Art

  • Art,  Features,  Lifestyle,  Photography

    Donna Karan’s Second Act at Urban Zen

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    Donna Karan (L) and Frank Castagna attend the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)

    Earlier this month, HEW attended Urban Zen grand new opening in Americana Manhasset. The elegant evening was hosted by owner and fashion raven Donna Karan. The cocktail reception, and book signing also featured a special preview of esteemed photographer Elizabeth Jordan ‘s thought-provoking artwork.

    Urban Zen is located at Americana Manhasset, 2072 Northern Blvd. Manhasset, NY.

    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: Elizabeth Jordan attends the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Elizabeth Jordan attends the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)

    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A view of exterior at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)A view of exterior at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)

    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A general view of products at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A general view of products at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)

    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A copy of Donna Karan's book at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)A copy of Donna Karan’s book at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)

    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A general view of products at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Zen Fashion at the new store in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)

    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A general view of products at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)Details of a necklace designed by Haitian artisans for Urban Zen, Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)

    Elizabeth Jordan’s works illuminate how a “woman communicates with herself, versus how the world communicates with her and her culture. Early on Jordan’s photographs were most often taken in difficult settings intended to capture the beauty and dignity of people living in extreme circumstances in underdeveloped regions, such as Africa, Haiti and India. Her work expresses the hardships exaggerated by her subject’s lack of political representation and cultural value, leaving them more vulnerable to financial and medical hardship. Her work has evolved to include light installations using fiber optics and LED as it continues to address gender equality and poverty. Earlier this month, Jordan completed a highly successful show at Scenario Gallery, Miami’s newest contemporary fine arts gallery, making her commercial début following numerous and acclaimed philanthropic shows”.

    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A general view of products at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Background: Photography by Elizabeth Jordan at the new Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)

    Elizabeth Jordan’s works speak to my soul which is buried deep in forgotten underprivileged cultures. Her ability to capture the dignity of the people and illuminate the brilliance of the textures, fabrics, and patterns of so many of these countries is in complete synergy with my designs and mission at Urban Zen. From a larger perspective her work transmits the inner strength, will, compassion, dignity and love they represent for women around the world.” Donna Karan on Elizabeth Jordan

    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A general view of products at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Guests checking out the luxury good at Donna Karan’s Urban Zen store during the opening in Americana Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A general view of products at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Elizabeth Jordan’s artwork at the brand new Urban Zen store in Manhasset. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A general view of products at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Another view of the luxe goods at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: A general view of products at the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    A general view of products at the Urban Zen. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: Gianpaolo de Felice (R) and guest attend the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Gianpaolo de Felice (R) and Donna Karan’s granddaughter attend the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: Fran Gutleber and John Gutleber attend the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Fran Gutleber and John Gutleber attend the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: Rebecca Hollander and Jim Smiros attend the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Rebecca Hollander and Jim Smiros attend the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    MANHASSET, NY - JUNE 01: Gabby Karan de Felice (L) and Elizabeth Jordan (R) attend the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)
    Gabby Karan de Felice (L) and Elizabeth Jordan (R) attend the Urban Zen store opening in Americana Manhasset hosted by Donna Karan on June 1, 2016 in Manhasset, New York. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Donna Karan)

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  • Art,  Art Fairs,  Editor's Top Picks,  Features

    A Creative’s Perspective of FRIEZE New York Art Week

    IMG_0179Since its launch in 2012, this year was the first time I’ve actually paid a visit to the much talked about Frieze New York Art Week. The highly reported art fair was held, as it was in the past, at Randall’s Island Park, overlooking the East River.

    What took me so long to get there?

    The island is merely a few minutes away from the upper east side via the usual transportation routes. The New York Water Taxi can easily whisk you to the open fields of the island in a matter of minutes.

    Wether you’re looking to buy, discover or simply art gazing, a visit to Frieze will most likely feel like speed dating, with more than 200 galleries from 31 countries! The fair showcases an extraordinary cross-section of work by contemporary artists from around the globe, from the newly discovered to contemporary masters (yes, there is such a thing as contemporary masters).

    During my whirlwind tour, I got to  enjoy an ambitious array of artist commissions, installations, curated sections showcasing emerging artists and galleries, education programs. At the end of my tour, I met one of the most cheerful, not to mention colorful bird, while heading to an artist talk that shared nuanced perspectives on the world of contemporary art.

    Yes, my visit to Randall Island was well worth it, I would say.

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    ‘Frieze has engaged in a critical dialogue with contemporary artists, curators, dealers, collectors and writers fro 25 years and I am happy that this legacy continues to inform the content, quality and range of our fairs. Frieze New York offers a fantastic cultural experience – from presentations by the best galleries from around the world, to newly commissioned works and innovative public programs, to the natural light that infuses our unique, bespoke space – all set in this incredible city. This is the fifth edition of Frieze New York and it promises to be a great week,’ Victoria Siddall, Director of Frieze

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    Mickalene Thomas, I’m feeling good, 2014. Rhinestones, acrylic oil, enamel and glitter on wood panel

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    Image credits High End Weekly©. All rights reserved

  • Art,  Features

    Who are the Women Modernists in New York?

    Torr, Along the Shore
    Helen Torr (United States, 1886–1967), Along the Shore, 1932 Oil on canvas, Karen and Kevin Kennedy Collection

    Powerful works from the world’s leading artists, O’Keeffe, Stettheimer, Torr, Zorach will take center stage at the Portland Museum of Art (PMA) from June 24 through September 18, 2016. O’Keeffe, Stettheimer, Torr, Zorach: Women Modernists in New York will examine the art and careers of four pioneering artists and their wide contributions to American modernism in parallel for the first time. Through this exhibition, the PMA will take visitors to explore works by some of the most significant modernists in American art history. This unique exhibition offers valuable perspectives on the meaning of modernism, the life of a working artist in New York in the early 20th century, and the shared and differing experiences of being women at a crucial moment in first-wave feminism.

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    Florine Stettheimer (United States, 1871–1944), Jenny and Genevieve, circa 1915 Oil on canvas. Art Properties, Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library, Columbia University in the City of New York, Gift of the Estate of Ettie Stettheimer, 1967
    Zorach - portrait of Florine Stettheimer- Columbia
    Marguerite Thompson Zorach (United States, 1887–1968) Portrait of Florine Stettheimer, circa 1915, Pencil on paper, Art Properties, Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library, Columbia University in the City of New York, Gift of Mr. Joseph Solomon, 1973
    Zorach - Pegasus Hand Bag - Smithsonian
    Marguerite Thompson Zorach (United States, 1887–1968), Pegasus/Hand Bag, circa 1918 Wool embroidery on burlap or linen, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift from the collection of Tessim Zorach
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    Georgia O’Keeffe, American, 1887–1986. Jack-in-Pulpit Abstraction- No. VI, 1930. Oil on canvas

    Throughout the early 20th century, artists were radically breaking with all traditions in art, inventing a new visual language that responded to the experience of living in a new century. As creative ideas took hold in the sciences, modern artists created new ways of seeing the world through formal experiments. This exhibition examines the talents, relationships, privilege, and influences that enabled each woman to invent her own distinctive approach to modernism. In grouping these artists’ careers and work together, the Portland Museum of Art explores the creative forces behind modernism, while highlighting the social and political contexts they shared.

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    Helen Torr (United States, 1886–1967), Oyster Stakes, 1930 Oil on panel, Gift of Mrs. Mary Rehm; Collection of the Heckscher Museum of Art
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    Helen Torr (United States, 1886–1967), January, 1935 Oil on canvas, Gift of Mrs. Mary Rehm; Collection of the Hecksher Museum of Art
    Obj. No. 2013.194 Marguerite Zorach (American, 1887–1968) Two Sisters- Marguerite and Her Sister Edith, 1921 oil on canvas 30⅛"H x 25"W 76.52 cm x 63.50 cm Signed and dated in lower right M ZORACH/ 1921 Image must be credited with the following collection and photo credit lines: Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond. J. Harwood & Louise B. Cochrane Fund for American Art Photo: Travis Fullerton © Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
    Marguerite Zorach (American, 1887–1968), Two Sisters- Marguerite and Her Sister Edith, 1921 oil on canvas. Signed and dated in lower right M ZORACH/ 1921
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    Georgia O’Keeffe (United States, 1887–1986), The White Calico Flower, 1931 Oil on canvas, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
    Florine Stettheimer (United States, 1871–1944), Asbury Park South, 1920 Oil on canvas, Collection of Halley K. Harrisburg and Michael Rosenfeld, New York
    • Image credits: The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond. J. Harwood & Louise B. Cochrane Fund for American Art. Photo: Travis Fullerton © Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
  • Art,  Features,  Interior Design,  Interviews,  Life and Style

    Designer Spotlight: Sandra Nunnerley’s Keen Eye for Details

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    Sandra Nunnerley is the founder of the internationally recognized design firm, Sandra Nunnerley, Inc. W magazine has called Sandra one of the most fashionable designers in New York. Ms. Nunnerley is a widely published designer who has been featured on Architectural Digest’s AD 100 list, AD France 2016 Top 100 designers.

    Sandra Nunnerley is a woman widely known for her exquisite interiors, her conspicuous elegance, and ability to find key artists and artisans as she travels the globe to bring her clients the crème de la crème when it comes to design. As the famed designer develops a line of occasional tables for Maison Gerard and rug collection for The Rug Company, High End Weekly© recently spoke to her after her successful project for Sotheby’s third annual Designer Showhouse & Auction. The international auction house selected twelve interior designers and design firms to create one unique room within a home constructed within the fifth-floor exhibition space of Sotheby’s Manhattan headquarters.

    High End Weekly©: Tell us about your inspiration for the room you designed at the 3rd annual Sotheby’s Designer Showhouse? How did it come about?

    Sandra Nunnerley: Furniture as functional art is very inspirational to me at the moment and Sotheby’s had several functional art pieces that I was able to use in the Family Room I designed for the Showhouse. Two pieces were particularly interesting — the Rock Chaise by Studio Job (out of Antwerp – current exhibition at the Museum of Art and Design) and Zaha Hadid‘s “Gyre” lounge chair from the Seamless series (who sadly passed away right before the Showhouse opened) – they are great examples of furniture as functional art. It was exciting to create a functional Family Room around these two fantastic pieces and juxtapose their forms and shapes with other wonderfully designed pieces of furniture and lighting by Max Ingrand, Armand Jonckers, Oscar Niemeyer and art by Gerhard Richter, James Rosenquist, Robert Longo and Andy Warhol. I’m always inspired by the conversations that pieces from a range of periods have in a room.

    High End Weekly©: Was this the first showhouse you got to take part in? If not, how was it different from the rest?

    Sandra Nunnerley: I have done 3 Kips Bay show houses over the course of my career and my first for Sotheby’s. This one was different from the rest because Sotheby’s had an existing group of furniture and art and the 12 designers were asked to choose pieces from the existing inventory.

    Sandra Nunnerley Family Room. Photo credit Alan Barry Photography.

    High End Weekly©: Sotheby’s requested that you selected works from an array of their departments to furnish your Family Room, including 20th Century Design, English & Continental Furniture, Ceramics, Fine Arts, Prints, Silver, and Photographs. How was this experience different, if at all, from designing for your clients?

    Sandra Nunnerley: It was different because all the Sotheby’s inventory was divided via a lottery system among the 12 participating designers. The lottery made the design process a bit of a jigsaw puzzle and the experts at Sotheby’s who I have worked with for years were instrumental in helping pull together a cohesive room. Stacy Goodman, the head of Pre-Colombian art, Jean Fritts and Alex Grogan in the African and Oceanic departments lent pieces from their upcoming sales that really gave the room a point of view. Usually for my own clients, they are starting a home from scratch and I am the one responsible for sourcing all the items from a wide array of sources — shops, galleries, auction houses, etc. In this instance, Sotheby’s was the client who came to me with a lot of existing furniture and wanted to use it in a new and fresh manner.

    High End Weekly©: Over the years, you’ve worked with a number of artists to curate some of the most exclusive collections for your clients. What sorts of art (or artist) catches your eye?

    Sandra Nunnerley: It really depends on the client’s point of view and I enjoy working with lots of different art and artists. Right now I’m very interested in color field painters from the 50s and 60s, non-objective school, contemporary Chinese ink, photography, Outsider Art and Primitive.

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    An original sketch of Sandra Nunnerley’s Family Room for the Sotheby’s Designer Showhouse.

    High End Weekly©: Are there any major design trends or ideas that influenced your design aesthetics?

    Sandra Nunnerley: I strive to create timeless environments that transcend periods…. “classic meets contemporary” … I love mixing traditional and modern periods with contemporary design. The interplay between modern and traditional fascinates me.

    High End Weekly©: If you had to choose a favorite element of artists to collaborate with, what would it be?

    Sandra Nunnerley: Recently, I’ve found that the artists and artisans working in Korea are very interesting. Kwangho Lee and Choi Byung Hoon.

    High End Weekly©: Where do you look for inspiration?

    Sandra Nunnerley: I’m always “looking” — going to art fairs, shows, galleries and museums. you never know what you’ll find or when you’ll see something in a new way. For me travel is also important — I love to discover new artists or modes of expression that are not well-known.

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    An eye for details: Colorful vignette, with a feature of Sandra’s latest book at Sotheby’s.

    High End Weekly©: Tell us, if you were to work on a high-end furniture line, what would you call it, and what would be the inspiration behind it?

    Sandra Nunnerley: We are currently developing a line of occasional tables for Maison Gerard and I’m excited about our rugs collection that will launch this fall for The Rug Company. We are also working on a line of fabrics and a lighting line which are to be announced.

    High End Weekly©: Congratulations! What are some of your other most recent interior design projects?

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    The Rock Chaise by Studio Job at Sandra Nunnerley’s family room at Sotheby’s Designer Showhouse.

    Sandra Nunnerley: A home in Palm Beach, a chalet in Aspen, a pied-à-terre in New York, a penthouse in Berlin, a residence in New Zealand.

    High End Weekly©: Where are your go-to museums and galleries?

    Sandra Nunnerley: Tate London, The Norton Simon Museum in LA – a great building designed by Frank Gehry with wonderful gardens – I like the fact that it is a museum which has a very strong point of view as a collector’s eye. For similar reasons, the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia is also very interesting as it is one person’s collection. The Met on a Friday night is always a great choice too.

  • Art,  Features,  Galleries,  Gallery Openings,  Interviews

    Hui Chi Lee’s Artwork: Calligraphy in Motion

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    Hui Chi Lee’s solo show “Lian: Lian” is now on display until May at Fitzgerald Fine Arts in Soho, New York.

    The big apple is a place where art meets culture, and no better places can this be truer than downtown Soho, the East Village, and of course, the Chelsea area. Back in March, we visited FitzGerald Fine Arts (a Soho gallery which showcase contemporary Chinese porcelain and ink painting), and had the opportunity to meet Taiwanese artist Hui Chi Lee. This was Ms. Lee’s first show in New York, where she presented a new body of hand drawn graphite pen and colored pencil works on paper, as well as a soaring site specific sculptural installation, entitled “Lian, Lian.’ The exhibit was filled with energy, and a modern spirit, which reflected her abstract paintings that can somehow be compared to “Calligraphy in Motion”. In part, her latest series is a true reflection on Taiwanese cultural traditions that can seem oppressive in contemporary society.

    High End Weekly™: How was it growing up in Taiwan? And what were your early influences as an artist?

    Hui Chi Lee: I essentially grew up in my mother’s design studio. She inspired my eye with every details from the fabric on the floor to the mannequins mounted high above. Her painstaking attention to detail never left me. Art and hand craft informed my desire to become a painter, artist and sculptor. “Lian: Lian”, my current show at Fitzgerald Fine Arts, is in homage to her and my large family.

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    Hui Chi Lee

    HEW: Your body of work is heavily compiled with metaphoric messages. Is that purposeful or is it part of your consciousness?

    Hui Chi Lee: Part of it is a spiritual meditation on reincarnation, part and parcel of my culture.
    The use of hair is metaphorical for long-lasting values and questions about life on earth.
    The tension between the physical and spiritual realms, if you will.

    HEW: You currently have a show at FitzGerald, a contemporary fine arts gallery in Soho where you’re showcasing a new body of hand drawn graphite pen and colored pencil works on paper, as well as an impeccable sculptural installation, entitled “Lian, Lian.’. Tell us about this project.

    Hui Chi Lee: The title of series “Lián; Liàn,” derives from a pair of Chinese homophones which, depending on the context, mean “to connect” and “to enchain.” On one hand, these large-scale drawings explore the tensions and dynamics within human relationships. On the other, they explore how these same forces may constrict or enchain humans when negative forces come into play. While this series is in part a reflection on Taiwanese cultural traditions that can seem oppressive,I believe it can be applied more broadly to the human experience.

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    Hui Chi Lee

    Hair and chopsticks are evident motifs in this series. In Chinese tradition, lengthy hair symbolizes longevity. Hair signifies the duration of a life span, an expanse of time of which we are often hardly aware. While we may acknowledge the finitude of life, time is envisioned as somehow endless. Humans favor stability and continuity. Thus, even when one’s comfort and status is threatened or entangled by a chaotic environment, ambivalence seems inevitable. Color is introduced here in a symbolic, metaphorical way. Red symbolizes both a warning and an awakening moment in life.

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    Hui Chi Lee

    HEW: Are hand drawn graphite pen and colored pencil works on paper an investment? By its nature, paper is fragile, how should collectors care for that type of work?

    Hui Chi Lee: All of my work is 100% archival, from paper to plexiglass. As with all artwork, placing it out of direct sunlight is always a good idea.

    HEW: This is another two-part question … Can you shed some light on what you meant regarding your earlier work “Moving Corpse and Walking Flesh” when you said “Regardless of differences between nations and social structures, the disproportionate emphasis on consumerism and a lack of consideration given to spiritual dimensions have placed a heavy burden on contemporary life. Humans seem trapped in a never-ending spiral of materialistic desires and endless wants, and our craving to consume now turns on the subject to consume the spirit”. Can this, in part, be also said about the current state of the art market?

    Hui Chi Lee: I have selected the qualities we associate with mannequins—plastic and figure-like, but inanimate and anonymous–as a vehicle to prompt a discourse on these seemingly contradictory but connected conditions. The randomly amassed mannequin-like figures in these drawings lack self-determination and appear powerless, much like many vulnerable and immobile human beings in today’s society. I want to encourage the viewer to consider this human condition in a critical and holistic manner.

    Hui Chi Lee's "Lian" Lian".
    Hui Chi Lee’s “Lian” Lian”.

    The answer depends on the viewer’s own perceptions and projections. My work serves as a visual riddle for each viewer to decipher. The elements in each drawing seek to convey the imperceptible influence that an inherited tradition can have on one’s mentality, forming core beliefs that are difficult to break.

    HEW: I understand that you are currently teaching applied arts at the North Carolina Appalachian University. What do you tell your students about the future of contemporary art?

    Hui Chi Lee: My students are always working within the context of their generation. I encourage them to explore the world and their place in it.

    HEW: When you travel around the world, what do you look for in these different cultures? What are your go-to museums, monuments, and galleries around the globe?

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    A recent installation by Hui Chi Lee, showing at Fitzgerald Fine Arts in Soho, New York.

    Hui Chi Lee: It is the moments that I least expect to happen that I become more inspired by. In short, it is in the small moments and details that we experience things in a new way. This is what I hope to capture in my new body of work.

  • Art,  Christie's,  Decorative Arts,  Editor's Top Picks,  Features

    At Christie’s NY: A Fresh look at World-Class Masters

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    Jan Cornelisz. Vermeyen (Beverwijk, Circa 1500 -C. 1559 Brussels). Portrait of Joost Aemszoon van der Burch.

    Top Picks from Christie’s Classic Week: April 8-15, 2016

    Christie’s Classic Week overs an extraordinary look at some of the world’s top old masters – from Rubens masterpiece Lot and his Two Daughters which is in view for the first time in a century (the sale will take place at Christie’s London) to a fascinating exhibit named An Inquiring Mind: American Collecting of Japanese and Korean Art. The Classic Week goes from Antiquities, Sculpture, with a contrasting mix artists like Clyfford Still.

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    Background: A Hendrik Frans Van Lint waiting. (Called LO STUDIO). Baccus and Ariadne on the Island of Naxos.
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    Elisabeth-Louise Vigee Le Brun: Portrait of Marie Antoinette (1755-1793), bust-length, in a trompe l’oeil stone niche.
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    A Kawari Kabuto (Exotic Helmet). Momoyama period (Late 16th century).
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    A Roman sleeping beauty at Christie’s Classic Week.
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    Foreground – Right: Elisabeth-Louise Vigee Le Brun (Paris 1755-1842). Maria Grigorievna Viazemskaia, Princess Golitsyna (1772-1865), seated three-quarter-lengh.
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    Jean-Leon Gerome (Vesoul. Haute-Saone 1824-1904 Paris) Washington a cheval (‘Washington on his horse’). Bronze, dark brown patina.
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    A tinted plaster bust of Napoleon Bonaparte as first consul by Joseph Chinard (Lyon 1756-1813), 1801.
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    Domenikos Theotokopoulos, Called EL GRECO. (Crete 1541-1614) Toledo). The Entombment of Christ.
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    A colossal Roman marble portrait head of the emperor Hadrian. Reign 117-138 A.D.
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    An important large Roman inlaid bronze Bacchus. Circa 2nd Century A.D.
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    Christie’s Classic Week: April 8-15, 2016
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    A Roman marble Venus. Circa 1st Century B.C., 1st Century A.D.
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    An important Egyptian wood figure of a lady. Middle kingdom. Early 12th dynasty. Circa 1981-1802 B.C.
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    Foreground: An attic red-figured Nolan amphora, attributed to the Berlin painter, circa 470 B.C.
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    Contemporary artwork by Clyfford Still mixed with Classic Week at Christie’s. 

    All images by High End Weekly™. All rights reserved.

  • Art,  Art Fairs,  Features

    Lan Zhenghui’s Ink Moment in Hong Kong

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    Ink Monument installation at Art Central 2016.

    One of China’s leading contemporary artist, Lan Zhenghui, recently début a magnificent installation Ink Monument at Art Central Hong Kong. The project was presented by Ethan Cohen New York, at the iconic Central Harbourfront. Commissioned by Art Central’s selection committee, Lan Zhenghui’s installation Ink Monument towers close to 16.5 feet high, with a colossal four-sided column of large-scale ink paintings on rice paper.

    The artist created his new master-work to express the power of sadness and an epic awareness of tragedy. After Hong Kong Art Week, Lan will next embark on a U.S. tour that includes a second residency at Mana Contemporary co-sponsored by Ethan Cohen Fine Arts, and university lectures in multiple cities.

    This is the second year that the Art Central selection committee has invited Lan Zhenghui for a major installation. At 2015’s Hong Kong Art Week, Ethan Cohen curated Lan’s installation titled Re-Think, which was very well received in Hong Kong and was a highlight of the Art Central fair (the entire installation was acquired).

    2 - Lan with fair Director for Art Central, Maree di Pasquali
    Maree Di Pasquale, the Fair Director for Art Central Hong Kong, with Lan Zhenghui.

    7 - Artwork high-res - Ink Monument - installation - 5 meters x 1 meter - ink on rice paper - four-sided column

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    Born in Sichuan China in 1959, Lan graduated in 1987 from one of China’s most prestigious art academies, the Sichuan Academy of Art (famous alumni include Zhang Xiaogang and Zhou Chunya). He has focused his career working in contemporary ink painting and calligraphy, and his powerful ink movement is based on more than 20 years of passionate research for his vision of constructing art via ink traditions in new ways.
    8 - artwork hi-res Ink Monument, 2016, vertical detail-1, two sides, installation - 5 meters x 1 meter - ink on rice paper - four-sided column
    Ink Monument, 2016, vertical detail
    1.4 - Ink Moument installation - Lan Zhenghui
    Lan Zhenghui and his Ink Monument installation.
  • Art,  Editor's Top Picks,  Features,  Museums

    The Met Breuer Shows Off its Quirky Side

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    Pablo Picasso, Spanish, Malaga 1881-1973 Mougins, France. Portrait of Olga, 1921. This work is one of several female heads that Picasso rendered during a summer stay in Fontainebleau with Olga and their newborn son.

    Have you been to The Met? The Met Breuer, I mean.

    The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s modern and contemporary art program have expanded their artful wings by including a new series of exhibitions, performances, artist commissions, residencies, and educational initiatives in a building designed by Marcel Breuer on Madison Avenue and 75th Street. The museum official opened to the public on March 18, 2016. However, High End Weekly™ was fortunate enough to attend the press preview on March 1st. The Met Breuer is a strikingly contemporary building that provides additional space to explore the art of the 20th and 21st centuries through the global breadth and historical reach of the Met’s unparalleled collection. Their exhibition Unfinished: Thoughts Left Visible opened on March 18th, and will end on September 4, 2016. With over 190 works dating from the Renaissance to the present—drawn mainly from the Museum’s collection, supplemented with major national and international loans—the exhibition demonstrates the type of groundbreaking show that can result when the Museum mines its vast collection and curatorial resources to present modern and contemporary art within a deep historical context.

    Located on the 3rd and 4th floors, at Madison Avenue and 75th Street, this exhibition is undoubtedly one of the finest museum show I’ve seen so far this year. Other programs featured as part of the inaugural season of The Met Breuer include the largest exhibition to date dedicated to Indian modernist Nasreen Mohamedi; and a month-long performance installation, by Resident Artist Vijay Iyer. Upcoming exhibitions include a presentation of Diane Arbus’s rarely seen early photographic works (July 12-November 27, 2016), and the first museum retrospective dedicated to Kerry James Marshall (October 25, 2016-January 30, 2017).

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    Opening remarks from Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of the Metropolitan Museum during The Met Breuer Press Preview
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    An unfinished Pablo Picasso painting showcased at Marcel Breuer’s iconic building on Madison Avenue.
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    Press day at Marcel Breuer’s iconic building on Madison Avenue which now housed The Met Breuer.
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    Urs Fischer, Swiss, born Zurich, 1973. Cast bronze, oil paint, palladium leaf, clay bole, chalk gesso, rabbit-skin glue. “Many of Fischer’s works court the tension between permanence and impermanence. Some are designed to self-destruct, while others only appear to be disintegrating; 2, 2014 falls into the latter category.”
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    Pablo Picasso, Spanish, Malaga 1881-1973 Mougins, France. Harlequin, 1923.

    “Unfinished is a cornerstone of The Met Breuer’s inaugural program and a great example of the Met’s approach to presenting the art of today. Stretching across history and geography, the exhibition is the result of a cross-departmental collaboration, drawing on the expertise of the Met’s outstanding faculty of curators. We hope the exhibition will inspire audiences to reconsider the artistic process as they connect to experiences shared by artists over centuries.” Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of the Metropolitan Museum. 

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    A collection of unfinished old masters are now in view at The Met Breuer until September 4, 2016.
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    Leonardo da Vinci, Italian, Vinci, ca 1452-1519 Amoise. Head and Shoulders of a Woman (La Scapigliata), ca. 1500-1505. Oil, earth, and white lead pigments on poplar.
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    Portrait of Mariana de Silva y Sarmiento, Duquesa de Huescar (1740-1784), 1775 by Anton Raphael Mengs.
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    Kerry James Marshall speaking to the audience during Press Day at The Met Breuer. The artist uses painting, sculptural installations and photography to comment on the history of black identity in the US.
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    An utterly striking, yet unfinished work by Alabama-born artist Kerry James Marshal. In Marshall’s powerful allegory of painting, an artist sits holding her oversize palette, turned away from an unfinished self-portrait on her easel. The painting within a painting – or, more precisely, the painting about painting – is a time-honored motif taken up by many of the greatest artists in the Western tradition to which Marshall now contributes.
    IMG_8391
    George Romney, British, Beckside, Lancashire 1734-1802 Kendal, Cumbria. George Romney, 1784. Oil on canvas. This unfinished self-portrait was begun for the artist’s friend and biographer William Hayley during a trip that Romney and the artist John Flaxman made to Hayley’s villa. The painting was both praised for its vivacity and questioned for its incomplete state by those who knew the story of its making.
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    Sir Joshua Reynolds, British, Plympton 1723-1792 London. A Young Man, ca. 1770. The sitter may be a man who worked for the artist and appeared in other paintings by him, but precise identification is difficult.
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    Alice Neel, American, James Hunter Black Draftee, 1965. Oil on canvas.
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    Vincent van Gogh, Street in Auvers-sur-Oise, 1890.
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    Gustav Klimt, Posthumous Portrait of Ria Munk III, 1917-18. Oil on Canvas. Death stands at the beginning and at the end of this work’s history. The young woman, Maria (“Ria”) Munk, committed suicide on December 28, 1911, after the writer Hanns Heinz Ewers called off their engagement. Klimt, the most sought-after portraitist in Vienna at the time, was commissioned to paint her posthumous portrait. He struggled with the task ,and the first two portraits did not meet the family’s approval. While still working on this third portrait of Ria, Klimt himself died.
  • Art,  Art Fairs,  Features

    Art Fairs & Stylish Guests

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    Brazilian beauties, Alina Concalves & Alessandra Kertzer

    NY ART FAIRS AND STYLISH GUESTS

    Text and photos by Rose Hartman

    With over 200 galleries, The Armory Show was the place to be!!! Pier 92 and 94 attracted a record crowd of art aficionados. At Pier 94, one could discover the newest of the new with a new African art section.

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    Stylish guests attending the preview of The Armory Art Show (Contemporary Armory)
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    Recreation of Joan Miró’s studio at The Armory Show
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    Stephanie Labielle-Sczyrba (Assouline)
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    POMMERY‘S Champagne owners, Maylis Vraken & Adrien Eveque
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    Princess Firyal of Jordan

     

  • Art,  Features

    Friday’s Art Muse: Amanda Parer

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    Amanda Parer/Intrude Public Light Art Installation

    THE ANIMAL INSTINCT

    This week, Australian artist Amanda Parer announced the launch of her North American tour of Intrude, the highly acclaimed public art installation that features monumental rabbits, each sewn in nylon, inflated and internally lit. Fascinating.

    From March – June 2016, the giant rabbits will travel throughout North America, making stops in Washington D.C., San Francisco, Toronto, New York, Houston, Los Angeles, Denver and Memphis. (See schedule below.)

    One of the most celebrated and widely viewed pieces of light sculpture ever created, Intrude, which was a prominent work in the 2014 Vivid Festival in Sydney, has brought a joyful spirit to more than 19 major cities throughout the world, including London, Perth, Paris and Boston. The visual humor evoked by the enormous rabbits lures audiences into the artwork to reveal a more serious environmental message.

    For artist Amanda Parer, rabbits are an animal of contradiction.

    While they often connote a furry innocence, rabbits are considered an invasive pest in the artist’s native Australia, where they have caused a great imbalance to the country’s natural and delicately balanced ecosystems since they were first introduced by white settlers in 1788. Through Intrude, Parer hopes to move people to thoughtfully consider how humans can change and dominate the environment.

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    Amanda Parer/Intrude Public Light Art Installation
    Amanda Parer
    Amanda Parer, 2013
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    Amanda Parer, 2013. Porcelain
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    Amanda Parer, 2014
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    Amanda Parer. Public light art installation
    Amanda Parer.3
    Amanda Parer. Public light art installation

    Tour schedule is as followsTORONTO: Monday, March 14 – Wednesday, March 23
    Brookfield Place Toronto (181 Bay Street). SAN FRANCISCO: Monday, April 4 – Monday, April 25
    Joseph L. Alioto Performing Arts Piazza, located in the heart of San Francisco’s Civic Center. NEW YORK: Sunday, April 17 – Saturday, April 30. Monday – Saturday, 12 -9 p.m. Sunday, 12 – 7 p.m. Brookfield Place (230 Vesey Street). HOUSTON: Monday, May 9 – Saturday, May 14. 1600 Smith Street. LOS ANGELES: Sunday, June 5 – Saturday, June 11. Installation spans three Brookfield properties: Bank of America Plaza (333 South Hope Street) and Wells Fargo Center (330 South Hope Street) on Bunker Hill; and FIGat7th (735 South Figueroa Street) in Downtown LA. DENVER: Two weekends: June 17, 18, 19 and 24, 25, 26
    1801 California Street. Republic Plaza (370 17th Street).

    Amanda Parer.7
    Amanda Parer. Public light art installation
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