Baseera Khan at Contemporary Arts Center Cincinnati

September 30, 2022 – September 24, 2023

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A glimpse at the real Murdoch

A glimpse at the real Murdoch

As he steps down as head of his companies, clips of a younger Rupert Murdoch

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The riot that 'killed' disco

The riot that 'killed' disco

How an anti-disco stunt became an international scandal

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The crime novels dividing opinion

The crime novels dividing opinion

'Cosy crime' is the new hit genre – but is it brilliant entertainment or twee?

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The dress that shocked the world

The dress that shocked the world

The woman who inspired Lady Gaga's meat dress

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The show that changed sex on TV forever

The show that changed sex on TV forever

How Sex Education was revolutionary, on and off screen

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The superstar models who ruled the 90s

The superstar models who ruled the 90s

How Linda, Cindy, Christy, Naomi and Tatjana defined an era

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Why 'wear, wash, repeat' makes sense

Why 'wear, wash, repeat' makes sense

Repeatedly wearing our favourite item has more advantages than you might think

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Could this win the best picture Oscar?

Could this win the best picture Oscar?

Why race satire American Fiction is now an awards season frontrunner

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When 'fairy mania' gripped Britain

When 'fairy mania' gripped Britain

Today we have "fairycore" but 100 years ago fairies were a national obsession

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One of the US's biggest mysteries

One of the US's biggest mysteries

How the event that still spawns conspiracy theories lives on in popular culture

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Princess Diana’s ‘Black Sheep’ Sweater Sells for $1.1 M. at Sotheby’s

A famed red sweater that was worn by Princess Diana sold for $1.14 million at a recent Sotheby’s auction. The colorful jumper, which depicts one black sheep among a crowd of white ones, headlined an online sale called “Fashion Icons.”

The final amount for the sweater blasted past its high estimate of $80,000 and far exceeded the previous record for a garment worn by the former Princess of Wales. That amount was $604,800, more than six times its high estimate, for a deep purple strapless gown designed by Victor Edelstein that was also sold by Sotheby’s in January.

The knitted garment worn by Diana was created by British designers Sally Muir and Joanna Osborne for the pair’s brand Warm & Wonderful. Diana wore the sweater in June 1981 at a polo match, shortly after she and Prince Charles announced their engagement.

According to Sotheby’s, coverage of Diana wearing the wool item was “the advertisement of a lifetime” for the two-year-old company, and was later credited as giving the small business a “stratospheric launch.” The design was so popular that the American clothing brand Rowing Blazers reissued a cotton version in 2020. It was also featured in the television show The Crown.

Interest in items worn by Diana has skyrocketed, with a rare amethyst cross necklace auctioned by Sotheby’s in London earlier this year. A representative for Kim Kardashian beat four other bidders on the necklace, dubbed the Attallah Cross, worn by Diana at a charity event in October 1987. It sold for £163,800 ($200,000).

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German Museum Faces Right-Wing Backlash for Creating Visiting Hours for Non-White Attendees

A German museum is facing right-wing backlash after creating a designated time for non-white visitors to view an exhibition about colonialism, the Washington Post reported last week. Police remain stationed at the museum.

The Zeche Zollern Museum in Dortmund dedicated four hours each Saturday as a safe space for BIPOC attendees to visit the show “This Is Colonial” with the purpose of being “considerate of people who are more affected by the topic of colonialism than others,” the director of local industrial museums Kirsten Baumann said on Facebook.

Visitors who arrive during that time, however, are not monitored.

The museum received international visibility when a TikTok video of two white men confronting staff about the time slot went viral. In it, the men accuse the museum of discrimination against white people.

The two white men were not asked or forced to leave the premises. But museum employees who were filmed without their consent are reportedly taking legal action for defamation.

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The First Work Completed During Bob Ross’s ‘The Joy of Painting’ TV Show Is Up for Sale for $9.85 M.

A Walk in the Woods (1983), the painting completed on air during the first episode of Bob Ross’s landmark television show The Joy of Painting has come to market, The Art Newspaper reported Thursday.

They say that memories are priceless. However, anyone interested in reliving the first episode of The Joy of Painting via A Walk in the Woods is going to have to shell out a hefty sum: Modern Artifact, the Minneapolis, Minnesota-based gallery selling the canvas, has priced it at $9.85 million. 

The gallery understands that this figure might seem outlandish to some, but that may be the point. The gallery says that while it will entertain offers “they would prefer to share it with a museum or traveling exhibit to allow as many people as possible to view such an exciting work of art.”

Meanwhile, Modern Artifact plans to take the painting on tour itself, according to The Art Newspaper.

In a statement, gallery owner Ryan Nelson wrote about Ross’s singular place in art and cultural history. “Bob Ross has surpassed Andy Warhol and Pablo Picasso as the internet’s most searched for artist according to data from Google Analytics,” he said. “It’s an incredibly impressive feat, especially considering that there is virtually no official marketing, and his original paintings are nearly impossible to find.” 

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A Christie’s Sale of Imperial Chinese Porcelain Could Inject New Life into a Fragile Market

On September 21 at Christie’s, Marchant, the venerable London-based dealer of Asian art, is selling eight pieces of imperial Chinese porcelain they hope will reinvigorate the once-booming Western market for these ceramics. 

The sale sparks interest on multiple fronts. Marchant is a London-based dealer specializing in this exact sort of thing, and has been since 1925, so its collaboration with a house like Christie’s is unusual.

Also, the works headed to sale date to around the time of the ascension of Wanli (1573–1620) as emperor. According to Samuel Marchant, this was an era of very notable porcelain for the late Ming Dynasty, as quality of production fell sharply toward the end of Wanli’s reign.

Marchant knows his stuff. His great-grandfather was Samuel Sidney Marchant founded the firm, and Richard Marchant, Samuel’s grandfather, joined the family business at the age of 17 in 1953.

On the phone with ARTnews, Samuel spoke of the differences between early, middle, and late Ming dynasty porcelain and between Imperial porcelains made “during the reigns of Kangxi, Yongzheng, and Qianlong, who are three of the three most prominent and famous emperors of the Qing Dynasty.”

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Fernando Botero, Artist Whose Voluptuous Figures Transformed Latin American Art, Dies at 91

Fernando Botero, a Colombian artist whose paintings peopled with full-figured members of the elite achieved international fame, opening doors for many Latin Americans after him, has died at 91.

Lina Botero, his daughter, told Caracol, a Colombian radio station, that her father died at his home in Monaco on Friday morning. He had been battling pneumonia.

Botero’s paintings of Colombian governmental officials and clergy are now known the world over. He said that when he first started making them, in the 1950s, there wasn’t much other art like it in his home country, where European modernist painting was not widely seen at the time.

His voluptuous figures, with rounded arms, thick waistlines, and sizable thighs, have become instantly distinguishable as Botero’s own. He went on to translate these figures for the third dimension, turning them into sculptures that were sometimes placed in public settings, where they towered over the people who stood before them.

Critics initially debated whether these figures were meant to be parodies, since the politics of Botero’s work was deliberately oblique.

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The Best Colored Pencil Sets for Aspiring Artists in 2023

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, ARTNews may receive an affiliate commission.

Whether for art classes or for projects that need pizzazz, a set of good-quality colored pencils is a must for every back-to-school season. It can be overwhelming finding the right one, however, as many colored pencils are geared toward pros. For most students, a solid beginner set—while not necessarily lightfast—will suffice. You’ll quickly see that you don’t have to spend a lot to bring a new world of color to a young artist’s fingertips. Read on for our top picks, which all come in sets of at least two dozen colors with a diverse selection of hues and sharpen easily for frustration-free use.

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How we pick each product:
Our mission is to recommend the most appropriate artists’ tool or supply for your needs. Whether you are looking for top-of-the line equipment or beginners’ basics, we’ll make sure that you get good value for your money by doing the research for you. We scour the Internet for information on how art supplies are used and read customer reviews by real users; we ask experts for their advice; and of course, we rely on our own accumulated expertise as artists, teachers, and craftspeople.

ARTnews RECOMMENDS
Prismacolor Scholar Art Pencils, Set of 24
These student-grade pencils from the biggest name in colored pencils sit at the top of our list for many reasons. First, they are economical, at a little more than 50 cents a pencil. Secondly, they deliver rich, blendable color that can lay down lightly or intensely. Their cores are softer than Prismacolor’s premier line of colored pencils, allowing students to practice blending colors, but they nevertheless resist breakage. This set also comes in a durable plastic case that opens to double as an upright holder you can stand on your desk.

Buy: Prismacolor Scholar Colored Pencils, 24 Pack $13.08

WE ALSO LIKE
Derwent Academy Colored Pencil Sets
These rather highbrow sets may not be an intuitive buy for little artists, but it cinches the next spot on our list for a few reasons. First off—and this is a big one—these pencils come in a sturdy tin, so you can bid farewell to flimsy, dirty cardboard boxes. The pencils themselves are simply gorgeous: brilliantly hued 3.3-millimeter leads in a glossy black casing, finished with correspondingly colored ends. They’re a worthy purchase for the whole family. Because Derwent’s colored pencils are a step up from our first pick, expect to shell out a little more for these 12- and 24-pencil sets. Are they worth every penny? You bet.

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Tourist Allegedly Damages Brussels Statue, South Korea’s MMCA Gets New Director, and More: Morning Links for September 15, 2023

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TOURISTS ALLEGEDLY BEHAVING BADLY. An Irish man in Brussels was captured on video climbing on a stone sculpture of a lion and nude figure outside the city’s stock exchange on Sunday and then apparently knocking off a torch that the figure was holding by accident, the Irish Times reports. Police later cuffed the suspect at a fast-food restaurant. The cost of restoring the piece was put at €17,600 (about $18,800) in early reports. It was a weird weekend in Europe. Footage has surfaced of a woman (said to be an American) cuddling up to and touching Copenhagen’s famed Little Mermaid (1913) sculpture by Edvard Eriksen on Saturday, Metro reports. Signs near the landmark counsel visitors not to touch the piece. One onlooker told the outlet, “There was a crowd of about 100 people and everyone was watching on really confused.”

ARTIST UPDATES. Sculptor Martin Puryear is unveiling a permanent piece at the Storm King Art Center in Upstate New York later this month, and got the profile treatment from the New York Times. ● Artist Derrick Adams, who opened a residency in his hometown, Baltimore, this year (The Last Resort Artist Retreat, it’s called), has a show up at Gagosian in Beverly Hills and was interviewed by the Los Angeles Times. ● And competing for the John Moores Painting Prize for the tenth time (against more than 3,000 people), Graham Crowley finally won, BBC News reports. Presented by Liverpool’s Walker Art Gallery, the biennial honor comes with £25,000 (about $31,100).

The Digest

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US Investigators Move to Seize Three Egon Schiele Works from Museums on Claims From Jewish Heirs of Stolen Property

The Manhattan District Attorney’s office recently issued warrants for three artworks by Egon Schiele on the claim they had been stolen from a Jewish art collector that was killed during the Holocaust.

The warrants were issued to the Art Institute of Chicago, the Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh, and the Allen Memorial Art Museum at Oberlin College. New York prosecutors are arguing the artworks by Schiele from these institutions belong to the three living heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, who was forced to liquidate his assets during his internment at the Dachau concentration camp in Germany.

According to the New York Times, which first reported the news Wednesday, Grünbaum was a prominent Jewish art collector and cabaret artist who was eventually killed at Dachau in 1941. Before his internment, Grünbaum’s art collection grew to nearly 500 pieces, with with at least 80 works by Schiele.

The warrants were for the watercolor-and-pencil drawing on paper Russian War Prisoner (1916) from the Art Institute of Chicago; the pencil-on-paper drawing Portrait of a Man (1917) from the Carnegie Museum of Art; as well as the watercolor-and-pencil on paper work Girl With Black Hair (1911) from Oberlin’s Allen Memorial Art Museum.

According to the New York Times, all the works were valued between $1 million and $1.5 million, and will be transported to New York at a later date.

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Demolition in Cairo Threatens Art Center and Heritage Sites

Egyptian government officials have ordered the close of the contemporary art center Darb 1718 in Cairo, the Art Newspaper reported on Thursday. The center is being demolished for the construction of a new major road.

The head of the center’s local district and the deputy governor reportedly showed up at Darb 1718 and told staff to leave the building in 30 minutes.

“When we asked for an official notification, they could not provide us with anything,” Darb 1718 founder Moataz Nasr told the Art Newspaper.

One of the first cultural spaces in the city to host exhibitions, concerts, events, and workshops, Darb 1718 announced the news of its closure in an online petition, which has garnered more than 11,000 signatures since it was posted on July 27. Nasr also filed a lawsuit with the state council. These efforts have so far delayed the center’s demolition.

Meanwhile, Nasr has said the center’s social media accounts on Facebook and Instagram have been suspended.

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