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| Thursday 13 September 2012 | View in browser | News | Museums | Market | Conservation | Exhibitions | Jobs | Comment | In print | | | In this week’s edition | market Temporary space in Rio de Janeiro means the gallery’s total space is greater than London's Tate Modern Ten-year partnership with state-owned Beijing GeHua Art Company will allow auction house to use planned Beijing freeport More in market in the current issue: - Victims of forgery are "left in limbo"
- Art handler released from Beijing prison
news Weapons are still being produced in the city that hosts one of the largest art exhibitions in the world More news in the current issue: - Romney and Ryan propose to slash arts budgets in half, but will the private sector make up the shortfall?
- Why the top of the art market is unconcerned by the tottering euro
museums German organisation dedicated to late sculptor Jean Arp is moving to Berlin. New curator wanted More in museums in the current issue: - LA Museum of Contemporary Art's summer of discontent
- A very Orthodox exhibition in Jerusalem pulls in the crowds
- Australian gambler's museum under threat due to big tax bill
blog It’s been seven months since 128 intrepid travellers (including our editor-at-large Cristina Ruiz) completed the Damien Hirst challenge by visiting the artist’s spot paintings exhibition in all 11 branches of the Gagosian Gallery around the world—but now, finally, their prize is (nearly) ready Exhibitions Museums aren’t all about painting, as the Royal Academy’s “Bronze” exhibition (15 September-9 December) aims to prove. “We’re trying to bring objects together in a surprising way, so maybe [visitors] won’t rush past the sculpture wings in museums anymore,” says David Ekserdjian the co-curator of the exhibition along with Cecilia Treves, the curator of exhibitions at the Royal Academy, London. To keep the installation interesting, works from very differing centuries and movements have been placed next to each other, showing how the material has been used in artistic production through the ages. The show includes over 150 bronzes from Asia, Europe and Africa and covers a period of five millennia. “The idea sprang to me by considering the relationships and correspondences that are especially evident with bronze—it has both range and kinship across different cultures,” says Ekserdjian… Read more jobs These two posts will support a new development in art, law and business in collaboration with the University of Glasgow. The posts will be based in London at Christie’s Education and work with the new professor/reader in art business to be appointed simultaneously by the University of Glasgow and the academic director at Christie’s Education. The new positions will deliver the teaching for a proposed new MSc in Art, Law and Business planned to commence in September 2013. Read more All jobs | | | | You received this email from The Art Newspaper because you are on the Thursday newsletter list. Unsubscribe to permanently remove yourself from this list. © The Art Newspaper, 70 South Lambeth Road, London SW8 1RL. Tel: +44 (0)20 3416 9000 www.theartnewspaper.com | |
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