From the category archives:

Fresh Links!

Election Day Links!

by Charlie Williams on November 6, 2012

If you haven’t voted yet, go do that! 

  • The polls opened about seven hours ago, which means people have a ton of complaints. We’re top among them, as AFC’s Whitney Kimball almost lost her vote this morning when a volunteer accidentally pressed the “cast ballot” button. She was told to fight it in court after the election. She only got a new ballot after a loud argument made organizers worry that the story would “blow up.” Here are a few that actually made the presses.
  • Gizmodo posted a video of a touchscreen machine that won’t let you vote for Obama. [Gizmodo]
  • The Observer reports that major Coney Island poll sites are being run by police academy recruits and are missing machines and check-in books. [NYO] The city’s also running low on stickers. [Gothamist]
  • Republican Congressman Jeff Flake is accused of sending robocalls telling Democrats to vote tomorrow, and at the wrong sites. [Gawker]
  • As always, the L and the G are still fucked, with promises of repairs soon. The New York Observer’s got the progress. [NYO]
  • On Saturday, one unfortunate MTA spokesman was reported commenting “As for the G, enough of it is parallel to other lines—plus the naturally low ridership.” What. the. fuck. [NYO]
  • Jonathan Jones doesn’t like L.S. Lowry. For everyone back home in Manchester: Fuck off Jonathan Jones. [Guardian]
  • Didn’t get enough frights and thrills this Halloween? Check out Art News’s survey of art and Museum tours celebrating Halloween and Day of the Dead. [ArtNews]
  • If your havin’ world problems, I feel bad for you, son/ I got 99 problems but…Mitt…ain’t one.  Get it? Get it? Jay-Z busted a rhyme at an Obama rally before Secret Service could “snatch him offstage.” [NewYorkMagazine]
  • NYFA posted a list of arts-specific Sandy recovery resources. Thanks, NYFA! [NYFA]
  • After a week of reading and reporting on damaged galleries across New York, we’re happy to see that the David Zwirner in Chelsea will be partially reopening on Friday. [Gallerist]
  • Meanwhile, traditional acts of art vandalism, handling mishaps and gallery blunders remain the greatest threats to collections in the UK. [artinfo]
  • Occupy has been spearheading Sandy relief efforts, [HuffPo] and they still desperately need volunteers and supplies. Check interOccupy for the updated lists.
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Wednesday Links: #MittRomneyHatesArt

by Leighann Morris on September 26, 2012

  • If you were anywhere near Brooklyn Bridge on Sunday, you would have seen graffiti artist Saber flying five planes in formation across sunny Sunday skies with messages reprimanding presidential candidate Mitt Romney for his plans to kill funding for the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and other much needed arts organisations (which is really funny, considering the Romney plane window comments that flooded the internet today). Anti-Romney messages included “#MittRomneyHatesArt” and “#DefendTheArts”. We’re not quite sure hashtags work on clouds, but you can watch a video of the spectacle here. [HuffPo]
  • Oh no, someone is putting on an exhibition inspired by “Lost”.  ”Lost (in LA)”, curated by the former director of Paris’s Palais de Tokyo, Marc-Olivier Wahler, is due to take place at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery at Barnsdall Art Park (1 December-27 January 2013), with works by Tatiana Trouvé, Oscar Tuazon, and Thomas Hirschhorn, among others. [The Art Newspaper]
  • NADA’s released its exhibitor list for Miami Beach 2012, and ArtINFO has the breakdown. Over half are new additions. [ArtINFO]
  • The Warhol Foundation announced this month that it had settled a deal with Christie’s to liquidate all of its remaining art holdings, aiming to raise money for more grants. Christine J. Vincent assesses Warhol’s philanthropic legacy. [The Art Newspaper]
  • This week marks the beginning of the Gwangju Biennale. Overseen by six female curators from the Middle East and Asia, the Biennale explores themes of civic protest with artworks that deal with resistance campaigns from South Korea all the way to the global Occupy movement. [The Guardian]
  • Can the art world go a day without talking about Andy Warhol? I thought I’d left it all behind after reading all the reviews of Regarding Warhol at the Met, but now news is in that the British Royal Collection has bought Warhol’s screenprint portraits of the Queen. They will be in an exhibition this year. Warhol did say that one day he wanted to be as famous as the Queen of England? [Artdaily]
  • Was Expo Chicago a success? Hard to know from Julia Halperin’s mixed report, but sales don’t appear to be overwhelmingly strong. Dealer spin for this fair? “Chicagoans are a little more cautious.” [ArtInfo]
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Thursday Links!

by Leighann Morris on September 6, 2012
  • Warning! It’s fashion week again. Previously acceptable areas of Manhattan will be flooded with unacceptable fashionistas. Avoid. [HuffPo]
  • AFC’s Paddy Johnson is teaching a class! Do you want to write about art? Enroll, and she’ll teach you. [tumblr]
  • Apparently no fewer than 128 people completed Damien Hirst’s “spot challenge” back in January. 128. They’ll get their prints soon, but more importantly, what the hell, people? [The Art Newspaper]
  • Photographer Juozas Cernius, who’s taken his share of pretty pictures for this blog from around the world, is looking to fund a project documenting the work of aid groups in Africa, India, and Southeast Asia. He’s raising the money through IndieGoGo, and then giving the proceeds back to aid organizations. It’s a good thing to do for the world, and maybe you should help him out. [London Free Press]
  • This week, AFC’s Paddy Johnson will be at the Toronto International Film Festival. In anticipation of TIFF, Indiewire have realised 25 films they are looking forward to. Are you excited about seeing Keira Knightley trying to do Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina justice? Us neither. We’re looking forward to The ABC’s of Death, comprised of short horror films by 26 directors. Each was assigned a letter of the alphabet and accompanying word, leaving it up to the director to come up with a short story of death. GNARLY. [Indiewire]
  • Anyone going to TIFF must watch the premiere of Reincarnated, an Andy Capper documentary made about Snoop Dogg embracing rastafarian culture/smoking lots of weed in Jamaica. Anyone not going must watch this trailer. [YouTube]
  • Wanna see Putin in a little white suit, hand-gliding over Siberia to “help endangered cranes begin their migration to wintering grounds in Iran and India”? Now you can! [Animal New York]
  • The Walker had an Internet Cat Video Festival and we were really excited. The “people’s choice” cat video winner was revealed last week, and now we’re disappointed. Existential feline Henri 2, Paw De Deux won out of the thousands of entries, that included Keyboard Cat and Nyan Cat. AFC’s Paddy Johnson has something to say about the unexpected result. [Today]
  • James Panero writes about how punk rock influenced Pussy Riot and Ai Weiwei. In a nutshell: “While at times misused within Western culture, … when employed against oppressive regimes [punk] can be potent.” [The Wall Street Journal]
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NYU Launches “Artistic Activism” Research Group | Center for Artistic Activism

by Paddy Johnson on September 26, 2011

NYU Launches “Artistic Activism” Research Group | Center for Artistic Activism – Awesome. 

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Stephen Mueller, Color Field Painter, Dies at 63 – NYTimes.com

by Paddy Johnson on September 26, 2011

Stephen Mueller, Color Field Painter, Dies at 63 – NYTimes.com – I'm late on this, but Mueller was great painter. This is a good obit. 

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#OccupyWallStreet Invades Sotheby’s Auction in Solidarity with Locked-Out Art Handlers

by Paddy Johnson on September 26, 2011

#OccupyWallStreet Invades Sotheby’s Auction in Solidarity with Locked-Out Art Handlers – Good to see Sotheby's PR time is quick to report the best contemporary art sale in three years, while they also lock out their art handlers for demanding a living wage. 

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Via Verde in South Bronx Rewrites Low-Income-Housing Rules – NYTimes.com

by Paddy Johnson on September 26, 2011

Via Verde in South Bronx Rewrites Low-Income-Housing Rules – NYTimes.com – Via Verde gets a very positive review from Michael Kimmelman. This is his first review as the Times' architectural critic.

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Lisa Oppenheim: Accidental Networks (MAP #25 Summer 2011) | MAP Magazine

by Paddy Johnson on September 26, 2011

Lisa Oppenheim: Accidental Networks (MAP #25 Summer 2011) | MAP Magazine – I’m amazed by the flood of art pieces I’ve seen lately that consist of a photograph of a book that the artist finds interesting. Or a book in a showcase. Or sculptures that consist of a bookshelf on the wall with a number [...]

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Lisa Oppenheim: Accidental Networks (MAP #25 Summer 2011) | MAP Magazine

by Paddy Johnson on September 22, 2011

Lisa Oppenheim: Accidental Networks (MAP #25 Summer 2011) | MAP Magazine – I’m amazed by the flood of art pieces I’ve seen lately that consist of a photograph of a book that the artist finds interesting. Or a book in a showcase. Or sculptures that consist of a bookshelf on the wall with a number [...]

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Brooklyn Has a Historic Skyscraper District!

by Paddy Johnson on September 22, 2011

Brooklyn Has a Historic Skyscraper District! – Apparently, Brooklyn has a (brand-new) district full of skyscrapers.

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