Home » Art » Page 181

Art

HypeArt Visits: Greg Ito

Greg Ito is a Japanese-American artist who creates vibrant paintings that serve as portals into his memories and many interests. Born and raised in West Los Angeles, Ito remembers always being surrounded by artistic relatives and began to follow his own path by receiving his BFA at the now defunct San Francisco Art Institute (SFAI).Each of his compositions are created through a meticulous choice of symbols that are in part inspired by his Japanese heritage, his affinity to LA, and flatly laid in a rolodex of colors that the artist has archived since college. In particular, Ito often makes reference to his grandparents and great-grandparents' internment within the Gila River War Relocation Center in Arizona during World War II. While it was a turbulent experience for his family and the larg...

Metal Detectorist Finds Gold Pendant Linked to Henry VIII

Back in 2019, Charlie Clarke, a cafe owner from Birmingham, England needed to clear his mind after losing his dog to cancer. He decided to visit a friend's countryside home in Warwickshire, where equipped with his metal detector, he roamed around the grounds until the device repeatedly signaled a find. Buried a foot beneath the ground was a 500-year-old gold chain and heart-shaped pendant with motifs tied to Henry VIII and his first wife, Katherine of Aragon. First reported by The New York Times, Clarke knew he'd stumbled upon something truly special due simply to the weight and luster of the object. Having undergone years of research, the British Museum recently authenticated the piece as a genuine relic from the House of Tudor. “We all thought: My goodness, is this for real? Could this p...

Kohn Gallery Presents ‘This Is the Time of the Hour’ Exhibition by Alicia Adamerovich

Brooklyn-based artist Alicia Adamerovich has opened her inaugural solo exhibition at Kohn Gallery. Entitled The is the time of the hour, the show encompasses various artworks that delve into notions of being overwhelmed. Through her wooden sculptures and alien landscapes, Adamerovich invites her audience to traverse the subconscious as well as visualize their psychological states.Known for her depictions of bleak and barren landscapes with an unsettling, surrealistic appeal, Adamerovich's paintings are often doused in dark hues and sandy finishes. These sceneries are then graced with luminescent orbs and spiraling, structured appendages to complete the artist’s hallmark alienesque touch. From “Blessed be thy cavity” to “Isn’t it just” and “Setting my teeth on edge,” Adamerovich intends to ...

Bonhams Auction House Is up for Sale

Auction houses are usually the ones making the big sales, but Epiris, the London-based private equity firm that owns Bonhams, is looking to sell the centuries-old house itself. First reported by Bloomberg, Epiris tapped JPMorgan Chase & Co. to advise in the possible sale, which is estimated to be worth up to $1b USD.Epiris first acquired Bonham's in 2018 and has bolstered revenue to a record $1b USD in 2022, including seeing an increase in global salesrooms, offices and departments. Artnet News has previously attributed this rapid growth to a series of acquisitions of smaller regional auction houses, such as Bukowskis in Stockholm and Cornette de Saint Cyr in Paris — surmounting to $300m USD in 2021 altogether.2022 saw an array of offerings from the British auctioneer, where amongst the lo...

LACMA Retraces When Art and Computers First Began to Intersect

There is a new exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) that retraces the origins of when art and computers first began to intersect. Entitled Coded: Art Enters the Computer Age, 1952 — 1982, the show is divided into six semi-chronological periods that spotlight how computers evolved from military machines engineered to calculate missile projections and compute code, to staple devices used for governmental, corporate, educational purposes, and indeed, artistic purposes. 1952 is linked as the first year when a purely aesthetic image was created on a computer. This was the age of the "mainframe" computer — massive wall-built units that look like where the Architect dwells in The Matrix Revolutions. As with perhaps any new medium, there was a general hysteria around the role...

Philadelphia and Kansas City Museums Are Betting Art Over Super Bowl LVII

As with every year, plenty of wagers are being made in lieu of Super Bowl LVII, when the Kansas City Chiefs take on the Philadelphia Eagles. While the former club fields arguably the best quarterback-tight end combo in football, the latter is being touted as the most complete roster in the NFL. In a true pick-em game, it will likely come down to the team that makes the most mistakes that will determine this contest — adding to the drama of one particular bet that's been made between the Philadelphia Museum of Art (PMA) and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City.On Monday, February 6, the two institution's made a friendly bet over the big game, with the loser having to loan off a work of art from its permanent collection. “When the Eagles soar to victory, we will warmly greet our fr...

Have An Artistic Valentine’s Day with Pieter Ceizer’s New ‘Amour’ Wood Sculpture

Flowers, chocolates and a big ol' teddy bear are time-honored Valentine's Day gifts, but if your special someone is an artistic sort — or if you're a single artistic sort who's looking to cop something to stave off the gnawing loneliness that the "holiday" often bestows — Pieter Ceizer has got you covered this season. His long-running Woody sculpture series is continuing with a new model dubbed Amour, a love-filled creation that marks his second Valentine's-themed release after 2021's Love sculpture.Hand-crafted in Ceizer's Paris atelier, Amour is a humanoid heart with outstretched arms and legs and its tagline painted directly across its visage. It's doused in vivacious red and equipped with white screen-printed details that highlight the Dutch-born artist's mono-line style, beautiful in ...

The Shed Spotlights the Culture and Struggle of the Yanomami People

For over 50 years, artist and activist Claudia Andujar has documented daily life of the Yanomami people native to Brazil's Amazon rainforest. Instead of presenting an anthropological lens, which is often the approach for journalistic coverage on indigenous peoples native to the region, Andujar developed a lifelong connection that has allowed her to document an intimate portrait on the culture and struggles of Yanomami life. On view at The Shed in New York, Andujar presents the latest stop in her exhibition, The Yanomami Struggle. Featured alongside 200 of her own photographs are works by Yanomami artists, such as André Taniki, Ehuana Yaira, Joseca Mokahesi, Orlando Nakɨ uxima, Poraco Hɨko, Sheroanawe Hakihiiwe, and Vital Warasi. Also on view are a selection of video works by contemporary Y...

Broadwick Live Opens the Doors to “Thin Air” at London’s Beams

An all-new collaborative exhibition space is coming to the British capital, welcoming multifaceted creatives from around the globe to showcase transformative artwork at Beams in East London. Spearheaded by Broadwick Live — the group behind Printworks, Field Day, and The Drumsheds — a 55-thousand-square-foot industrial warehouse will be reimagined into one of the U.K.'s largest presentation spaces to date. Titled "Thin Air," the program will be dominated by seven contemporary artists and collectives working in the art and technology sector. Digital artist Alex Czetwertynski will curate the showcase, seeing creatives interact with the space and its extensive surroundings. Works by James Clar will be on display, which utilize meditation and sound to induce an increased imaginative state. Matt...

Shoeuzi Teases New Sculpture Piece “The Wait”

London-based artist Shoeuzi a.k.a. Jack London has teased his latest art piece titled "The Wait." The sculptural work expands the artist's catalog as his known for his fused sneaker and Uzi-style collectible art toys. View this post on Instagram A post shared by shoeuzi (@shoeuzi)The teaser shows a boy-like sculptural character named KIDULT, who is dressed in a tank top and a baseball cap. Additionally, the piece appears completely in black with a smooth surface. What makes the character stand out is its glowing white swirl-like eyes. The piece is said to illustrate the feelings of anxiety and frustration felt by people today.Check out the gallery and teaser above for a first look at Shoeuzi's forthcoming piece. Stay tuned as "The Wait" is set to make its official debut soon.In r...

Pen & Paper: Gentle Oriental

Meet Gabrielle Widjaja (a.k.a. Gentle Oriental), a multifaceted creative who has developed a unique style and point of view through their passion for art. Their journey began at a young age when they would spend hours every day copying comic strips and drawing fan art. As they grew older, their fascination with art evolved, leading them to pursue a bachelor's degree in graphic design at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). They describe themselves as a "Queer Chindo making Asian Americana," using their artwork to explore their background as an Asian American growing up in California and now living in New York.Their work is a reflection of their personal experiences and their newly acknowledged queer identity. From illustrations to digital art, and even tapestry, Gabrielle has a divers...

Leo Villareal Illuminates Pace Gallery’s Geneva Location

Leo Villareal's hypnotic light installations are usually reserved for massive public spaces. Think of the River Thames or the Bay Bridge in San Francisco. Using a combination of binary code, the American artist is well-known for creating rhythmic LED compositions that meditate on the relationship between architecture and nature.For his latest project, however, Villareal illuminates Pace Gallery's Geneva location through a new solo exhibition dubbed Nebulae. On view are a series of eight wall-based sculptures, each continuously diffusing colors "that evoke the complex, vibrant, and ever flowing molecular or cosmic systems that organically occur in nature," according to the artist in a statement. As the worlds of art and technology continue to blend, Villareal's sculptures invite audiences t...