next Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, turned history on its head recently when he attended an Orthodox synagogue in New York and claimed that the Founders intended for their Christianity to play a part in government. Scalia then went so far as to suggest that the reason Hitler was able to initiate the Holocaust was because of German separation of church and state.

    The Associated Press reported on November 23, 2004, “In the synagogue that is home to America’s oldest Jewish congregation, he [Scalia] noted that in Europe, religion-neutral leaders almost never publicly use the word ‘God.’”

    “Did it turn out that,” Scalia asked rhetorically, “by reason of the separation of church and state, the Jews were safer in Europe than they were in the United States of America?” He then answered himself, saying, “I don’t think so.”

    The article, by Thom Hartmann, goes on to provide some useful history of church and state in Germany and the USA.

    [photo from NoBeliefs.com

    ·

    Categories: ,
  • Coen / Xmas ?

    coen-xmas.jpg
    Brooke Coen sang Christmas carols on Saturday during the Parade of Lights in downtown Denver.
    Steve Peterson for The New York Times

    I was reading an article about people outraged over the PUBLIC holiday displays in Denver not being Christian enough.

    For many years, this city’s annual Parade of Lights was as bland as butter and content to be so. Organized by the local business community, the event shunned politics and anything remotely smacking of controversy, including openly religious Christmas themes that might offend.

    The star was Santa, not Jesus, and the mood was bouncy, commercial and determinedly secular.

    This year, Jesus came anyway. A local evangelical Christian church called the Faith Bible Chapel sought but failed to get permission for a religious-themed float with a choir singing hymns and carols. By coincidence, Denver’s mayor chose this year to change the traditional banner on the roof of the City and County Building. “Merry Christmas” was out. “Happy Holidays” was in.

    Like a spark in dry tinder, the result was a flare-up that caught even some church leaders by surprise. A holiday rite that had drawn thousands of paradegoers annually suddenly became a symbol, for many Christians, of secular society run amok.

    I was struck by the name in the caption. I don’t know anyone named Coen that sings Christmas carols.

    ·

    Categories: