lead NEW YORK. A group within the Occupy Wall Street movement is in discussions to find a multi-purpose, indoor arts space, which is to be used for “studio space, rehearsals, concerts, storage, performances, exhibitions, teach-ins, film screenings, art classes for children, sleeping, etc”, according to its website. The Arts and Culture committee of the New York City General Assembly, the protest group behind the movement, is planning to use shared office space on Wall Street with other Occupy groups, and is considering another offer from the arts blog Hyperallergic to borrow space in its Brooklyn offices, among other options... READ MORE   As Italy’s new technocratic government struggled to its feet, 100 financiers, entrepreneurs, collectors, curators, dealers and academics gathered in Florence for a private conference on the future of art and finance Degas on show at Royal Academy of Arts has government indemnity withdrawn An advertisement in a London newspaper listed the drawing as “for sale” while the exhibition is running Slovenia gets a second taste of national art Museum of Contemporary Art Metelkova opens this month Four artists who have used one of the unfinished office buildings as studio space will have to move out at the beginning on next year Sweden's first arts network looks to 2016 Galleries, museums and artists' groups join forces to plan for next five years There is a fascinating resonance between the wild, ambitious idealism that once inspired Tatlin’s tower, and the "remarkable, miraculous, limitless possibility of thinking" that has inspired the development Saadiyat Island Thirty-two local galleries are taking part in the fair, although some heavyweight names are noticeably absent All Articles video With his sights firmly set on Los Angeles, Marc-Olivier Wahler, director of the Palais de Tokyo, Paris, discusses the international art scene and touches on his forthcoming events "Lost in L.A." and "Hollywood Chalet". Anna Somers Cocks talks to veteran American painter Ellsworth Kelly about the main influences of his career. more videos  what's on A daring attempt to reimagine Edgar Degas informs the Royal Academy of Arts’ “Degas and the Ballet: Picturing Movement”, the UK’s first large-scale exhibition featuring his famous dancers. “It’s never been done before,” said Ann Dumas, the curator who has organised the survey of more than 80 works, which focuses on Degas’s depiction of movement. Despite his experimentalism, Degas has “suffered in the public imagination”, said Dumas... READ MORE all exhibitions |
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