Monday, 30 May 2011

Video of Ai Wei Wei's Zodiac Heads from asiasociety.org

   I was having a look at the Asia Society website (here) and saw this little video. I've pinched it to put on here, so please have a look at their site by way of a thank you.
 

   If you want to see a bigger image of this, then copy and open the following code in a new window:
                        http://media.asiasociety.org/video/110516_zodiacheads.flv

   How I got this will probably be the subject of a future post titled something like 'How to pinch stuff off websites using Firefox and Adblock Plus'


Sunday, 29 May 2011

Indian & Islamic Art at Auction Atrium, London June 3rd-9th

   Auction Atrium is an internet-based auction house located in Kensington High St, London, W8. All lots in an active auction are available for inspection in its showroom.

   The Indian & Islamic Art sale starting June 3rd has 215 lots.




 A Chandella Buff Sandstone Figure of a Divine beauty (surasundari), probably Khajuraho,
11th/12th century. 75cm. Estimate: £15,000-20,000.








   You can view the online catalogue here.

Poster auction at van Sabben, Hoorn, Holland June 4th

   van Sabben Poster Auctions in the Netherlands are staging the first of their twice-yearly sales on June 4th. 1026 lots, many with very affordable estimates (but probably not the one illustrated!).
Holland-America Line New Statendam - 80x105, 1929, on japan by A.M. Cassandre
Estimate: €7,500-12,500

   You can view the online catalogue here.

Saturday, 28 May 2011

Bookstall is NOT on today May 28th

   After 11 months quietly minding my own business in Martello St on a Saturday, I've been stomped on by The Man. Hopefully I'll find a new location shortly. I plan to make books available on here in the meantime, so pop back and see what's on offer.

Wednesday, 25 May 2011

Photographs auction at Grisebach Berlin May 26th.

   Villa Grisebach in Berlin is staging a 190 lot auction of modern & contemporary photographs on May 26th.

   'Highlights include the famous Mainbocher Corset by Horst P. Horst (Est: €10,000-15,000) which counts among the masterworks of the history of photography, as well as George Hoyningen-Huene’s classical Divers, Paris (a print originally from the collection of Horst P. Horst) (Est: €8,000-12,000), Berenice Abbott’s New York at Night (Est: €7,000-9,000), André Kertész’s Melancholic Tulip (Est: €4,000-6,000), Andreas Feininger’s Empire State Building seen from New Jersey (Est: €3,000-4,000) or Leni Riefenstahl’s Glenn Morris (Diskuswerfer) (Est: €3,000-5,000).

   Especially rare are vintage prints by Helmar Lerski from two private collections, one is an extremely rare Selbstportrait (Est: €4,000-6,000), a Junger Bettler from the series Köpfe des Alltags (Est: €3,000-5,000) as well as partly hand-coloured works from Lerski’s early years in the U.S.A.

   More highlights of modern photography are René Burri’s Ché Guevara in an unusual large format (Est: €15,000-18,000), Erwin Blumenfeld’s Selbstportrait mit Maske (Est: €9,000-11,000), Arnold Newman’s portrait Jackson Pollock, Springs, Long Island (Est: €4,000-6,000) as well as works by David Bailey, Aenne Biermann, Mario Giacomelli, Germaine Krull, Michael Ruetz, Else Thalemann, Herbert Tobias and others.

   The contemporary section of the sale begins with Bernd and Hilla Becher’s nine-part work Fördertürme, Schuylkill County, PA, USA (Est: €20,000-30,000). Other top lots in this section include Valie Export’s Konfiguration mit schwarzer Hand (Est: €8,000-12,000), Peter Lindbergh’s Kristen McMenamy from the 1996 Pirelli calendar (Est: €12,000-14,000), Sarah Moon’s colour pigment print Jean-Paul Gaultier (Indépendant) (Est: €5,000-7,000) and Hiroshi Sugimoto’s Tri City Drive-In, San Bernardino (Est: €20,000-30,000) as well as works by Helmut Newton, Martin Parr, Bettina Rheims, Thomas Ruff, Thomas Struth, Miroslav Tichy, Wolfgang Tillmans, and others.'
 Horst P. Horst - The Mainbocher Corset
Later gelatin print. Estimate : €10,000-15,000
   You can view the online catalogue here.

Sunday, 22 May 2011

Tanya Brett sculptures at Jonathan Cooper Gallery until May 28th

   Jonathan Cooper Park Walk Gallery, London, SW10, is staging Ice Souls, a new exhibition from sculptor Tanya Brett until May 28th. Focusing much-needed attention on the plight of the endangered polar bear and other Arctic animals as a result of global warming, the new exhibition will include fifteen ceramic sculptures, bronzes and drawings depicting polar bears, seals, arctic foxes, walruses and arctic hares.

   The exhibition is in support of Hauser Bears (here), a charitable organisation committed to the conservation of bears worldwide.

Swimming Bear - ceramic 54x67x19cm
Tanya Brett with one of her sculptures

   Details of the exhibition can be found here.

14 Ju Ming sculptures going under the hammer at Christie's HK May 28th-29th

  Christie's are to auction 14 Ju Ming Tai-Chi sculptures as part of the Chinese 20th Century Art sales in Hong Kong on May 28th & 29th. You may have seen one his sculptures in Old Park Lane, W1, next to the Metropolitan Hotel.
Ju Ming (b.1938) - Taichi Series - Sparring
  Edition of 6 - two bronze sculptures
left: 81x 61x120 cm. right:128x44x92 cm.
Executed in 1982.
Estimate: HK$2,500,000-3,500,000. 

   You can read Ju Ming's wiki entry here where you'll also find other links as well. You can look at the catalogue of the auctions here and here.

Clerkenwell Design Week in London May 24th-26th

   London’s premier celebration of design returns following its hugely successful 2010 inauguration. The three-day festival brings together a varied and vibrant programme of events spanning debates, discussions, presentations, exhibitions, installations, street parties and workshops all in the name of celebrating and embracing design.

   Showcasing the latest product and furniture design innovations from over 50 British and international manufacturers, CDW crucially offers the unrivalled opportunity to see many world launches of new furniture and interior accessories. For many companies it’s also the first opportunity to see products that were launched at the Milan furniture fair in April.

   New to this years event is The House of Detention venue – a subterranean Victorian prison hidden in the heart of Clerkenwell. Not usually open to the public, this unique space will house site-specific installations and innovative product displays for the duration of CDW.

   Once again, CDW will take up ‘residency’ at the Farmiloe Building on St John Street, housing a pop-up design exhibition, featuring cutting edge displays and installations from an array of international designers and organisations from across London and further afield.
   You can register online to gain free entry to the exhibitions and obtain full details of what's on offer here.

Chinese efforts to preserve underwater archaeological wreck sites

   I picked up a copy of the European weekly edition of China Daily (here) and there's an article on the Chinese Goverment's efforts to salvage the wrecks of the Ming Dynasty merchant vessel Nan'ao No. 1 discovered in 2007 in the South China Sea, and also the Song Dynasty Nanhai No. 1 lifted entire from the seabed also in 2007.
   You can read the article here.

Saturday, 21 May 2011

Simon Norfolk + John Burke photo exhibition at Tate Modern until July 10

   Burke & Norfolk: Photographs From The War In Afghanistan at Tate Modern until July 10th. Details here.

   In October 2010, Simon Norfolk began a series of new photographs in Afghanistan, which takes its cue from the work of nineteenth-century British photographer John Burke. Norfolk’s photographs reimagine or respond to Burke’s Afghan war scenes in the context of the contemporary conflict. Conceived as a collaborative project with Burke across time, this new body of work is presented alongside Burke’s original portfolios. John Burke, took sepia-toned documentary photographs of the second Anglo-Afghan war, from 1878 to 1880 (the first having taken place in 1839-1842).
   You can see more of the photographs on Simon Norfolk's website here.

Saturday, 14 May 2011

Bookstall is on today May 14th

There might be a shower around 1 o'clock but hopefully we'll get most of the day. I've loads of stuff this week, so come on down.

Friday, 13 May 2011

The early bird gets the worm

Since I didn't do the stall last week, the competition will carry over to tomorrow.

   The first person who comes to my stall on Saturday (if it's fine) and utters the phrase

'Ancelotti, that's yer lotti'
        will win either two auction catalogues from past auctions or one catalogue from a forthcoming sale.

Tuesday, 10 May 2011

Marjorie Strider exhibition at Albemarle Gallery, London until May 28th

From the website:

   'Overlooked until relatively recently, Women Pop Artists are currently experiencing a well-deserved renaissance. Marjorie Strider is one of the most important women artists of this movement whose work is now being looked at again.

   She participated in the highly acclaimed touring exhibition, Seductive Subversion: Women Pop Artists 1958-1968 from January 2010 to April 2011, which received rave reviews. The exhibition was organised by the Rosenwald-Wolf Gallery, University of the Arts, Philadelphia and curated by its exhibitions director Sid Sachs. A hardback book of the same title accompanied the exhibition published by Abbeville Press, New York.

   Exhibiting throughout May at Albemarle Gallery, Strider brings a new vibrant body of work to a London audience for the first time in her artistic career. The themes of feminine beauty and the girly pin-up, male obsessions and the objectification of women are playfully juxtaposed in her recent work. Her exquisite use and understanding of colour and composition, occasionally veering towards abstraction, firmly sets her among her Pop Art male counterparts, Roy Lichtenstein, Tom Wesselmann and Andy Warhol.'
In the Swim, 2010, acrylic on canvas, 60"x80"

   You can find details of the exhibition and look at the catalogue online here.

Monday, 9 May 2011

13 Assassins trailer + photos + more

   13 Assassins is the latest Japanese samurai epic to hit our cinema screens.

   Takashi Miike, the director responsible for such uncompromising and unforgettable movies as Audition and Ichi The Killer indelibly stamps his trademark style on the Samurai genre with the ultra-violent, all-action, blood-spattered epic, 13 Assassins.
 
   One of the most prolific, wildly unpredictable and controversial directors in cinema, here Miike reinvents himself once more “in top, slash-tastic form” (Variety), throwing in several obvious nods to the works of Akira Kurosawa and enough grotesquery to satisfy his loyal legions of fans, with a movie that has been described as a “handsomely mounted samurai adventure” (Cinematical) that is “too damn magnificent to ignore” (Twitch).

   Miike’s remake of Eichi Kudo’s classic 1963 samurai period action-drama Jusan-nin No Shikaku boasts a heavyweight cast featuring some of the biggest names in contemporary Japanese cinema, including Koji Yakusho (Babel; Memoirs Of A Geisha), Takayuki Yamada (252: Sign Of Life), Yusuke Iseya (Sukiyaki Western Django; Memories Of Matsuko; Casshern), Mikijiro Hira (Goemon) and Hiroki Matsukata (Tajomaru: Avenging Blade; Ichi).
   The story:  In mid-19th Century Japan the era of the samurai is beginning to fade as the feudal nation begins to enjoy a rare period of peace. But the fragile calm is soon threatened by the bloody rise of Lord Naritsugu, the Shogun’s sadistic, psychopathic younger brother, whose position places him above the law and free to rape, mutilate and murder on a whim. Concerned that Naritsugu’s actions will eventually destroy the Shogunate, top Shogun official Sir Doi covertly calls on esteemed and noble samurai warrior Shinzaemon Shimada to assassinate the evil Lord before it is too late. Shinzaemon willingly agrees and immediately gathers together an elite group of samurai to assist him in the task, knowing that what they are about to embark upon may well prove to be a suicide mission.Following weeks of training and preparation, Shinzaemon and his men head off on a perilous journey through the mountains, hoping to ambush Lord Naritsugu and his entourage. However, on finally coming face to face with their target, the 13 samurai discover Naritsugu’s men hugely outnumber them. Disregarding the odds, the fearless assassins continue with their plan and initiate a bloody showdown that they cannot allow to end until Naritsugu lies dying.

   You can look on the film's official UK site for photos & trailers here.

   The film's official US site for photos & trailers is here.

Sunday, 8 May 2011

Edouard Martinet exhibition at the Sladmore Gallery, London until June 10th

   Following on from his first exhibition two years ago the Sladmore Gallery is staging a second showing of Edouard Martinet's creations made from bits & pieces of 'found' mechanical items.

   He has continued with the largely insect theme with meticulous crafting of each work, from the tiniest screwed-in hair pin prawn feeler to the road lamp wings of the ladybird. All are underpinned with his sculptor's understanding of the correct form of each piece, the attitude and poise perfectly re-created in his unusual materials.
Wasp on Fruit - 12 ¼" x 9" x 13" (height x length x depth) 
eyes and head : old motorbike sunglasses, bells
antennae : arms of folding glasses
thorax: boot tips, bells from typewriters, bike bell,
wings : pencil holder, glass
legs: spoon handles, bike brakes, bike chain
abdomen : bike headlight, boot tips;    fruit : float


   Edouard Martinet was born in Le Mans, France in 1963 he studied art at ESAG, Paris and graduated in 1988. From 1988 to 1992 he lived and worked in Paris as a graphic designer, and in 1990 started sculpting and staging exhibitions. From 1992 to 1995 he lived in Charente before moving to his current location in Rennes where he teaches art at L'Institut des Arts Appliques.

   You can look at more of the works available here.

Conservation of Buddhist Treasures in Mustang documentary 54min

   Over at preciousteaching.org there is a documentary detailing efforts to conserve works of art in Mustang (moo-stahn), one of the last outposts of Tibetan culture. It is so isolated and protected that no Westerner set foot inside its borders for centuries. In the early 1990s, this untouched society set high in the Himalayas opened its borders for the first time, exposing an ancient world’s dazzling sacred relics long damaged by the elements and neglect.


   You can see the film here. There is loads more to see on the site so have a wander around.

Saturday, 7 May 2011

Adam Styka painting to be sold at Sotheby's London May 18th

   I've another Adam Styka post elsewhere on here to which this one will be added after the sale. Is it the most expensive painting in the sale? No. I just like a lot of his works.

   Sotheby's in London are to sell a painting by Adam Styka as part of the 19th Century European Paintings sale on May 18th.
Porter near the island of Philae, oil on canvas 28¾"x36¼"
Estimate £25,000-£35,000

Asian Art at Woolley & Wallis Salisbury May 18th-19th

   Woolley and Wallis is the top provincial auction house for Asian Art in the UK (if you don't count someone else selling a Qianlong vase for £41million - still unpaid). It has announced a 2-day sale of asian art on May 18th & 19th.

   Part I contains 473 lots and can be viewed here.

   Part II contains 662 lots and can be viewed here.
A rare Chinese archaistic rhinoceros horn libation cup 16th / 17th century,
15.8cm long, 9.7cm high. Estimate: £30,000-50,000

Bookstall is NOT on today May 7th.

   The weather's a bit dodgy today. I'm going to give it a miss this week. Instead, I'm going to go to the Animal Art Fair in Fulham this weekend. It finishes tomorrow. Andrew.

Friday, 6 May 2011

Self-sufficiency courses at Hackney City Farm

   Low-Impact Living Initiative (LILI) is a non-profit organisation whose mission is to help people reduce their impact on the environment, improve their quality of life, gain new skills, live in a healthier and more satisfying way, have fun and save money.

  They offer courses throughout the country, some of which take place at Hackney City Farm. If you've ever had the notion to keep chickens, make your own essential oils, grow mushrooms or produce soap, then have a look at what is on offer - you never know what you may discover!
 
distilling oils from fresh mint on a course at Redfield

You can see the range of courses offered here.

Photographs auctions at Bloomsbury London & Rome May 18th & 20th

   Bloomsbury Auctions has announced two photograph auctions in London & Rome on May 18th & 20th respectively.

   London's sale features 226 lots and the later Rome auction has 175.
Berenice Abbott (1898-1991) Canyon: Broadway and Exchange Place, July 16, 1936 
Vintage gelatin silver print, signed in pencil with photographer's stamp verso, 10 x 8in
Estimate: £9000 – £12000

   You can view the catalogue and also download it (17MB) here.

   More photographs by Berenice Abbott can be seen over on the Commerce Graphics website here.

The early bird gets the worm.

   Shall we have a little competition?

   The first person who comes to my stall on Saturday (if it's fine) and utters the phrase
'Ancelotti, that's yer lotti'
        will win either two auction catalogues from past auctions or one catalogue from a forthcoming sale.

Wednesday, 4 May 2011

Auction Atrium African & Oceanic Art internet sale until May 9th

   Auction Atrium is an internet-based auction house located in Kensington High St, London, W8. All lots in an active auction are available for inspection in their showroom.

   The African & Oceanic Art sale currently live has 137 lots.
A Pair of Ogbomoso Ibeji Figures
standing on a circular base with hands resting on the thighs, with pendulous breasts, the enlarged head with typical scarifications, and a high conical coiffure;
eyes inlaid with aluminum nails, fine aged brown patina. Height: 22 cm. Condition: Good. Estimate: £ 1000-1500.

   You can view the online catalogue here.

Tuesday, 3 May 2011

Photographs auction at Phillips de Pury London May 19th + downloadable catalogue

   Phillips de Pury  has announced the auction of its latest Photographs sale in London May 19th. 188 lots.
Peter Lindbergh - Linda Evangelista, Harper's Bazaar US, 1992
Baryte print, printed later and flush-mounted. 100x80cm. One from an edition of 7. 
Estimate: £22,000-28,000

    You can look at the catalogue and even download it here. The download is 39.7 MB so it may take a while if you have a slow connection speed.

Monday, 2 May 2011

Past exhibition of rock carvings of Dazu at National Museum of Wales

The steep hillsides of the Dazu world heritage site near Chongqing, China contain an exceptional series of rock carvings dating from the 9th -13th century.

   The carvings comprise some 50,000 figures in total. They are remarkable for their aesthetic quality, rich diversity of subject matter, both secular and religious, and the light that they shed on everyday life in China during this period.

   The exhibition provided a unique opportunity to see some of these sculptures, which had never before been seen outside China.

   From Steep Hillsides: Ancient Rock Carvings from Dazu, China contained superb examples that have become detached from their original setting, along with accurate replicas of some of the most important sculptures still in situ and dramatic large-scale images to give some idea of what it is like to visit these spectacular places.
   Whilst the rock carvings have now returned to China there are links to photos and other stuff here.

Maori-carved 30-bore carbine + 2 clubs at Wallis & Wallis May 5th

   Wallis and Wallis Auctions in Lewes, Sussex, England will be offering to the highest bidders 3 Maori-related items in its Conoisseur Collectors sale on May 5th.

   First up is Lot 158: A rare and most unusual Maori-carved 30-bore Calisher & Terry breech loading rifled percussion carbine, 38" overall, barrel 21" engraved on the breech “Terry’s patent 30 Bore” and along the barrel “Calisher & Terry, Makers to HM War Department”, and with folding ladder rearsight; the lock engraved “Calisher & Terry, London”; the walnut fullstock profusely carved overall with intricate Maori decoration; steel mounts, the trigger guard numbered 6334; with front sight swivel only and original steel cleaning rod. Good Working Order and Condition, the metalwork with dark patina overall (butt trap lid missing).

Note: The British and Colonial troops fought the Maoris in 1846-47 with further service in 1860-66. The official weapon used was the Calisher & Terry carbine. This carbine was probably captured and decorated by a Maori. Estimate: £3000.

    Lot 159: A 19th century Maori greenstone club patu, or mere pounamu, of paddle form, radial grooved grip with hole for suspension cord, 12" overall, with photostat details and information from the Museum of New Zealand, Wellington. Estimate: £3000.
   Lot 160: A Maori hardwood paddle club wahaika, carved overall with traditional banded pattern, a Tiki with paua shell eyes, on the inner edge, stylized head with paua shell eyes to grip, 15½" overall. Good Condition. Estimate: £3000.
   The details of the auction can be found here.

Modernist Posters at Swann Galleries, New York May 5th

From the press release:
   'On May 5th, Swann Galleries will conduct their annual spring auction of Modernist Posters. The sale features rare avant-garde images from the U.S., Europe and Asia that appeal to fans of cutting-edge design.

   There is a rare exhibition poster by Dutch architect and designer Hendrikus T. Wijdeveld for a Frank Lloyd Wright exhibition held in Amsterdam, 1931.

   Art Deco classics include Jean Dupas, Bal des Etudiants, 1927, in a rare large format. The image appealed to Andy Warhol, who at one time owned a version of the poster.

   A 1935 poster by an unknown artist for the film Peach Blossom Dream, starring Chinese movie star Pearl Ing.

   David Shubow, Moments with Genius, circa 1936 is a classic WPA-era image.

   Edward McKnight Kauffer's Power / The Nerve Centre of London's Underground, 1931, is among the scarce British rail posters in the sale.

Otto Baumberger (1889-1961). Riunione Aviatoria. 1937. 49x35 inches
Estimate: US$5000-7500

   You can view the online catalogue of 208 lots here.

San Francisco Vintage Posters auction May 7th

   Poster Connection is staging its bi-annual San Francisco poster auction on May 7th. 395 lots covering Advertising, Art, Military/Propaganda and Travel/Sports.
Ilmari Sysimetsä (1912-1955) Olympische Spiele Helsinki Finnland Lithograph 1952
39.3x24.4 in. Estimate: US$1400.
   You can view the online catalogue here.

Artist Monographs on artnet

    The link in a previous post to the oil paintings of Richard Estes was an opportunity to have a browse around the vast online resource that is artnet.
 
   The artnet Price Database Fine Art and Design is an illustrated online database of 4 million fine art and design auction results covering more than 188,000 international artists and designers. The artnet Price Database is a subscription-based service that allows users to search auction results dating back to 1985.

   The artnet Monographs library has been developed in close collaboration with artists, estates and galleries to provide comprehensive artist information. This body of Modern and Contemporary artists’ sites brings insight into the depth and scope of extraordinary artists oeuvres, and it serves as a research tool for students, faculty, museum curators, researchers, dealers and collectors.

   artnet Monographs present a growing body of artists’ online works. Unlike published print monographs and catalogues raisonnés, these are living catalogues, which will be constantly updated as artists create new works and estates release additional information. artnet offers these catalogues free to the public as an educational resource. Simply click on an individual artist's image to begin, and check back to browse new catalogues.


   There are sections covering Mixed Media, Paintings, Photography, Sculpture and 19th Century/Modern.
   You can access the Monographs here. 

Sunday, 1 May 2011

Japanese domestic living exhibition at the Geffrye Museum, London until Aug 29th

From the press release:

   In the West, the Japanese house has reached iconic status in its architecture, decoration and style. However, is this neat, carefully constructed version of Japanese life in fact a myth? This special exhibition aims to question the widespread stereotype of the minimal Japanese house, characterised by large empty spaces devoid of people and things. It goes behind the doors of contemporary urban homes to find out how private domestic lives are lived in Japan today, examining a variety of aspects of the home – from decoration, display, furniture and the tatami mat, to eating, sleeping, ‘gifting’, cleaning, hygiene, and worship.

   The exhibition recreates the layout of a standard urban apartment. Visitors will travel through an entrance hall, a ‘western style’ room, tatami room, bathroom, and, finally, to the LDK – ‘living-dining-kitchen’ – area, the largest communal space inside the home. Each of these rooms will be filled with a selection of the everyday possessions with which inhabitants might surround themselves. We hope that through an active engagement with these day-to-day spaces and objects, visitors may not only experience a degree of what it feels like to be at home in contemporary Japan, but also to encounter another culture on an empathetic level instead of gazing at and imagining its exotic nature from a distance.
    Full detail of the exhibition as well as a series of lectures on May 14th can be found here.

Street Photography at the Museum of London until Sept 4th

From the website:
 
   This major new exhibition at the Museum of London showcases an extraordinary collection of London street photography with over 200 candid images of everyday life in the street. From sepia-toned scenes of horse-drawn cabs taken on bulky tripod-mounted cameras to 21st century Londoners digitally ‘caught on film’, explore how street photography has evolved from 1860 to the present day. Examine the relationship between photographers, London’s streets and the people who live on them, and reflect on the place of photography on London’s streets today as anti-terrorism and privacy laws grow ever tighter.
   Full details of the exhibition can be found here.

Festival of Asian Literature, London May 10th-26th

   The open night kicks off with: A Tibetan Journey - Colin Thubron – To a Mountain in Tibet in conversation with Erica Wagner from The Times.

   'Acclaimed as one of the greatest living travel writers, Thubron follows the pilgrimage route through Tibet to Mount Kailas, the most sacred of the world’s mountains. He talks with villagers and monks and tells the stories of exiles and of eccentric explorers from the West.   A haunting and beautiful travel book, it is also a very personal journey, undertaken shortly after the death of his mother, and interwoven with his own reflections on love, grief and solitude.'

Tickets £ 15 /£12
Asia House Friends £ 10

   Full details of the festival and of other Asia House events can be found in the links below.