
One of the very sad, very creepy men created by video artist Ed Atkins
- Joan Miró’s grandson, Joan Punyet Miró, celebrated the opening of the surrealist painter’s exhibition at Kunsthaus in Zurich with a performance that sounds like a scene out of a Hollywood movie where a non-art person starts dating a wacky artist and gets dragged to wild and crazy art world things that don’t make any sense. [artnet News]
- Michael H. Miller reports on the latest reality show to take on the art world. This one is called “Art Breakers” which is a pun on, um, “heartbreakers”, and stars two blond girls working in this world. The girls encounter so called “hot” artists nobody has ever heard of at galleries nobody has ever heard of and nobody will ever want to hear of. Needless to say, it sounds terrible. [ARTnews]
- This review isn’t great, but it makes me want to see the work. Ed Atkins produces videos populated by uncanny CGI men who seem pretty depressed and lonely. Foreshadowing the ennui of the coming AI generation? [ARTnews]
- “Anyone who uses the word ‘prurient’ should never be taken seriously.” -Bucky Turco, of Animal New York, who is being sued by the estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat over nude photos of the artist published last year. The photos were shot by Paige Powell, Basquiat’s ex-girlfriend, and published under the headline “And Now, Basquiat’s Actual Balls!” [Artforum]
- Dear rest of humanity that are presently alive, how shitty does it feel to be the generation that’s watching Roman ruins that have stood for thousands of years get blown up by the Islamic State? Seriously, what the fuck is wrong with people? [The Art Newspaper]
- Confession: I have not finished reading this article (it is so very long) but it’s worthwhile. Raphael Rubinstein considers the “Total Service Artists” who take on the ancillary tasks of producing, managing, distributing, curating, and historicizing their work. [Art in America]
- Wow. The affordable studios in Bjarke Ingles’s insane midtown pyramid start at $565/month. Apply for that (most likely) very competitive lottery now. And in the unlikely event you do end up snagging an apartment, please invite us over for dinner. [Curbed]
- Molly Crabapple reports on (and illustrates) the treatment prisoners inside the Pennsylvania’s State Correctional Institution at Dallas, specifically focusing on Carrington Keys. The whole story is heart breaking – a life lost in prison, mostly for resisting the status quo. (Whistler blowers like Keys just get beat up and given longer sentences for fictitious crimes.) Keys eventually sued the prison and he now has a video in his hands of his abuse. But that’s new evidence, so he’s stuck in jail for another six months until the prosecution has a chance to properly look at it. [Vice]