Hints and tips:
...Its publication comes just two months after the death of the American artist Carl Andre, whose scandal-stained reputation it fictionalises....
...Reported early sales were mostly at the relatively low end of the art market scale (under £100,000) — though bigger hits included El Anatsui, who opened in Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall this week and whose...
...Activist investor Carl Icahn is one of those urging the Fed to stick to its guns, telling the FT there was no alternative to stamping out “the disease of inflation”....
...Kraftwerk’s musical motifs are unmistakable, and their crisp 3D projections have for years been showcased in concerts and galleries around the globe (including MoMA and Tate Modern), yet they retained a...
...The black-clad figures enact a hand-ringing semaphore of grief accompanied by a recording of a male choir singing the “Olim lacus colueram” from Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana....
...London’s Tate Modern regularly devotes installation space to playful dreamscapes – most recently, Yayoi Kusama’s obliteration room....
...Fearsome activist investor Carl Icahn lost his proxy fight with McDonald’s over the fast-food chain’s treatment of pigs....
...Tate’s destabilising, improvisational Rodin also accords with the art of process which Tate strongly prioritises in displays of its 20th- and 21st-century permanent collection around the themes “In the Studio...
...The podcast is lively, accessible and enthusiastic, and the 80-odd episodes have featured everyone from the uber-curator Hans Ulrich Obrist and Tate director Maria Balshaw to artists Kaws (Brian Donnelly...
...After completing an MA at Goldsmiths, London in 1999, she made her name with sculptures whose controlled forms, often with highly finished surfaces, stamp them as the offspring of 1960s minimalists such as Carl...
...Arranged in 20 rows of five across the south part of the Duveen Galleries, they form an imperfect grid — a subversion of the severity and purism of Judd or Carl Andre or Dan Flavin....
...Ten years before, Tate’s purchase of Carl Andre’s floor-array of ultra-minimalist bricks had drawn a tidal wave of angry derision....
...Opening salvos are Tony Cragg’s cubed strata of wood and rubbish, “Stack”, and Carl Andre’s “Equivalent VIII”, notoriously known as “The Bricks” since, following Tate’s purchase in 1972, it became an emblem...
...That he was part of a 1973 show at the Artist’s Space in New York that was curated by LeWitt, Carl Andre and Ronald Bladen, and that one of those occluded address books contained the names of top NY gallerist...
...As Logsdail represented Carl Andre in the UK, he played an indirect role in one such shock: the Tate’s 1972 purchase of Andre’s “Equivalent VIII” or — as it was known in the scandalised press — “the pile...
...To August 21, tate.org.uk...
...These things could be in the National Gallery or the Tate. Forget ‘artefacts’, forget ‘art’, forget all those categories — it’s all rubbish.”...
...“It’s a hostile takeover,” says Carl Hegemann, the theatre’s literary editor....
...At the Whitechapel, a string of firsts included shows by artists such as Carl Andre and Gerhard Richter, as well as exhibitions that raised the bar of curatorial expertise to standards we now take for granted...
...Whether it’s the Sydney Opera House, Bilbao’s Guggenheim Museum, London’s Tate Modern, Oslo’s Opera House or New York’s Whitney Museum of American Art, these big statements have been instrumental in the...
...The word “xylotheque” is new to me but the 18th-century German naturalist Carl Schildbach shows what it could mean....
...For a long time this has been Penzance’s lot: overlooked in favour of gentrified, resort-feel destinations such as nearby St Ives, with its more upmarket shops, sweeping beaches and a Tate gallery....
...Carl Linnaeus, the great botanist, bestowed its name, but misspelt “Stuart” as “Stewart”. Like a misnamed racehorse, a misnamed plant can never escape....
...The floors are an industrial grid of oak, which echo the minimal geometry of a Carl Andre sculpture (though they are perhaps a little too strident in their repetitive rhythm)....
...Nittve was recalling the effect of Carl Andre’s “Equivalent VIII” when it was displayed in London’s Tate Gallery in the mid-1970s....
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