Can you heist street art? Yes you can, and right now there’s a massive global crime spree going on + more art industry news:
Art Industry News is a daily digest of the most consequential developments coming out of the art world and art market. Here’s what you need to know on this Friday, April 8.The Guyanese British artist will create four sculptures to adorn its Fifth Avenue facade. The project, titled “Gilt,” is the third in the Met’s ongoing series of site-specific commissions for the museum’s exterior. Locke’s project will run from September 16 to May 22, 2023.
” The exhibition, which runs until October 30, includes works that engage and challenge femininity, and features Louise Bourgeois and Petra Collins. A lack of regulation in the South African art market makes its industry ripe for exploitation and the circulation of fakes, a report says. Works by 20th-century artists, like the late Lucky Sibiya, who died in 1999, are particularly susceptible.
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Ukrainian woman in Tucson makes and sells felt art to send money back homeA Ukrainian couple living in Tucson is selling art to send the funds to Ukraine. The local United Nations Association Center gave them a platform to do it.
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Why a Documentary About a Cow Reveals the Limits of an Art FormThe poignant and heartfelt documentary “Cow” is a displaced movie, tnyfrontrow writes. “For all its virtues, its most interesting action isn’t onscreen but only hinted at.”
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Catholic Church in Encino Shows Support for Ukraine With 80-Foot-Long Art MuralAn 80-foot-long work of art made with colorful salt and sawdust was created at a Catholic Parish in Encino as a message of support to Ukraine.
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Letter: Public art is worth the money – but a landlocked whale doesn’t cut itThe cost of the 900 South roundabout whale sculpture is $100,000. To paint it is another $7,500. Now, mind you, I’m not against spending money on public art. I’m a big fan of it. It’s necessary to the vibrancy of a city and adds character to places that would otherwise be “Anytown, USA.” Don’t get me started on Salt Lake City’s downtown. What I am against is spending money on any public art that lacks creativity, a good design sense, proper placement, and overall interest — like a landlocked whale.
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These photos reinsert Black and brown, queer and trans bodies in art history'Being,' a project spearheaded by Camila Falquez, reimagines the classical artistic canon from which they've historically been erased.
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