Category: Art News

Sir Thomas Lighton Appointed New Chief Executive at Agnew’s in London

JACQUES LOUIS DAVID (1748-1825) - 'Apollo and Diana attacking the Children of Niobe' - 47 ½ x 60 ½ in (121 x 154 cm) Sold by Agnews Gallery in 2008 to DALLAS MUSEUM OF ART, USA

LONDON.- Agnew’s, one of London’s leading
international art dealers, has appointed Sir Thomas Lighton as its new Chief
Executive and is moving to a gallery in Mayfair in the heart of the capital’s
art world.
These important changes herald the beginning of a new era
for the prestigious, long-established gallery which will see a gradual move
towards greater involvement in 20th century and contemporary art, whilst
continuing with its more traditional dealing in Old Master and British
paintings, drawings and watercolours.

RIBA President’s Medals Student Awards 2009 Winners Announced

LONDON.- The winners of the RIBA President’s Medals Student Awards 2009 in association with Atkins were announced at a ceremony at the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). These prestigious awards promote excellence in the study of architecture, rewarding talent and encouraging architectural debate world-wide. Nicholas Szczepaniak , from the University of Westminster, won the Silver Medal for his project “A Defensive Architecture” and Wen Ying Teh from the Architectural Association won the Bronze Medal for her project “An Augmented Ecology of Wildlife and Industry”. Rebecca Gregory from the University of Westminster won the Dissertation Medal for her work “The Art of Skew Bridges: The Technique and its History Explored”. The main President’s Medals are: the Bronze Medal (awarded to the best Part 1 design project), the Silver Medal (for the best Part 2 design project) and the Dissertation Medal, which is awarded f

Sir Thomas Lighton Appointed New Chief Executive at Agnew’s

LONDON.- Agnew’s, one of London’s leading international art dealers, has appointed Sir Thomas Lighton as its new Chief Executive and is moving to a gallery in Mayfair in the heart of the capital’s art world. These important changes herald the beginning of a new era for the prestigious, long-established gallery which will see a gradual move towards greater involvement in 20th century and contemporary art, whilst continuing with its more traditional dealing in Old Master and British paintings, drawings and watercolors. Previously Tom Lighton was Managing Director of Waddington Galleries in London, which

Thomas Hoving, Ex-Director of Metropolitan Museum, Dies

NEW YORK, NY (AP).- Former Metropolitan Art Museum director Thomas Hoving has died at his home in New York City. Nancy Hoving says her husband died Thursday of cancer. He was 78. He was director of the museum from 1967 to 1977 and was known for championing blockbuster exhibits. Artifacts from King Tut’s tomb were the most popular exhibit in the museum’s history. They drew 8 million visitors. His tenure at the Metropolitan Museum of Art was characterized by his distinctive approach to expanding the Met’s collections. Rather than build more comprehensive

Francis Alys Awarded Biennial Award for Contemporary Art

MAASTRICHT.- The jury, comprised of Enrico Lunghi, Dirk Snauwaert and Alexander van Grevenstein, has decided unanimously to award the BACA 2010 to Francis Alÿs (B – 1959). For over twenty years, he has lived in Mexico City, and recently also in Casablanca. The BACA, the Biennial Award for Contemporary Art, is intended as a tribute to an artist for his or her adventurous oeuvre and visible influence on other (younger) artists. Francis Alÿs meets these criteria in exemplary fashion, adding to them a personal world brimming with poetic accents and enormous involvement with his neighbours

Musei Capitolini Exhibits Michelangelo’s Most Mysterious Work of Art

ROME.- This drawing on a support made by gluing two sheets together, has often been called a “small cartoon”. However there is no evidence that this piece represents a preparatory phase of any work by Michelangelo or by artists connected to him. It is instead enlightening to think of this piece, without comparison in the corpus of Michelangelo’s drawings, as a meditation – continually recurring in the artist’s mind- on a maternity that is too painful for the mother to fully express her love for her son. It is no accident that the most

The National Portrait Gallery Presents Two Exhibitions on Elvis Presley in 2010

WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery will recognize the influence of the “King of Rock n’ Roll,” Elvis Presley (1935–1977), on American life, history and culture with two exhibitions in 2010. “One Life: Echoes of Elvis” opens on Presley’s 75th birth anniversary and is a one-room exhibition devoted to the evolution and influence of Presley’s image after his death. The traveling exhibition, “Elvis at 21: Photographs by Alfred Wertheimer,” shows a young musician just about to rise to fame. One Life: Echoes of Elvis” explores the image and story of Presley

The Powerhouse Museum is Rewinding the 80s with a Spectacular New Exhibition

SYDNEY.- The Powerhouse Museum is bringing back the 80s with a spectacular exhibition opening on December 12 that will reveal the good and the bad about the decade vividly remembered for its over the top excess. The 80s are back will explore Australian life and popular culture in the 1980s, remembering the styles, trends and subcultures, and how they found expression in fashion, design, music, film and television. “The 1980s shaped a generation. Australia was prosperous and expressing its emerging identity with confidence through a variety of flourishing cultural forms,” said exhibition curator Peter Cox. “It was a fertile time for new

The Cucci Cabinet – A Royal Gift – Sells for 4.5 Million Pounds

LONDON.- Combining superb Florentine pietre dure plaques with opulent gilt bronze mounts, elaborate marquetry and beautifully modeled figurative carving, this cabinet is a superb example of the magnificent cabinets produced in Paris in the mid-17th-century. Almost certainly given to Queen Hedvig Eleonora of Sweden, or indeed commissioned by her, it is one of only very few surviving cabinets executed at the Royal Gobelins workshops in Paris. It illustrates

Pennsylvania Police: Artist’s Son Swipes $20M in Paintings

ALLENTOWN, PA (AP).- A Pennsylvania man used a backhoe to break into a museum owned by his father — the pioneering fantasy artist Frank Frazetta — in an attempt to steal 90 paintings valued at $20 million, police said Thursday. State police charged Alfonso Frank Frazetta, 52, of Marshalls Creek, with theft, burglary and trespass after they say he was caught loading the artwork into his trailer and SUV.

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