Browsing Category: contemporary art

  • Found Objects 04/12/2011

    A few of the least missable art links from the web this week. Peruse at will: Here’s the most surprising thing written about art this week: Charles Saatchi on the vulgarity of the art world. As if to make a similar point Miru Kim shacks up with two pigs for the duration of Art Basel …

    December 4, 2011
  • Found Objects 28/11/11

    Welcome back to another round of art links from an exciting week on the Internet: From the department of unexpected events, here’s news that the EU is planning to undertake its biggest ever funding drive for art and culture. And here’s some more news that goes against the grain. Scientists have massively slowed up the …

    November 28, 2011
  • Adolf Krischanitz, Barhocker (1986)

    With its dark, stained and somewhat splayed feet this stool looks solid enough. But it was still not clear that sitting there was permitted. It was, after all, part of an exhibition. It had its own plaque on the wall and, indeed, I was reading the very details relating to this piece, when I turned …

    November 24, 2011
  • Interview: Tamsin Dillon

    What might it be about a subterranean art commission which makes the imagination soar? Michael Landy, Jeremy Deller and Eva Rothschild are among the well-known contemporary artists to have taken their talents underground in recent times. It’s a gallery space you probably know, and chances are you have travelled on it. Art on the Underground …

    November 24, 2011
  • Found Objects 22/11/11

    Vienna was fun, but more on that later. Here are some links I’ve been catching up with: Check this photo on Hyperallergic and I’m sure you’ll agree, this woman really looks like a public menace. No wonder the cop is using pepper spray. I may be late to this, but if police can use said …

    November 22, 2011
  • Found Objects 14/11/11

    Internet: scoured, or at least partially. Hope you enjoy this week’s art-related links: The world’s most expensive photograph reached £2.7 million at Christies. The Guardian seemed surprised it wasn’t a classic Kodak moment. Meanwhile the world’s most expensive exhibition (surely) has already sold out its run at The National Gallery. The Independent offers a guide …

    November 14, 2011
  • Found Objects 07/11/11

    Once again I’ve whittled down the infinite reaches of the world wide web into ten or so convenient destinations just for you: Not entirely art related but this does feature some highly creative metaphors: John Lichfield writes about the Eurozone crisis in the Independent (via @tds153) Also in the Independent, gallerist Richard Cork tells us …

    November 7, 2011
  • Canvassing views: a survey of UK art blogs

    Quick art quiz question: who said in 2009: “I spend 90% of my energy on blogging”? It wasn’t Jonathan Jones, who posts daily on art for the Guardian. Nor was it a professional US art blogger from Hyperallergic, C-Monster, Art Fag City or ArtInfo. It was in fact Ai Weiwei, just named Art Review’s most powerful …

    October 26, 2011
  • Found Objects 24/10/11

    In solidarity with occupy Sotheby’s, etc, criticismism has been occupying GoogleReader to bring you another bunch of links: It could always be worse. So suggests Der Spiegel who report on the publication of a database of Nazi appproved art. Being dubious about the Museum of Everything, I liked this Jonathan Griffin piece which raises questions. …

    October 24, 2011
  • Ximena Garrido-Lecca, The Walls of Progress: Project Country (2011)

    Amidst the bright, shiny things one could take home from Frieze to put on your wall was this: a structure of mud, daring collectors to take it back to their bright, shiny homes. Hand made from adobe bricks and modelled on an original in the highlands of Peru, this sculpture brought the outside world into …

    October 21, 2011