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Search resuls for: "Cecily Brown"


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Yvonne Force Villareal at the opening of the Bunker Art Space on Dec. 3, 2023, in West Palm Beach, Florida. Culture Corps creates precise replicas of artworks for shows. The firm's first foray into placing art in shows was on the reboot of "Gossip Girl," a deal initiated by Remen through her contacts in the entertainment industry. The firm approached sourcing artwork for the show as if it were for a private client's home, Force Villareal said. A piece by Lucien Smith in the Tribeca home of 'Gossip Girl' character Julien Calloway in season one of the series.
Persons: Yvonne Force Villareal, Sean Zanni, Patrick Mcmullan, Anna, Shonda Rhimes, Anna Delvey, Anna Sorokin, Delvey, Cecily Brown —, Brown, Julia Garner, Cecily Brown, Jean, Michel Basquiat, Gregory Crewdson, Carla Klein, Damian Lewis's, Bobby, Axelrod, Jane Holzer —, Andy Warhol's, Laurance Rockefeller, Doreen Remen, Remen, Villareal, Lucien Smith, Julien Calloway, HBO Max, , Candida Hofer, Neo Rauch, liaising, they've, Cindy Sherman, Barbara Kruger, Ugo Rondinone, Yvonne Force, Griffin, gallerists Paul Kasmin, Danny Moynihan, Hein Koh, Sarah Peters, Dayssi, Kanavos, Paul Kasmin, Pearl, Masato Onoda Organizations: Bunker, Netflix, Showtime, Culture Corps, Corps, CNBC, Axe, Force, Rhode Island School of Design, Art, Fund, Tribeca, HBO, Artists Rights Society, Bauer, Getty, Women's Business Enterprise National Council, WWD, Penske Media Locations: West Palm Beach , Florida, York, British, New York City, Swiss, Las Vegas
The four art dealers who trade together as LGDR have opened a gallery on East 64th Street with a preposterous inaugural exhibition — but before you take that the wrong way, remember the etymology. Preposterous, adjective: from the Latin prae-, meaning “before,” and posterus, or “coming after.” Something preposterous is turned the wrong way. …I had better stop; “Rear View,” with more than 60 paintings, sculptures and photographs of human figures facing the more interesting way, invites a preposterous amount of wordplay. Many of the artists in “Rear View” channel their backward glances through the classical ideal. Michelangelo Pistoletto, the Arte Povera artist, places a concrete copy of the Aphrodite of Knidos in a pile of trash.
One reason the British-born artist Cecily Brown, 53, came to New York in 1994 was that she wanted to paint, and in the London of Sarah Lucas and Damien Hirst, with their fried-egg-and-kebab sculptures and sharks in formaldehyde, that urge was regarded as rather retrograde. But the other reason was, as she says, “I’m a nepo baby in London, and here people don’t know so much that my dad was a big cheese.”One reason the British-born artist Cecily Brown, 53, came to New York in 1994 was that she wanted to paint, and in the London of Sarah Lucas and Damien Hirst, with their fried-egg-and-kebab sculptures and sharks in formaldehyde, that urge was regarded as rather retrograde. Sylvester had always been interested in Brown’s painting, introducing her to famous artists like Jasper Johns and Richard Serra and taking her to see a show with Francis Bacon, whose work he’d championed for decades, curating exhibitions and publishing a book of their interviews. In art school, Brown recalls, “Bacon was the reigning king, and [Sylvester’s] interviews with Bacon were pretty famous among art students.” But in New York, she says, Sylvester’s “name doesn’t necessarily ring a bell, which I think was one of the main reasons I wanted to live here…. The art world here just felt so much bigger.”
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