Monday, December 29, 2008

Damien Hirst from ArtObserved


For the Love of God (2007) by Damien Hirst, via Wikimedia


DEMAND FOR DAMIEN HIRST’S ARTWORK MAY BE WEAK AND COULD BE SEEN TO WORSEN FURTHER IN 2009
December 24th, 2008



"Demand for Damien Hirst’s artwork is reportedly drying up a bit after the artist sold almost $200 million worth of art on September 15th (as covered by ArtObserved here,) the same day that Lehman Brothers collapsed and the Dow posted its then-largest single day decline. Christopher van de Weghe, a New York art dealer, recently sold only 2 of 8 lots at this year’s Art Basel Miami Beach–with those two lots selling for several thousand dollars, much less than the recent low estimates of their respective price ranges at auctions. Even sales of certain Hirst art works with larger more recognizable runs, such as the medicine cabinets and spin paintings, are very slow–so slow in fact that Hirst’s production company, Science Ltd, is laying off up to 20 people (as covered by ArtObserved here.)

Additionally, several art markets experts expect prices for Hirst’s work to remain depressed through most of 2009 due to the significant output of supply that has come online in the last few years. “We will see less of him at auction or we’ll see as many works but with lower estimates,” said Anders Petterson, chief of ArtTactic market research firm, via Bloomberg. Petterson added, on the topic of a survey his firm conducted with 150 art industry respondents regarding Hirst’s works: “the feeling is that the Hirst market has been stretched a bit too far, almost as if it snapped and backfired.” This sentiment is echoed by other dealers and analysts in the same article. “There’s little or no activity at $1 million or higher,” said Chelsea dealer Perry Rubenstein, who has sold various Hirst artworks in the past. “The price level for his market is completely unclear right now,” said David Zwirner, the owner of one of the two largest galleries in Chelsea. However, both of these points could be applied to the broader art market, as there is very little visibility as to when and how the market could eventually recover.


Damien Hirst. Image via Portfolio.

The consensus now seems to be that “Beautiful Inside My Head Forever,” Hirst’s $200 million show earlier this year, which to some has come to signify much of the effervescence of the better part of the past decade, was most likely the peak of the market not just for Hirst but perhaps for the art market in general. The success of that sale was notable and controversial not only in its extraordinary payout to the artist but also because the artist took his product directly to market using Sotheby’s, thus circumventing the dealers (primarily Larry Gagosian in New York and Jay Jopling in London). Much of the success of that show has been attributed to the fact that Sotheby’s linked the work up with new pools of buyers hitherto untapped by Hirst’s dealer network, even taking the artworks on a roadshow to such places as India and the Hamptons vacation market in New York (covered by ArtObserved here).

Despite the historical success of the Sotheby’s sale, the type of art production and sales system that Hirst embodies could be particularly vulnerable in a down market. Hirst’s work is systematic, ubiquitous, highly marketed through crossovers into fashion and music and backed by a highly extroverted large sized personality. His works stand in contrast to, for instance, a less frequently produced Peter Doig painting, or for a more recently in the news example, a John Currin work, which, due to its rarity as a singularly produced oil painting, actually outperformed estimates in the recently depressed November New York auctions (his Nice ‘n Easy, 1999, oil on canvas work sold for $5,458,500, above it’s estimate of $3,500,000 to $4,500,000, as covered by Art Observed here.) Hirst’s artwork can seem to be a sort of luxury product, a metal and formaldehyde accessory. A Hirst work is in many ways a sort of status symbol that is more easily accepted by non-insider art buyers than another valuable but more esoteric work. Many of Hirst’s works are immediately striking or controversial, such as diamond encrusted skulls and massive, bisected animals in glass cases and they are thus very readily absorbed by all facets of media and correspondingly, by popular culture. Many of the works are produced in large consistent series that are not only recognizable but marketed in such a way that new buyers might acquire them comfortably due to their mass cultural acceptance.

However, as the world economy has slowed the deep pools of potential buyers has dried up, leaving the buying activity largely in the hands of serious, experienced, sophisticated buyers who act with precision to acquire significant, quality works not recently nor perpetually produced by an art factory system. The same mechanism that propelled Hirst to Icarian heights may thus cut him off at the knees. In a burgeoning economy, relentless art production and marketing can grow an artist’s prominence, yet in a retreating market the high elasticity of art prices reacts quickly and negatively to the disproportionate supply. Nevertheless, Hirst is a phenomenon not only in the works he produces but certainly in the way in which he operates within the art market, constantly pushing at the edges of the system. He should in all likelihood continue to be unpredictable, dynamic and innovative in the upcoming years and should as such not be written off."
Visit ArtObserved




DAMIEN HIRST - Beautiful Artemis Thor Neptune Odin Delusional Sapphic Inspirational Hypnosis Painting, 2007 - LOT 17 at Phillips de Pury Nov. 13th auction - UNSOLD - ESTIMATE $3,000,000-4,000,00

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Beefeater's web design



I've been researching sponsors for a party during Art Basel Miami 2009. Beefeater's website has impressed me most. They seem to sponsor mostly athletic events, not really appropriate for the event we're hosting. But if someone knows otherwise let me know.

Friday, December 26, 2008

Ryan Heshka


"Radio Help"
Ryan Heshka
Acrylic on Wood Panel
8"x8"

Available through Copro Nasen

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Andrea Heimer


"The Socialite"
acrylic
2008





"Saint Sunniva"
acrylic/silk screen/pencil/ink/marker on canvas
2008





"The Ghost"
acrylic
2008


Find her on elsewhere.... Flickr, website

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Success & Gary Baseman






Interviewer:
You've obviously worked very hard to get to where you are but you also consider luck to be a very important part of your success. How much of success simply comes down to dumb luck?

Gary:
Do you want a mathematical formula of how much dumb luck plays in success?

S = HW x P x DL/BD x ND

Where S = Success, HW = Hard Work, P = Persistence, DL = Dumb Luck, BS = Bull Shit, ND = Natural Disasters.

What I try to tell students, is that you can't expect anyone to do it for you. And if you don't try, it will never happen. Also be careful what you wish for, because you may just get it. And then you will have to find something else to bitch about.


From Crown Dozen.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Alexis Hubshmin





Alexis Hubshmin, president and founder of SCOPE art fair interviewed on Vernissage. Watch here.

Isabel Samaras


"Besame Mucho"
2002
Oil on Wood
8" x 10"





"Secrets of the Batcave, Part 2"
2002
Oil on wood
12" x 20"





"Kiss"
2004
Oil on Wood
16"x20"

Isabel lives in the East Bay people!
These images don't do the paintings justice but she's having a solo exhibit in May at The Shooting Gallery, where you can see new works in person.

Friday, December 19, 2008

If you know how much I like video art....





Then you know how I wish to experience this exhibit.


Video Installation by Pipilotti Rist

"The Museum of Modern Art in New York commissioned Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist to create a site-specific installation in the museum’s second-floor Marron Atrium. Rist filled the 7345 cubic meter atrium with seven twenty-five-foot-high video projections with a large circular eye-shaped sofa in the center of the floor available for reposing visitors. Rist is well-known for her video works that deal with issues of the body, gender, and sexuality. Many of the images of ‘Pour Your Body Out (7354)’ present a lush amalgamation of femininity: gigantic pink tulips, glistening apples, a pool of menstrual blood seeping from a woman’s crotch." via Art Observed


More images from Hauser & Wirth here.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Tim Biskup



"Right Hand"
Cel Vinyl Acrylic on Panel
12x 12
2007

Monday, December 15, 2008

Favorites from Modernism Gallery in SF


"THE DISASTERS OF WAR 7"
Gottfried HELNWEIN
2007
MIXED MEDIA ON CANVAS
78 1/2 X 110 1/2






"THE DISASTERS OF WAR 2"
Gottfried HELNWEIN
2007
MIXED MEDIA ON CANVAS
76 1/4 X 124 3/4"






"KRYLYA XOLOPA WINGS OF A SERF"
Mikhail O. DLUGACH
1927
LITHOGRAPHIC POSTER
42 1/2 X 38 1/2"






"TSENA ZHIZNI THE PRICE OF LIFE"
Mikhail O. DLUGACH
1940
LITHOGRAPHIC POSTER
36 X 23 7/8






"HEARTS & MINDS"
Jerry KEARNS
1986
ACRYLIC ON CANVAS
72 X 118






"SPLASH DOWN"
Jerry KEARNS
2006
ACRYLIC ON CANVAS
60 X 84

Friday, December 12, 2008

Kehinde Wiley



"On Top of The World"
Oil on Canvas
6'x5'
2008





"Dogon Couple"
Oil on Canvas
8'x7'
2008





"The Three Graces"
Oil and Enamel on Canvas
8'x10'
2005






"Portrait of A Venetian Ambassador, Aged 59 II"
Oil on Canvas
2006
6'x8'






"The Apostle Peter"
Oil and Enamel on Canvas
8'x10'
2006


Of my recently discovered favorites, Kehinde Wiley, creates decorative portraits true to human's nature. He makes old sentiments palpable to today's society, by often replicating scenes form classical paintings and inserting contemporary characters to play the roles of saints and biblical personas. Keep up with this one.

Monday, December 08, 2008

Molly Crabapple




Molly Crabapple is the woman behind Travis Louie's most recent painting, "Molly Bad Hair", for The Shooting Gallery's exhibit at Aqua Wynwood. I got to meet her this week in Miami and hear about what she's working on over at Dr. Sketchy's. She's writing a three part break down of Basel on jewcy.com.

Quite the intriguing woman whose blog and Dr. Sketchy's work is worth following.

Friday, December 05, 2008

Miami Day 4



The Foox duo of the blog Kung Foox Collective. They've got some quality coverage on Miami events/people/art as well.

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Miami Day 3




In the eye of a monster.



A cute monster!

Jeremy Fish at Fifty






Artist: Jeremy Fish
Gallery: Fifty24SF
Opening Reception: Thursday, December 4, 2008 7pm - 9:30 pm
Exhibition Dates: December 4 -December 30, 2008
Address: 252 Fillmore Street






"Jeremy Fish's show, "Ghosts of the Barbary Coast," celebrates the individuals that chased their dreams all the way to San Francisco during the California Gold Rush. In exploring the city he admires and has called home for the last 15 years, Jeremy Fish unwittingly writes a love letter to San Francisco through his works of art. "Ghosts of the Barbary Coast," will be on display at the upper level of the FIFTY24SF Gallery from December 4-30, 2008."





Monday, December 01, 2008

Antistrot: Netherlands Artists





Paul Borchers, David Elshout, Silas Scheltterer, John Kleinjan






These guys do a variety of artistic projects together including performance, robotics, digitizing, paintings, drawings, video documentary. Currently, David is finishing a book which talks about the concepts behind their work.





Sara Tecchia gallery from New York brought several of these guys' paintings to Aqua Wynwood this week. The paintings are more detailed versions of the murals.

I love the characters they create (and you never use the same ones twice.) While I was talking with Sara about their work, she pointed out that each painting can be hung from any side, essentially creating four different paintings in one. Pretty rad.

"Nola"



Recent Bansky print.
POW