Thursday, May 7

Article 26 Richard Avedon

Wish I could go to this... Looks like its gonna be great. of course how could it not be, right?


Photo Op | Richard Avedon at the I.C.P.

Richard Avedon PhotosPhotos courtesy of the Richard Avedon FoundationNaty Abascal and Ana-Maria Abascal with Helio Guerreiro, bathing suit by Brigance, Ibiza, Spain, September 1964. Photo by Richard Avelon.

What is the difference between fashion and fine art photography? Perhaps no photographer was more plagued by the dichotomy (if there in fact is one), than the late great, Richard Avedon, who pretty much disowned his fashion work in favor of his large format portraiture. The exhibition, “Avedon Fashion 1944-2000,” opening May 15 at the International Center of Photography, presents this disowned work as a seminal body of fashion photography. And none of it looks at all shabby. Co-curator Carol Squiers notes, “Fashion photography we know nominally as a woman in a dress. It’s a beauty picture with a commercial purpose to sell something. But with the best fashion photographers, it was not about promoting a particular dress. You have them doing extraordinary things.” (See the slide show below for proof.) According to Squiers, in Avedon’s view, fashion and portraiture were one and the same. “I can’t speak for him,” she says, “but my interpretation of things is that he was attacked in the late 60s for being a fashion photographer and felt he had to be taken seriously. He was never about beautiful women anyway. He was always digging into a more complex mood.”

Article 25--More on the Art Market.

This would be the article trying to make light of the situation


ART MARKET WATCH
by Stewart Waltzer
 
With only 50 lots in the sale and some lots sub-prime, observers at Christie’s big sale of Impressionist and modern art on May 6, 2009, could have expected a dull evening, particularly after yesterday’s barely credible sale at Sotheby’s. But this wasn’t the case. Christie’s ran a brisk, rat-a-tat auction that hammered down numerous lots at very high prices. It did not feel like a recession. The room was packed. It was not brilliant; better, it was business as usual.

The sale total was $102,767,000 (with premium), with 38 of 48 lots finding buyers, or 17 percent by lot. By contrast, Sotheby’s sale the evening before totaled $62,370,500, with 29 of 36 lots selling, or more than 81 percent.

What emerged from Sotheby’s sale yesterday was that the long view and the smart view are no longer synonymous. Previously, the long view/smart view had been that good art endures and becomes valuable. What emerged at Sotheby’s is the idea that populist art is accessible and does better short term and long term. Anything can be rare as long as enough people want it, good or bad. The downside: esthetes disparage your taste. The upside: you laugh all the way to the bank. And the art market, like any other, is irrational.

At Christie’s, the lots were better and esthetic values led the way. Nice, if true. Meanwhile, the auction did not suffer. Lots that had appeared at auction in recent memory were being offered again and sold at multiples of their previous price. The rationale for many of the estimates was based upon sales made in 2007 and early 2008, when there was still a Lehman Brothers. Hammer prices are quoted for tonight’s lots.

Lot 2, Joan Miró, Maquette pour personage, 1971, est. $300,000-$400,000. A diminutive Euro-Gumby sculpture, the Ent-like L’oiseause niche sur les doigts en fleur sold in 2005 for $273,000. The Gumby-esque Project pour un monument a Los Angeles, where else, sold for $270,000 in 1992. The 10-inch Maquette pour personage sold in feral bidding for $310,000.

Lot 7, Pablo Picasso, Mousquetaire a la pipe, 1968, est. $12,000,000-$18,000,000. Christie’s or a third party guaranteed the picture. It is more secure as an investment than as a painting, and is reputedly caroming off the misfortune of a Bernard Madoff investor. It sold on the eve of the presidential election in 2004 for $7.1 million. Christie’s sold the comparable Homme assis au fusil in February 2008 for $11.1 million and the nearly identical Homme a la pipe in November 2007 for $16.8 million. Tonight Mousquetaire a la pipe sold for $13 million, the top price of the auction.

Lot 11, Alexej Jawlensky, Odalyske, 1910, est. $4,000,000-$6,500,000. A serene nude on a couch in fauvish color, half blaue reiter, half fauvism. Brilliant. Schokko-Schokko mit tellerhut, a pleasant portrait of a woman in a hat like a fruit bowl, sold in 2003 for $8.2 million and in 2008 for $18.7 million, also brilliant. Odalysk sold for $4.5 million.

Lot 12, Henri Edmond Cross, Paysage avec le cap Nègre, 1906, est. $700,000-$900,000. A pretty, Divisionist painting. Cross always seems lost on Seurat’s branch of Post-Impressionism, and economically undervalued. Two other Cross Divisionist pictures, Rio San Trovaso, Venise sold in 2004 for $825,000 and La sieste au bord de la mer sold in 2003 for $780,000. Paysage avec le Cap Negre, vibrant and structurally loosey goosey, sold for $850,000.

Lot 15, Edgar Degas, Après le bain, femme s’essuyant, 1890-95, est. $4,000,000-$6,000,000. Last November at Sotheby’s, Degas did not fare so well. Femme se coiffant passed, Le Ballet passed, and Femme s’essuyant les cheveux, hammered for $750,000 over an estimate of $1 million-$1.5 million, after auctioneer Tobias Meyer opened the lot at $4,500,000. Danseuse au repos, stellar, hammered at $30 million ($37 million with commission); it had sold for $28 million in 1999. No profit in it, save for the house. All were good works, tactile and rich with a modern sensibility. Lot 15 is more of the same but in our economy, in thrall to auctioneer Christopher Burge’s ministrations, it sold for $5.3 million.

Lot 19, Maurice de Vlaminck, Le Havre, les basins, 1907, est. $4,500,000-$6,500,000). A picture of tugs at the dock. Investment grade? Sold for $2 million in 1989 and $1.2 in 1997. They should have held. Le remorqueur, a pretty, smaller picture of a river tug sold last November for $3.6 million at Sotheby’s narcoleptic sale. Le remorqueur a Chatou, much smaller, sold in 2006, in a buoyant market, for $4.9 million. The attractive Le Havre, les basins sold tonight for $3.3 million.

Lot 20, Pierre Bonnard, Nu devant la glasse ou baigneuse, 1915, est. $800,000-$1,200,000. A naked woman with a cute bum, seen bum side out. The advent of indoor plumbing and showers altered the face of French painting. Bathroom voyeurism changed from a polite conceit to a police matter. Bonnard must have spent a considerable time lurking in the corner, watching women wash. This is a charming picture in its subject and delicate coloration. The painting barely sold in 1997 for $400,000, charm or no. It sold tonight for $750,000.

Lot 21, Henri Edmond Cross, Rio San Trovaso, Venise, 1903, est. $1,200,000-$1,600,000. Cost $825,000 in 2004. See above lot 12. A spectacular Divisionist picture of a Venetian canal, pretty, restrained and tightly structured. Given the depredations of auctions houses, the seller could not have seen much profit; sold for $1.1 million.

Lot 22, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Madame Misia Natanson, 1897, est. $2,000,000-$3,000,000. She was an art world busybody who connived continually both for and against Picasso, according to John Richardson, and was casually rendered by every artist she befriended. Toulouse-Lautrec treated her with both sensitivity and generosity; the portrait is expressive without being elaborate. Another painting, Deux femmes Valsant, was sold last June for $3.8 million. It looks to be a portrait of Misia Natanson and her niece Bourette, and was owned by John Natanson. Misia was not a pretty woman. Portrait de Henri Nocq, depicted standing in a velvet-collared evening cloak ogling Lautrecs in the studio, sold well below its estimate last November for $4.4 million. Madame Misia sold for $2.2 million.

Lot 26, Tamara de Lempicka, Portrait de Madame M., 1932, est. $6,000,000-$8,000,000. Are we in a Lempicka bubble? Sotheby’s had four lots and Christie’s two in their respective evening sales.Madame M is a big-shouldered woman whose sexuality targets ex-governors, a modern norm, but not so palatable. It is only in the past three years that Lempicka works have been valued at this level. This picture sold in 1989 for $990,000 at the bottom of its estimate. Tonight it set the record, eclipsing even Sotheby’s horrors. Sold $5.4 million.

Lot 27, Kees van Dongen, Le Gondolier de Venise, 1921, est. $800,000-$1,200,000. A tourist painting of a standing figure in yachting whites looking like an advert for Ralph Lauren, complete with its well-used patina. What happened to Van Dongen’s kohled slatterns and how did this picture escape from the day sale? Another fashion shoot picture, Sarah Rafale au bois de Boulogne, sold for $858,000 in 2007. The gondolier did not float. Passed.

Lot 32, Pablo Picasso, Femme au Chapeau, 1971, est. $8,000,000-$12,000,000. The Schnabel Picasso. Not pretty, neither the woman nor the hat, but very, very large. One thinks first it’s amousquetaire. Purchased directly from the Picasso family in 1989 (as if it had been held back to spare Picasso’s career?). Works from 1969, Le baisser, a multi-eyed jellyfish in parthenogenesis, sold in 2008 for $17 million, and Homme a la pipe, 1969, as large as Femme au Chapeau, sold in 2007 for $11.8 million. Sotheby’s sold a 1971Tete d’homme in 2006 for $6.4 million. No very late work has exceeded that value but is that type of discernment a factor in this late market? Is any type? Sold, just, at $6.85 million, to Helly Nahmad Gallery.

Lot 33, Pablo Picasso, Tête de femme, 1909, est. $2,500,000-$3,500,000. Few works from this period appear at auction. This watercolor is particularly delightful both as it relates to the origins of Cubist sculpture and for the sheer joy of its execution. It barely sold in 1997 for $900,000. Tonight it sold for $2.3 million.

Lot 34, Alberto Giacometti, Buste de Diego (Stele III), 1957-58, est. $4,500,000-$6,500,000. A bust of Diego upon a column. The bust has that rough touched sensibility, and soft shoulders, similar to a bust that sold in 2005 for $3.6 million. This sits atop an expressive, molded column. Another cast sold in 1993 for $1 million. Giacometti has been the flavor of the new millennium. This one sold for a lavish $6.8 million.

Lot 44, Pablo Picasso, Harlequin, 1915, est. $600,000-$800,000. A watercolor, an austere rendering of the playing card figures that became the Cubist icon; the color is expressive and moderated. Two similar works on paper have appeared at auction. Homme a la pipe, assis au fauteuil sold in May 2007 for $4.7 million, andHarlequin, a different work from the McCarty-Cooper collection, sold in 1994 for $132,000. No others. Harlequin, tonight’s lot, seemed like a good deal. Wrong. Passed.

Lot 45, Pablo Picasso, Nature morte, 1934, est. $5,000,000-$7,000,000. The best Picassos in both sales? It is a luminous still life from a period of great portraits. He was having fun subverting his wife Olga, with Marie-Thérèse and her sister installed in the next village. As a painting, it is perfect in its apparent simplicity and contained coloration. This is its fourth trip to auction in 20 years, but its first and last tenures endured 10 years or more. It sold in 1987 for $1.2 million, in 1997 for $1.2 million and in 1998 for $882,000. Jackpot tonight, it sold for $4.8 million.

Lot 49. Morisot, Jeune fille écrivant, 1891, $500,000-$700,000. An expressively brushed and colored picture of an awkward adolescent at work at her easel. Nice but not exciting. Jeune fille ecrivant, a different picture, sold in 2006 for $1.2 million. Jeune fille au chien, very cutesy, sold in 2006 for $577,000. As lot 49 must have been part of a global reserve on the material from Evelyn Annenberg Jaffe Hall, Christie’s sold the work without regard to its specific reserve. It sold at a 1986 price of $250,000.

While the art industry has been unusually quiet for months, according to dealers, this sale brought close to $100 million, very respectable. It was nice to see money changing hands again.

STEWART WALTZER is a New York art dealer.

Article 24-- another one to back up the last post...

No buyer for Pablo Picasso painting at NYC auction

NEW YORK (AP) — A Pablo Picasso painting of his young daughter and an Alberto Giacometti sculpture of a cat, each estimated to sell for $16 million to $24 million, failed to find buyers at auction Tuesday as the art world struggles with the global financial crisis.

The Sotheby's auction house said bids for the two artworks at its impressionist and modern art sale fell below their reserve prices.

Picasso's "The Daughter of the Artist at 2 1/2 with a Boat" was painted in 1938 and remained in his possession until his death. A private collector has owned it since the 1980s.

Giacometti's "The Cat" last was seen at auction in 1975. The 1951 bronze sculpture, depicting a feline figure on a pedestal, is one of eight editions. It was consigned by a European collector.

The uncertain economy has played a part in art auction houses' decision this spring to offer fewer lots, lower pre-sale estimates and works by well-known artists and private estates that haven't been seen at auction in decades. In the fall, Sotheby's and rival Christie's took beatings when many works didn't sell or sold below their estimates.

Sotheby's said that of the 36 impressionist and modern works of art on auction Tuesday, 29 were sold, for a total of $61.3 million, well off their $118.8 million estimate. Last spring, Sotheby's offered 52 lots, which sold for $235.4 million.

The heaviest bidding Tuesday was for an abstract painting by Piet Mondrian, "Composition in Black and White, with Double Lines," which sold for nearly $9.3 million. The painting, which has been on loan since 1967 at the Dallas Museum of Art, fetched almost twice its high estimate of $5 million.

Three works belonging to an heir of the renowned collection of Louisine and Henry Osborne Havemeyer, whose many works were gifted to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, also sold well.

Camille Pissarro's "Flood in Pontoise," estimated at up to $1.2 million, brought just under $3 million, while his "The Female Goat Keeper," estimated at up to $1.8 million, fetched $2.5 million.

Claude Monet's "Sailboat on the River Seine, Argenteuil," estimated at up to $1.8 million, sold for $3.5 million. The small landscape was painted at Monet's home outside Paris in 1872.

One of a group of deco-style paintings by Tamara de Lempicka, consigned by noted German fashion designer Wolfgang Joop, "Portrait of Marjorie Ferry," from 1932, sold for $4.9 million, a record for the artist, Sotheby's said. It didn't identify the previous record.

Another painting by that artist, "Portrait of Duchess de la Salle," from 1925, realized $4.45 million. Both were estimated at $4 million to $6 million.

Sotheby's didn't reveal the identities of the buyers or say if the sale prices included its commission.

Christie's sale of impressionist and modern art was scheduled for Wednesday evening.

Article 23--Are we really going to sell our work if these won't even sell?

The Art Market Is Back? Now That’s Surrealism

Say what you want about art dealers. They have a special gift for coloring the art market in bright shades of optimism and price increases.

WK-AP601_cover.jpg_DV.jpg
What are they smoking?

Take Wednesday night’s auction of Impressionist and Modern art at Chrisities. It was, by any serious measure, a disappointment. Most of the works failed to sell for the top estimated price. One of the most-featured works, a 1928 Max Ernst painting that was expected to fetch as much as $9 million, was pulled the day of the auction.

A Picasso, “Femme au chapeau,” that was expected to sell for $8 million to $12 million, sold for $7.8 million.

And yet the art world would have us all focus today on the single blockbuster headline: “Picasso Sells for $14.6 million.” That would be the “Mousquetaire a la pipe,” which was expected to sell for $12 million to $18 million. (The seller was Jerome Fisher, the Palm Beach, Fla., Bernard Madoff victim and Nine West founder made famous for his Mar-a-Lago altercation with Madoff-feeder Robert Jaffe.)

By this reading, with one single painting, presto, the art market is back.

“There’s pent-up demand to buy,” New York dealer David Nash told Bloomberg.

“People have their confidence back,” said another dealer, Christophe Van de Weghe.

The Picasso sale featured somewhat unusual economics. Christie’s paid a multimillion-dollar guarantee to the seller and another undisclosed investor bought that guarantee. As my colleague Kelly Crow points out in today’s Wall Street Journal, that investor helped bid up thepainting during the auction, and got a share of the upside on the sale.

Still, the fact is, Sotheby’s auction on Tuesday night and Christie’s auction Wednesday night were shadows of their former selves. The only thing that is “back” is the relentless hype and surreal economics of the art market.

Christie’s sales total of $102 million was a huge drop from last year’s spring-auction total of $277 million. Sotheby’s auction experienced an even steeper decline, to $61 million from the $223 million last November. Sotheby’s failed to sell its two most-prominent works, a Picasso and Giacometti.

What is more, the auctioneer’s bonds have been reduced to junk status, with Standard & Poor’s expecting that Sotheby’s business will remain depressed for the next 12 months. Many wealthy art buyers, it seems, are spending more time staring at their gutted investment statements than they are looking at art for their walls.

Maybe the market will recover faster than that, given the stock market’s recent rally. But these days, I would sooner trust a credit-rating provider than an art dealer.

Article 22--From University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh

This was kind of inspiring it is about a photography student alum that shoots weddings for a living but has this side project going that she has to shoot in a totally different manner.



Photographer shows passion in student project

by Alex Mueske

Amber Patrick doesn’t do the typical class picture. There is no lining up students in rows with the teacher in front. For the UW-Oshkosh student photographer, that would be too boring.

At a recent shoot, she had 14 journalism students walk around in the dark while their instructor stood like a statue.

The only light available was transmitted from the computer monitors. Students bumped into each other and into furniture. One whispered, “What is she doing?”

The “she” in this case is Amber Patrick, who has a unique view of the world through her camera’s eye.

The result of that unusual shoot: a photo that captured a clear image of the instructor with her students, appearing translucent, milling about her.

In other words, a typical Patrick work of art.

On May 15, that photo and other Patrick works will be on display at the Reeve Union’s Steinhilber Gallery. Patrick was the project photographer for student journalism project called “War: Through Their Eyes.” The multimedia project looks at 16 soldiers and Marines that are either current students or alums of Oshkosh and asked them to share their stories of serving in the military. Not limited to only war veterans, it also covers stories of students who are awaiting the order to serve abroad.

Patrick feels most comfortable telling stories through her photos.

“It’s a family thing,” said Patrick, a junior majoring in graphic communications and photography. “My mother was an artist, and I was a photographer for my high school yearbook. I’ve always liked it. Maybe I was born with it.”

For the past two years, Patrick owns and operates GNE Photography, focusing on kids, families and weddings. However, while wedding shoots are challenging enough, she said photographing war vets and other military men and women proved to be a different kind of challenge.

“Weddings are one-day projects,” she said. “With ‘War: Through Their Eyes,’ it’s a continuing and consuming project.”

Patrick shot photos and the soldiers and Marines in studio, at class and at home. Patrick even went as far as trekking through the woods in freezing conditions to shoot and document a ROTC field exercises.

“During the shoot, my hands were freezing, it made it really hard to press the trigger,” she said. “That led to a number of out-of-focus shots, but we still ended up getting some great pictures.”

Patrick first learned of the project two weeks before the start of the spring semester. “I was ecstatic to be a part of the project,” she said. “My mind was reeling with all of the possibilities of what we could do to add some artistic flavor to the project.”

Grace Lim, the journalism instructor who assigned the project to her 14 beginning journalism students, describes Patrick’s work as exceptional.

“I keep forgetting that she’s a student,” said Lim, a former reporter with the Miami Herald and People magazine. “She’s as good as some of professional photographers I’ve worked with before.”

Lim said she was taken by Patrick’s creative take on the class photo.

“All I was expecting was a simple photo of me and the students; instead I got this cool photo that looks like a painting.”

Patrick aims to accomplish much with the project.

“The project shows the variety of shots I can do,” she said. “I want people to know who each soldier is and experience their story.”

The project, which includes a book, a series of podcasts and a photo exhibit, gives the student soldiers and Marines a forum to share their stories with the rest of the world.

Patrick said the soldiers and Marines were not used to being the focus of attention, but once she got them into the studio, she got them to ignore the camera.

“I asked them about their interviews and tried to just ask normal questions,” she said. “I wanted to get to know who they were and to talk to me as if they were talking to anyone else.”

For Patrick, “War: Through Their Eyes,” has taught her to fit her photography to the style of the project.

“The whole process has been a blast, but I am predicting that the exhibition on May 15 will be the most memorable part for me.”