Tuesday, August 18, 2020

NEW BOOK BY D.L. HUGHLEY (SURRENDER, WHITE PEOPLE!) #ARTBYSKIP


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NEW SPECIAL FROM WICKED NADAS THIS WEEK ORDER NOW WICKEDNADAS@GMAIL.COM

 






Gordon Parks' Ethically Complex Depictions of Crime Published in New Book

 gordon parks the atmosphere of crime book moma museum of modern art equal justice initiative

gordon parks the atmosphere of crime book moma museum of modern art equal justice initiative

gordon parks the atmosphere of crime book moma museum of modern art equal justice initiative

gordon parks the atmosphere of crime book moma museum of modern art equal justice initiative

gordon parks the atmosphere of crime book moma museum of modern art equal justice initiative

gordon parks the atmosphere of crime book moma museum of modern art equal justice initiative

gordon parks the atmosphere of crime book moma museum of modern art equal justice initiative

gordon parks the atmosphere of crime book moma museum of modern art equal justice initiative

gordon parks the atmosphere of crime book moma museum of modern art equal justice initiative

gordon parks the atmosphere of crime book moma museum of modern art equal justice initiative

In 1957, LIFE Magazine enlisted Gordon Parks to illustrate a recurring series of articles on crime across the United States. Parks was the first African American to hold the position of staff photographer for the publication. He embarked on a six-week journey to major cities including New York, Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles. The body of work that he captured for the project resulted in an eight-page photo-essay titled The Atmosphere of Crime.

This past June, The Gordon Parks Foundation teamed up with the Museum of Modern Art to publish a book featuring 60 shots from the series alongside many other captures that have never been made public. The stylized visuals appear as stills from crime noir movies of the past. From a snapshot portraying suit-clad cops kicking down a door to a haunting image of a shadowy figure brandishing a gun, Parks’ images offered an unfiltered look at the tumultuous atmosphere that dominated the era of the 1950s embroiled in social unrest and urban corruption.

Bryan Stevenson, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, expressed in an essay inside the book: “From the beginning, the prosecution and punishment of crime in this country have been profoundly shaped by race, poverty, power, and status. For centuries politicians have stoked fear of crime and exploited perceived crime waves, while our public discourse about crime has been compromised by persistent inattention to our history of racial violence. There is a different narrative about ‘crime in America’ that we have for the most part ignored.” 

The book is available for purchase at select stockists including Steidle’s website for € 38.00 EUR (approx. $44 USD).

ART & USPS

 futura kaws save usps artists plea

futura kaws save usps artists plea

Amid the ongoing Black Lives Matter protests, coronavirus pandemic, and the upcoming November election, people online are concerned about The United States Postal Service. Just one look at your social media feed and you’ll probably encounter a slew of posts outlining grievances over the Trump administration’s efforts to gut and undermine the agency ahead of the election.

A number of those online posts urging people to help save the USPS are by leading artists including Futura, KAWS and more. “As a former postal worker who loved to work the graveyard shift, I will always support the USPS. Thank you for the job you and your coworkers continue to do everyday in these terribly troubled times,” said Futura on his Futura Laboratories Instagram account. Gender non-conforming writer and performance artist, ALOK, has also shown their support for the USPS alongside American artist Lmnopi and Portland-based illustrator AliRae Aguirre.

President Trump has made claims that mail-in voting will lead to voter fraud without any sort of substantial evidence — many people are relying on absentee ballots by mail due to fear of going to polling stations because of the pandemic. Not to mention, Trump admitted last week that he opposed $25 billion in new funding for the agency, as per CNN.

The USPS was in financial woes before Trump even took up the U.S. presidency. The agency lost $69 billion USD in the past 11 years, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office. One of the main reasons for the shortfall is a 2006 law that put the USPS at a competitive disadvantage.

Those who want to help protect the USPS should contact their respective senators and representatives via phone call or e-mail. You can also sign this Change.org petition and text “USPS” to 5049. Another way to show support is by purchasing stamps and USPS merchandise here.

Friday, August 14, 2020

NEW #ARTBYSKIP ON ARTBYSKIP.MYSHOPIFY.COM / SKIP-SMITH.FINEARTAMERICA.COM

 

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ART: BASQUIAT

 Phillips Jean-Michel Basquiat Auction Southampton 'Portrait of A-One A.K.A King' 1982 painting hamptons

This Friday, Phillips is opening up a new outpost in the Hamptons, joining other auction houses like Sotheby’s and Christie’s, as well as galleries like Hauser & Wirth, Pace and Skarstedt. Phillips has moved into a two-story, 6,000-square-foot space in Southampton, New York, which has been redesigned by studioMDA. Its inaugural show at the new space will feature 70 works, giving the public a hint of what will be included in the auction house’s upcoming sales.

A major highlight of the November evening sale of 20th-century and contemporary art is Jean-Michel Basquiat’s 1982 painting Portrait of A-One A.K.A King, which is estimated to fetch between $10 million to $15 million USD. The six-by-six-foot work work serves as a tribute to the legendary New York graffiti artist A-One, who was also a close friend of Basquiat, and is an example of the artist’s “mark-making,” Robert Manley, co-head of 20th-century and contemporary art and global chairman at Phillips, told ARTnews.

Back in June, Basquiat’s Untitled (Head) (1982) achieved a new record for a work on paper by the artist at Sotheby’s, where it sold for $15.2 million, while Phillips sold a Basquiat paper on canvas work titled Victor 25448 (1987) for $9.3 million USD last month. Just two weeks ago, a Basquiat work set a record for an in-app purchase when Untitled (1982) went for $10.8 million USD on former Christie’s co-chairman Loïc Gouzer’s new app called Fair Warning.

Other works that will be included in the evening sale of 20th-century and contemporary art include pieces by Pablo Picasso, Ruth Asawa, Joan Miró, Nicolas Party, Robert Rauschenberg and many others. The sale is scheduled for November 11 to 12.

Jean Michel-Basquiat In-App Purchase Record Loïc Gouzer painting artwork 'untitled'

Last week, former Christie’s co-chairman Loïc Gouzer debuted his new app called Fair Warning. The artwork auction app sees a single piece of art auctioned off each week starting on Sundays at 5 p.m. EDT. Yesterday, Gouzer announced that the app sold Jean-Michel Basquiat’s Untitled (1982) for $10.8 million USD — a record for an in-app purchase of any item. Measuring four by six feet, the acrylic and oil stick Basquiat work was kept in Gouzer’s garage in Montauk, which he transformed into a climate-controlled viewing room. Interested buyers were allowed to view it in person.

The first piece that Gouzer auctioned on the app was Steven Shearer’s 2018 portrait, Synthist, which sold to a private collector in Europe for $437,000 USD. He has sold two works since then, including a body print by David Hammons that sold for approximately $1.3 million USD and a piece by Steven Parrino that fetched $977,500 USD. “It’s really an experiment,” said Gouzer. “The idea was to create a guerrilla type of auction system where you could start moving paintings by using the cloud rather than physical locations.”

For now, only those who have been invited can participate. Unlike auction houses like Sotheby’s and Christie’s that consider themselves democratic outlets, Fair Warning has limited spots. “There’s no runners, there’s no trash-taking or shopping around pictures—it’s about creating a community,” Gouzer said. “At least for now, we have a certain amount of people that we’re going to take, and the closer we get to that number the harder it’ll be to get in. The whole idea is to keep it private so people can feel comfortable.”

Jean-Michel Basquiat $100 Million USD Painting art institute of chicago ken griffin 'boy and god in johnnypump' Kenneth C. Griffin

Back in June, Citadel founder and Chicago philanthropist Kenneth C. Griffin purchased Jean-Michel Basquiat’s massive Boy and Dog in Johnnnypump for over $100 million USD. “The vast majority of Ken’s art collection is on display at museums for the public to enjoy,” Citadel spokesman Zia Ahmed said after the sale. “He intends to share this piece as well.” This Thursday, the work will hang on the wall in the Modern Wing of the Art Institute of Chicago, where it will be on view to the public when the museum reopens.

“This is from 1982, so really at the height of his career,” said Hendrik Folkerts, the museum’s Dittmer Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art. “That’s why we’re so extremely thrilled to be able to reopen with this.” Measuring 14 feet wide and 8 feet high, the work depicts one of Basquiat’s almost skeletal Black male figures playing with a dog in the spray of an open fire hydrant, or “johnnypump.” “He wants to paint these figures, both dog and boy, from the inside out,” Folkerts explained, while the surrounding splashes of color evoke a “blazing hot summer landscape.”

Boy and Dog in Johnnnypump will become the museum’s only work on display by Basquiat. This new addition showcases the resonance of his works and his influence on a new generation of artists. “If I talk to young artists here in Chicago at the School (of the Art Institute) or anywhere else, Basquiat is an inspiration,” Folkerts added. “Basquiat is there for them.” Griffin is a leading donor to cultural institutions, especially in Chicago and New York, and has loaned other significant works, like Jackson Pollock’s Number 17A and Willem de Kooning’s Interchanged.

The Art Institute of Chicago is opening on July 30 and offering a week of free admission for Illinois residents.

jean michel basquiat victor painting for sale artworks auctions phillips sale

Phillips will soon put up a monumental painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat for auction in its upcoming Contemporary Evening Sale. Measuring six by eleven feet, the sprawling work titled Victor 25448 was displayed in Basquiat’s last solo exhibition before his death in 1988 at New York’s Vrej Baghoomian gallery. The large-scale paper on canvas work features several graphics of signs found in Henry Dreyfuss’s 1972 Symbol Sourcebook, as per ARTnews.

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

NEW ART WORK ON ARTBYSKIP.MYSHOPIFY.COM & SKIP-SMITH.FINEARTAMERICA.COM

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PEEP SAVAGE X FENTY'S AUGUST DROP, FULL OF PASTEL LINGERIE

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Rihanna‘s Savage X Fenty has announced an August drop, likely the last of the brand’s “Summer20” collection. A lookbook starring Savage X Fenty’s newest ambassador, Nazanin Mandi, reveals a cotton-candy-colored range of underwear suitable for everyday wear and special occasions.

Ranging from underwire to bralettes, bras arrive in lavender, mint and pastel pink colorways. Prints including the Savage X Fenty logo, delicate florals and colorful embroidered pineapples are applied throughout the collection, appearing on briefs, thongs and vinyl-trimmed G-strings. Classic cotton and lace styles provide more versatile options, too.

Savage X Fenty’s August drop releases on August 1 at the Savage X Fenty website

CHROME HEARTS IS SUING FASHION NOVA

Chrome Hearts Fashion Nova Copyright Infringement Lawsuit Logo Horseshoe Cross Imagery Court
Chrome Hearts joins the list of brands that have sued fast fashion giant Fashion Nova for copyright infringement. The label filed a lawsuit in a California federal court on Thursday regarding Fashion Nova’s apparel featuring graphics resembling Chrome Hearts’ recognizable horseshoe-inspired designs.