Showing posts with label online. Show all posts
Showing posts with label online. Show all posts

22/08/25

Infant: Banned Skills @ Whitney Online Gallery space for Internet and new media art - artport

INFANT: BANNED SKILLS
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
2025 - artport - Online Gallery

Infant Artist Duo
INFANT
Still from BANNED SKILLS, 2025
© INFANT

The Whitney Museum of American Art launched BANNED SKILLS, a digital art project by artist duo INFANT, sidony o’neal and Bogosi Sekhukhuni, on artport, the Whitney’s online gallery space for Internet and new media art. Commissioned for artport, the work serves as the portal to engage with INFANT’s evolving conceptual framework, XENOFORMALISM. The artists designed BANNED SKILLS as an interactive entry point to explore new speculative understandings of formal systems like math, science, and design. The project reveals how seemingly contrasting ideas can align to generate new aesthetic or ideological orders.

BANNED SKILLS is a nonlinear aesthetic narrative that prompts viewers to consider various aspects of humanity and established understandings of objects or histories. Unfolding along two distinct paths, the work’s primary navigation tool utilizes the psychological phenomenon of the bouba-kiki effect. The phenomenon, first presented in the 1920s, reflects deliberate associations between speech sounds and visual shapes with the word bouba often associated with smooth, rounded shapes and kiki with sharp, angular ones. Within BANNED SKILLS, users begin their experience in a “NEST” where the kiki and bouba forms exist, selecting one of the two shapes to take them along different paths. Along these journeys, users interact with a range of artifacts from art, architecture, design, and sound to explore cultural representations through unexpected groupings, placing the objects in conversation with one another. Encounters with juxtapositions of cultural artifacts—from the Gameboy Advanced SP Tribal Edition to the necklace made from precisely designed whale bones—invite users to gain new perspectives and draw connections. In the top-left corner of the screen, an interactive virtual music device lets users toggle between the kiki- and bouba-coded soundscapes, further emphasizing the visual juxtapositions. After users explore both spaces, a final third environment will appear.
BANNED SKILLS hopes to use participation as a way around the problem of ‘talking at’ the viewer, working with, not against, postures of engagement from the early 2000's gaming boom that feel familiar and nostalgic simultaneously,” said David Lisbon, Curatorial Assistant at the Whitney. “This is the first artport project that dives into this cross-section of the post digital and is a form of practice that garners attention because of its utility across levels of understanding. Considering the intersections of art and design have become a prominent narrative for emerging forms of contemporary engagement.”
The artists designed the virtual experience of BANNED SKILLS as a starting point for exploring their concept of XENOFORMALISM (XF). The prefix “XENO,” meaning strange or foreign in Greek, suggests an unfamiliar type of formalism. XF can be imagined as a category of filters to guide users in unpacking and connecting histories of visual aesthetics, sonic landscapes, and science. The work offers an aesthetic approach to new understandings of cultural representations, using histories of science fiction and digital culture—including gaming and computer graphics—as speculative introductions. The branching sequences INFANT has formed in BANNED SKILLS encourages viewers to reexamine how meaning is formed and reinforced within art, art history, design, science, and science fiction, and how these fields shape and contribute to collective cultural memory.

INFANT’s BANNED SKILLS was organized by David Lisbon, Curatorial Assistant at the Whitney Museum, and commissioned for artport, the Museum’s online gallery space for Internet and new media art commissions. artport is organized by Christiane Paul, Curator of Digital Art at the Whitney. 

ARTIST DUO INFANT

Sidony O’Neal (b. 1988) is a conceptual artist whose work and interdisciplinary research is informed by mathematics, architectural systems, and the histories of objects, from 15th Century locking mechanisms to plastic industrial pallets. Their works explore human relationships to objects, labor, and technology.

Their work has been featured in exhibitions at Et al., San Francisco, CA; Lewis Center for the Arts at Princeton University, Princeton, NJ; Dracula’s Revenge, New York, NY; Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, Portland, OR; Veronica, Seattle, WA; Third Born, Mexico City, Mexico; ICA at Maine College of Art and Design, Portland, ME; and Sculpture Center, Long Island City, NY. O’Neal has had residencies at MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA; and Banff Centre, Banff, AB, among others. Their performances have been featured at Kunstverein Düsseldorf, Volksbühne Berlin, and Performance Space New York. O'Neal is the recipient of awards and fellowships including the Oregon Arts Commission's Joan Shipley Award and a Hodder Fellowship from the Lewis Center for the Arts at Princeton University. In 2023, they were awarded a Hallie Ford Fellowship. O'Neal is co-founder of design firm INFANT.

Bogosi Sekhukhuni (b. 1991) is an artist and designer who reflects on cultures and histories of technology. Working across a range of media such as sculpture, video, set design, furniture design and performance, Sekhukhuni suggests ways to think about the mechanics of futurity.

Since 2012, Sekhukhuni’s work has been featured in both solo and group exhibitions, including Role Play, Fondazione Prada, Milan; Age of You, Jameel Arts Centre, Dubai; Art in the Age of Anxiety, Sharjah Art Foundation, Sharjah; The Art Happens Here: Net Art’s Archival Poetics, New Museum, New York; Bogosi Sekhukhuni, Foxy Production, New York; Rencontres de Bamako, African Biennale of Photography, Mali; and Simunye Summit 2010, Stevenson Gallery, Johannesburg. They have been awarded the Prix Net Art Award, Rhizome, New York (2017). Sekhukhuni is a founding member of the artist group NTU and has worked closely with CUSS Group. Sekhukhuni is co-founder of the design firm INFANT.

ABOUT ARTPORT

artport is the Whitney Museum’s portal to Internet art and an online gallery space for net art and new media art commissions. Launched in 2001, artport provides access to original commissioned artworks, documentation of net art and new media art exhibitions at the Whitney, and new media art in the Museum’s collection. Recent commissions include Ashley Zelinkskie’s Twin Quasar (2024); Maya Man’s A Realistic Day In My Life In New York City (2024); Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst’s xhairymutantx (2024); Nancy Baker Cahill’s CENTO (2024); Peter Burr’s Sunshine Monument (2023); Rick Silva’s Liquid Crystal (2023); Auriea Harvey’s SITE1 (2023); Amelia Winger-Bearskin’s Sky/World Death/World (2022); Mimi Ọnụọha’s 40% of Food in the US is Wasted (How the Hell is That Progress, Man?) (2022); and Rachel Rossin’s THE MAW OF (2022). Access these and more projects at whitney.org/artport.

Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City

22/03/25

Gautier Willaume: Abstract Paintings, 2025 - "Irregular Vertical Lines" - 17 Paintings Online

Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines
Abstract paintings, 2025

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

The French artist GAUTIER WILLAUME (born in 1968) presents, on Wanafoto, a series of paintings in progress. 

The paintings in this series are painted with acrylics applied with an ink roller (these are normally used for engravings or lithographs). Gautier Willaume's approach relies on a degree of chance in the drawing and the resulting "imperfections" that make these paintings interesting.

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

In his previous works, abstract painter Gautier Willaume had focused on paintings with clearly defined lines. While abstraction is central to his entire body of work, this series is innovative, for example, compared to his geometric paintings or those in the pop art-inspired "Théodore Géricault" series. 

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume - Painting
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

Gautier Willaume
Gautier Willaume
Irregular Vertical Lines Series, 2025
Acrylic on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy of the artist

The series presented in this post consists of small formats (300 gr. A4 sheets) while the other paintings of Gautier Willaume on paper are, for the majority of them, in the format 50 x 65 cm and his canvases in the format 60 x 80 cm. We can therefore imagine that these paintings are preparatory works for larger works.

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If you are an amateur artist, like Gautier Willaume, and 
you would like to present your work on this blogzine, 
please use the contact form (top left). It's free of course ;)

11/03/25

Gautier Willaume : Peintures abstraites, 2025 - "Lignes verticales irrégulières" - 15 peintures en ligne

Gautier Willaume
Lignes verticales irrégulières
Peintures abstraites, 2025

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste


L'artiste GAUTIER WILLAUME (né en 1968) présente, sur Wanafoto, une série de peintures en cours. 

Les peintures de cette séries sont peintes à l'acrylique appliquée au rouleau à encrer (ceux-ci sont normalement utilisés pour la réalisation de gravures ou de lithographies). La démarche de Gautier Willaume repose sur une part de hasard dans le tracé et les "imperfections" qui en découlent et qui font le charme de ces peintures. 

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste


Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Dans ses travaux précédents, Gautier Willaume, peintre abstrait, avait plutôt travaillé sur des peintures aux lignes bien tracées. Si l'abstraction est au coeur de l'ensemble de son travail d'artiste, cette série innove, par exemple, par rapports à ses peintures aux formes géométriques ou encore celles de la série "Théodore Géricault" d'inspiration pop art. 

La série présentée dans ce post est constituées de petit formats (feuilles 300 gr. A 4) alors que les autres peintures de Gautier Willaume sur papiers sont, pour la majorité d'entre elles, au format 50 x 65 cm (format Vigne) et ses toiles au format 60 x 80 cm. On peut donc imaginer que ces peintures sont des travaux préparatoires à des oeuvres de plus grande dimension.

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

Gautier Willaume - Peinture abstraite
Gautier Willaume
Série Lignes Verticales Irrégulières, 2025
Acrylique sur papier, 21 x 29,7 cm
© Gautier Willaume, courtesy de l'artiste

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Si vous êtes artiste amateur, comme Gautier Willaume, et que vous souhaitez présenter votre travail sur ce blogzine, n'hésitez par à utiliser le formulaire de contact (en haut à gauche). C'est gratuit bien sûr ;)

30/11/23

Gerhard Richter @ David Zwirner Online - "PAMUL" Print

Gerhard Richter, PAMUL
David Zwirner Online
Launching December 8, 2023

Gerhard Richter
Gerhard Richter 
PAMUL, 2023
© Gerhard Richter 2023 (08122023)
Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner

David Zwirner Online is pleased to debut PAMUL, a new print by Gerhard Richter. This new work is an inkjet print based on a 2023 drawing by the artist. During the printing process, the artist subjected the original composition to a series of notable alterations—including enlarging the overall image size, augmenting the drawing with additional markings and elements, removing the signature and date, and adding a light cream border around the edge of the entire image—so that the final editioned work expresses a subtle but intentional visual evolution from its drawn predecessor.

Celebrated worldwide as one of the most important and influential artists of his generation, with a career spanning six decades, Gerhard Richter has pursued a diverse practice that is grounded in nuanced investigations of history, memory, and representation. Prints and editions have played a crucial role in Richter’s oeuvre since 1965. His vast body of editioned works—which are often derived from the artist’s own artworks, as well as clippings from family archives and mass media—have constantly served as a way for him to experiment with the production of visual facsimiles and the iterative translation and interplay of mediums.

DAVID ZWIRNER

12/09/23

Photographs of Early NASA Missions in Dorotheum online auction - "The Beauty of Space" Collection

The Beauty of Space 
Iconic Photographs of Early NASA Missions
Dorotheum online auction
15 to 27 September 2023, 2 am

© Dorotheum
Lot Nr. 115, Buzz Aldrin (Apollo 11, 16 - 24 July 1969): 
The only photograph of Neil Armstrong on the Moon, 
20.3 x 25.4 cm, estimate € 15,000 - 25,000, starting bid € 12,000
© Dorotheum

© Dorotheum
Lot Nr. 40, Buzz Aldrin (Gemini XII, 11 - 15 November 1966): 
The first selfie in outer space, 20.3 x 25.5 cm, 
estimate € 7,000 - 10,000, starting bid € 6,000
© Dorotheum

© Dorotheum
Lot Nr. 108, Neil Armstrong (Apollo 11, 16 - 24 July 1969): 
The first photograph taken by humans from the surface of 
another world, signed and inscribed by the crew of Apollo 17 
and last men on the Moon, 20.3 x 25.4 cm, 
estimate € 6,000 - 8,000, starting bid € 3,000
© Dorotheum

Prepare to be "Moonstruck" as the "Beauty of Space" collection takes you on a mesmerizing journey through time and space. This remarkable single-owner collection of 229 vintage photographs, curated from NASA's early space missions, encapsulates the profound significance of our giant leap into the cosmos. These extraordinary visual treasures will be available for auction in the Dorotheum online event titled "The Beauty of Space - Iconic Photographs of Early NASA Missions," taking place between September 15 and 27, 2023.

Starting mostly at just 100 euros with no reserve, these photographs invite collectors and enthusiasts to participate in a cosmic and artistic journey. Parts of the Martin-Malburet-Collection have previously graced the walls of prestigious museums worldwide, including the Grand Palais in Paris, the Kunsthaus in Zürich, the Museum der Moderne in Salzburg, and the Louisiana Museum of Art in Denmark.

Auction Highlights: Iconic Moments in Space History
The "Beauty of Space" collection includes iconic and rare photographs from the Victor Martin-Malburet Collection, featuring historic moments that defined the golden age of astronautics and graced the covers of LIFE or National Geographic magazines at the time.

• Neil Armstrong (Apollo 11, 16-24.7.1969): The iconic image of Buzz Aldrin on the Moon with Neil Armstrong and the Lunar Module Eagle reflected in his gold-plated visor. Estimated at € 4,000–6,000, starting bid € 2,000.

• Crew of the Mercury Seven (July 1960): A captivating portrait of NASA's first astronauts in their silver space suits, extremely rare in color. The legendary Mercury Seven were the inspiration for "The Right Stuff." Estimated at € 1,200–1,800, starting bid € 600.

• Buzz Aldrin (Gemini XII, 11-15 November 1966): The first space selfie, a historic moment when humanity captured its own history in the making, thanks to Buzz Aldrin. Estimated at € 7,000 - 10,000, starting bid € 6,000.

• William Anders (Apollo 8, 21-27 December 1968): The first human-taken photograph of Planet Earth, a major milestone of photography, when humans were contemplating for the first time their home planet as a celestial body like any other. Estimated at € 3,000-5,000, starting bid € 1,500.

© Dorotheum
Lot Nr. 117, Neil Armstrong (Apollo 11, 16 – 24 July 1969): 
Buzz Aldrin's gold plated sun visor reflects the photographer 
(Neil Armstrong) and the LM Eagle, 20.3 x 25.4 cm, 
estimate € 4,000 – 6,000, starting bid € 2,000
© Dorotheum

© Dorotheum
Lot Nr. 58, William Anders (Apollo 8, 21 – 27 December 1968): 
The first human-taken photograph of the whole Planet Earth, 
20.3 x 25.4 cm, estimate € 3,000 – 5,000, starting bid € 1,500
© Dorotheum

© Dorotheum
Lot Nr. 1, Crew of Mercury Seven, NASA's first astronauts, 
in their silver spacesuits, iconic color portrait, July 1960, 
20.3 x 25.4 cm, Photo Ralph Morse, 
estimate € 1,200 - 1,800, starting bid € 600
© Dorotheum

Space and Photography: A Pioneering Visual Legacy
In 1969, humanity achieved a monumental milestone by setting foot on the Moon. This historic moment also marked a significant chapter in the history of photography.

While the primary objective of the astronauts was to scientifically record their activities, they were inspired by vistas never seen before, as well as a new understanding of what it is to be human. Each and every shot was a historic treasure, a once in a lifetime opportunity that would never be able to be captured again. Equipped with the most advanced camera technology, they recorded, with skill and daring, images which immediately transcended documentation, inspiring awe and wonder. It is not just the splendor of what is portrayed; or the significance of humanity's giant leap into the cosmos; there is also the sheer aesthetic appeal of these images. Today, they have achieved iconic status, standing alongside the earliest cave paintings as powerful symbols of human curiosity, ingenuity, and the unending quest for discovery.

The "Beauty of Space" collection, carefully curated by the French collector Victor Martin-Malburet, is a testament to this extraordinary convergence of science and art and to the dedication and pioneering spirit of NASA's early astronauts.

In today's digital age, it is easy to forget that this golden age of space coincided with the era of analog photography, which relied on light-sensitive chemistry, film, and photographic papers. These vintage prints, final products of the analog technology, were developed, both in color and black-and-white, primarily for scientific purpose, in the same year the photographs were taken, just after the missions returned to Earth. Historic and aesthetic artifacts bearing negative numbers, legends, logos from NASA, manufacturer watermarks, quality control stamps and print marks from its photographic laboratories, these photographic treasures are now appreciated for their artistic value as well as their historical and scientific significance.

While some of the images were released to the press, the vast majority was largely hidden from the public eye. They will now be made available for space enthusiasts and collectors alike. The online auction offers approximately 200 NASA photographs, spanning from the early 1960s to the early 1970s, capturing the genesis of manned spaceflight, including the Mercury Program (1958 - 1963), the Gemini Program (1965 - 1966), and the Apollo Missions (1961 - 1972).

A Spectacle of Never Seen Before Moments in Space and on another world

Starting in his teenage years Victor Martin-Malburet's journey into the cosmos began when his father gifted him his first space photograph at auction. Over the course of 25 years, Victor Martin-Malburet assembled an unparalleled collection comprising thousands of vintage photographs, originating mostly from NASA’s Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston, the vast majority unreleased and hidden from public view during decades until they were progressively made available through the internet. His early dedication and access to NASA's unreleased photographs and mission transcripts allow us to step back in time and experience these pivotal moments in human history through the astronauts’ eyes.

Among the exceptional unreleased photographs, space enthusiasts can bid on:

One of the first human-taken photographs from space by John Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth. Estimated at 2,500 to 4,000 euros, starting bid € 1,200.

The first photograph of the Moon rising over the Earth, as seen from space taken during Gemini VII, which broke the record for spaceflight duration at the time. Estimated at 1,200 to 1,800 euros, starting bid € 600.

A legendary rarity: Buzz Aldrin, the second man on the Moon, captured the only photograph of the first man on the Moon, Neil Armstrong, during the historic Apollo 11 mission. Estimated at 15,000 to 25,000 euros, starting bid € 12,000.

The first human-taken photograph of the Moon's surface, immortalized by Neil Armstrong during Apollo 11. Estimated between 6,000 and 8,000 euros, and signed and inscribed by the Apollo 17 crew, the last humans to walk on the Moon (starting bid € 3,000).

The first Earthrise photographed after transearth injection, over the curved Moon, on Apollo 11. Estimated at 3,000 to 5,000 euros, starting bid € 1,500.

An extraordinary original panorama from Apollo 15 of the Valley of Hadley-Apennine. Initially made so that scientists on Earth could reconstruct the location of the station visited on the Moon, this panoramic mosaic reveals the surreal beauty of the lunar scenery. Estimated at 2,500 to 3,500 euros, starting bid € 1,200.

And incredible photographs taken during the trouble plagued journey of Apollo 13, ghostly views of the Moon from orbit, unbelievable views of the Earth as seen as a small island of life hanging in the void of space or rising over the lunar horizon, and of course fascinating views from the Moon's surface.

As space travel continues to captivate imaginations, the "Beauty of Space" collection offers an unprecedented opportunity to own a piece of history.

DOROTHEUM
Palais Dorotheum, Dorotheergasse 17 I 1010 Wien
Online auction on www.dorotheum.com

26/03/23

Dorothea Lange: The Family Collection @ Phillips, NYC

Dorothea Lange: The Family Collection
Phillips, New York
Online Auction: 29 March - 5 April, 2023

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
White Angel Breadline, San Francisco, 1933
Estimate: $15,000 - 25,000
Image Courtesy Phillips

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
Women Workers, Richmond Shipyard, 1943
Estimate: $6,000 - 8,000
Image Courtesy Phillips

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
Street Demonstration, San Francisco (Down with Sales Tax), 1934
Estimate: $3,000 - 5,000
Image Courtesy Phillips

Phillips announces the second session of Dorothea Lange: The Family Collection, a trove of 50 photographs coming directly from the descendants of this seminal American photographer. This sale follows Phillips’ first offering from the Family Collection offered in October 2022. Part Two is open for bidding from 29 March to 5 April, 2023.

The sale features some of Dorothea Lange’s most indelible images from her multi-decade career in photography, as well as many images which will be new to collectors. All were in the photographer’s collection at the time of her death, passed along to her descendants, and represent the entirety of her career, from the first socially conscious images she made outside her portrait studio in San Francisco, through her work for the Farm Security Administration during the Depression, to her post-war documentary projects, much of it done in the company of her husband and collaborator Paul Taylor.


Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
Paul S. Taylor with Farmer, circa 1936
Estimate: $3,000 - 5,000
Image Courtesy Phillips

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
Migratory Cotton Pickers, Eloy, Arizona, 1940
Estimate: $7,000 - 9,000
Image Courtesy Phillips

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
Vietnam, 1958
Estimate $3,000 - 5,000
Image Courtesy Phillips

Born in Hoboken in 1895, Dorothea Lange learned to photograph as a young woman before her departure for the west coast in 1918. Talented and ambitious, Dorothea Lange opened a portrait studio that catered to San Francisco’s upper crust. After witnessing first-hand the social upheaval caused by the Depression, she took to the streets with her camera, taking images of labor demonstrations, the newly unemployed, and men, women, and children who were without home or income – images that would set the trajectory for the rest of her career.

During the Depression she traveled the country under the auspices of the Farm Security Administration, documenting the poverty endured by Americans and creating some of the most culturally relevant images of the 20th century. She brought her incisive and empathetic documentary style to a variety of national and international subjects during and after World War II. Dorothea Lange was witness to a world in transition and her camera captured it all. Her photographs show that the story of the 20th century is the story of individuals: their struggle, their success, and their perseverance.

Online Auction: 29 March - 5 April
Auction Viewing: 432 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10022

Estimates do not include buyer’s premium; prices achieved include the hammer price plus buyer’s premium.

PHILLIPS NEW YORK
432 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10022

01/12/22

Developing Stories: Native Photographers in the Field @ National Museum of the American Indian, New York - Donovan Quintero, Tailyr Irvine, Russel Albert Daniels

Developing Stories: Native Photographers in the Field
National Museum of the American Indian, New York
Through March 12, 2023

National Museum of the American Indian, New York
National Museum of the American Indian, New York
Photo courtesy of the Museum

The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian in New York presents “Developing Stories: Native Photographers in the Field,” an exhibition of photo essays by three Indigenous photojournalists. “Developing Stories” was originally expected to open at the museum in March 2020 and a version of it exists as an online exhibition

“Developing Stories: Native Photographers in the Field” is a series of photo essays created by Native photojournalists in collaboration with the National Museum of the American Indian. Each photographer explores an issue that is of deep personal interest and touches the lives of Native people in a specific community. The essays feature compelling photography and thought-provoking insights into contemporary Native life and, in so doing, nuanced perspectives on American experiences that are largely invisible to mainstream society.

“Developing Stories: Native Photographers in the Field” is curated by Cecile R. Ganteaume. Collaborators Tristan Ahtone (Kiowa), Editor at Large at Grist and John Smock, director of photojournalism at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at the City University of New York, provided editorial and technical expertise to the museum and photojournalists throughout the development of each photo essay.

Photo Essays 

Russel Albert Daniels (Diné descent and Ho-Chunk descent), “The Genízaro Pueblo of Abiquiú.” Daniels brings attention to a nearly 300-year-old community in New Mexico that was born out of violence and slavery. In this essay, he examines how, through annual festivals and feasts and their relationship to the land, Genízaros—detribalized descendants of freed Native American slaves—have maintained their sense of history and identity to the present day.

Tailyr Irvine (Salish and Kootenai), “Reservation Mathematics: Navigating Love in Native America.” Irvine examines the legacy of U.S. government regulations affecting Native Americans’ most personal decisions. Specifically, she focuses on the challenge blood quantum requirements (the amount of tribal affiliation in a person’s ancestry) pose for young Native American couples who want children and want them enrolled in their tribe. In early 1900s, the U.S. government began imposing this system on tribes as a means of defining and limiting citizenship. While some tribes still use this method for determining eligibility for tribal enrollment, other Native nations use documentation of a person’s descent from an enrollee on a designated tribal roll or census records.

Donovan Quintero (Diné), “The COVID-19 Outbreak in the Navajo Nation.” Photographer and journalist for the Navajo Times, Quintero explores how the pandemic affected the everyday lives of the Diné over the course of a year. The images highlight the resiliency of the Diné and the critical roles played by healthcare workers, police, council members, and unsung heroes of the pandemic.

NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN
Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House, One Bowling Green, New York, NY 10004

3/11/2022 - 12/3/2023

28/09/22

Photographer Dorothea Lange Family Collection @ Philips, New York

Dorothea Lange: The Family Collection
Phillips, New York
2 - 13 October, 2022

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
White Angel Breadline, San Francisco, 1933
Estimate: $20,000 - 30,000
Courtesy of Phillips

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
Street Demonstration, San Francisco, 1933
Estimate $8,000 - 12,000
Courtesy of Phillips

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
Kern County, California (Olson for Governor), 1938
Estimate $7,000 - 9,000
Courtesy of Phillips

Phillips announces the sale of Dorothea Lange: The Family Collection, a trove of over 100 photographs coming directly from the descendants of this seminal American photographer. The collection will be sold in two separate online offerings scheduled alongside Phillips’ October 2022 and April 2023 Photographs auctions in New York. The first of these two online-only sales will be exhibited at Phillips’ Park Avenue galleries in New York from 2-13 October, with bidding open on 3 October.

The two sales feature some of Dorothea Lange’s most indelible images from her multi-decade career in photography, as well as many images which will be new to collectors. All were in the photographer’s collection at the time of her death, passed along to her descendants, and represent the entirety of her career, from the first socially-conscious images she made outside her portrait studio in San Francisco, through her work for the Farm Security Administration during the Depression, to her post-war documentary projects, much of it done in the company of her husband and collaborator Paul Taylor.

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
Shipyard Worker and Family in Trailer Camp, Richmond, California, 1944
Estimate $6,000 - 8,000
Courtesy of Phillips

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
New York City (Man in Raincoat), 1952
Estimate $4,000 - 6,000
Courtesy of Phillips

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
Selected Images from The Public Defender, 1955
Estimate $18,000 - 22,000
Courtesy of Phillips

Dorothea Lange
DOROTHEA LANGE
Procession Bearing Food for the Dead, Egypt, 1963
Estimate $3,000 - 5,000
Courtesy of Phillips

Highlights of the October offering include a print of one of Dorothea Lange’s earliest and most decisive documentary images, White Angel Breadline, whose central figure embodies the poverty of the Depression and the grit to overcome it. The sale will feature a suite of 16 images from Dorothea Lange’s celebrated Public Defender series of 1955, in which her detailed portrayal of a public defense attorney and his clients set the template for a new kind of photojournalism. It is the largest group from this series to appear at auction.

The sale also includes an unprecedented selection of her international photography, begun in the 1950s, when she traveled with Paul Taylor to Ireland, Egypt, and Asia, creating a panoramic portrait of humanity across all cultures.

Estimates do not include buyer’s premium; prices achieved include the hammer price plus buyer’s premium.

Auction: 3 – 13 October 2022
Auction viewing: 2 – 13 October 2022
Location: 432 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10022

PHILLIPS NEW YORK 
432 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10022