Category: Art News

Italian Police Recover Hoard of Looted Artifacts Dug From Tombs

Ancient artifacts are displayed to the media during a press conference, in Rome. Italian police have broken up a ring of looters who raided tombs for ancient artifacts and exported them illegally to countries including the United States, officials said Friday. -  AP Photo/Angelo Carconi.

ROME (AP).- Italian police have broken up a ring
of looters who raided tombs for ancient artifacts and exported them illegally to
countries including the United States, officials said Friday.
During
more than a year of investigations, authorities recovered nearly 1,700 statues,
vases and other artifacts dating from pre-Roman times to the heyday of the
empire. Police flagged 19 people for possible investigation by
prosecutors. The artifacts were mainly dug out from tombs in the areas
around Naples and Venice and included a bronze bust of the emperor Augustus,
customs police in Rome said.

View of Venice by Bonington Acquired by the Kimbell Art Museum

FORT WORTH, TX.- The Kimbell Art Museum has added to its collection an exquisite oil sketch by the British artist Richard Parkes Bonington (1802–1828), “The Grand Canal, Venice, Looking Toward the Rialto”, painted on the spot in 1826. Its purchase was announced today by the Kimbell’s director, Dr. Eric M. Lee. Dr. Lee commented: “The opportunity to acquire one of Bonington’s beautiful oil sketches of Venice is extremely rare. Only eight are known, four of which were already in museum collections before the present one was acquired by the

The Empire Strikes Back: Indian Art Today Exhibition Announced at Saatchi Gallery

LONDON.- In October 2008, the Saatchi Gallery re-opened in the 70,000 sq. ft. Duke of York’s HQ building on King’s Road in the heart of London. With free admission to all shows, the Saatchi Gallery aims to bring contemporary art to the widest audience possible. Its first three shows, “The Revolution Continues: New Art from China”, “Unveiled: New Art from the Middle East”, and “Abstract America: New Painting and Sculpture”, have attracted over one million visitors to date. On January 29 the Saatchi Gallery will open with “The Empire Strikes Back: Indian Art Today”,

Dallas Museum of Art Publishes its First Catalogue of African Art

DALLAS, TX.- The Dallas Museum of Art will present a rich and comprehensive look at African visual culture through “The Arts of Africa”, the first catalogue dedicated to exploring the Museum’s collection of nearly 2,000 objects—acclaimed as one of the top five of its kind in the United States. Commemorating the 40th anniversary of the collection, which began with a gift of more than 200 objects from DMA benefactors Eugene and Margaret McDermott, the catalogue draws from both historical sources and contemporary research to examine over 100 figures, masks, and other works of art that represent

Caravaggio Painting Sent to Tel Aviv in Advance of Berlusconi Visit

TEL AVIV.- The Government of Italy has agreed to the loan of “Caravaggio’s Rest on the Flight into Egypt”, c. 1597 from the Doria Pamphilj Gallery in Rome to the Tel Aviv Museum of Art for one fortnight. Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571-1610), better known as “Caravaggio”, is one of the greatest painters of all times, and may be termed “the founder of Baroque” due to his innovative style, combining extreme chiaroscuro, figures flickering in the dark, stark realism and dramatic diagonal compositions. Surprisingly, this was all achieved by a man who

Site-Specific Installation by Artist Kiki Smith at the Brooklyn Museum Announced

BROOKLYN, NY.- Kiki Smith: Sojourn, a major site-specific installation that explores the ideas of creative inspiration and the cycle of life in relation to women artists, will be on view February 5 through September 12, 2010, in the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art. The exhibition will draw from a variety of work by Kiki Smith in a range of media including cast objects, unique sculpture, and works on paper. The artist will also incorporate her work into two of the Brooklyn Museum‘s eighteenth-century period rooms in the nearby Decorative Arts galleries. Inspired, in part, by an important eighteenth-century New England needlework, Prudence Punderson’s “The First, Second and Last Scenes of Mortality” (Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford), Smith focuses on a variety of universal experiences, from the milestones of birth and death to the quotidian, such as the daily chores of domestic life. She also analyzes

The Field Museum Announces “Mammoths and Mastodonts: Titans of the Ice Age”

CHICAGO, IL.- For millions of years they survived, living in temperate climates and on the wind-swept lands of the frozen north – great beasts weighing as much as eight tons and bearing tusks up to 16 feet long. “Mammoths and Mastodonts” were wonderfully successful creatures of the Ice Age. They were a source of food and artistic inspiration for ancient peoples who lived in Europe, Asia, and North America. But despite their size and ability to adapt to different habitats, these early cousins of the elephant eventually went extinct – leaving us an abundant fossil record. “Mammoths and Mastodonts: Titans of the Ice Age”, an exploration of these fascinating creatures, premiers at Chicago’s Field Museum March 5 and runs through September 6, 2010, before embarking on a four-year tour of 10 venues in North America and overseas. The exhibition is geared for all ages and is an experience the whole family will enjoy. S

First Exhibition in Philadelphia for Cai Guo-Qiang Opens

PHILADELPHIA, PA.- The Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Fabric Workshop and Museum will present a multi-site exhibition of the work of Cai Guo-Qiang, one of the most prominent contemporary artists on the international art scene. Cai Guo-Qiang: Fallen Blossoms consists of a poetic meditation on the passing of time, memory, and memorializing. One of the artist’s signature “explosion events,” Fallen Blossoms: Explosion Project has been specifically commissioned for the exhibition and will take place at the Philadelphia Museum of Art; a second explosion event will follow at the Fabric Workshop and Museum.

Italian Police Recover Hoard of Looted Artifacts After Year of Investigation

ROME (AP).- Italian police have broken up a ring of looters who raided tombs for ancient artifacts and exported them illegally to countries including the United States, officials said Friday. During more than a year of investigations, authorities recovered nearly 1,700 statues, vases and other artifacts dating from pre-Roman times to the heyday of the empire. Police flagged 19 people for possible investigation by prosecutors. The artifacts were mainly dug out from tombs in the areas around Naples and Venice and included a bronze bust of the emperor Augustus, customs police in Rome said.

The Field Museum Announces Mammoths and Mastodonts: Titans of the Ice Age

CHICAGO, IL.- For millions of years they survived, living in temperate climates and on the wind-swept lands of the frozen north – great beasts weighing as much as eight tons and bearing tusks up to 16 feet long. Mammoths and mastodons were wonderfully successful creatures of the Ice Age. They were a source of food and artistic inspiration for ancient peoples who lived in Europe, Asia, and North America. But despite their size and ability to adapt to different habitats, these early cousins of the elephant eventually went extinct – leaving us an abundant fossil record. Mammoths and Mastodons: Titans of the Ice Age, an exploration of these fascinating creatures, premiers at Chicago’s Field Museum March 5 and runs through September 6, 2010, before embarking on a four-year tour of 10 venues in North America and overseas. The exhibition is geared for all ages and is an experience the whole family will enjoy. Star of

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