Robert Rauschenberg Dead at 82

The NY Times has just reported that the American artist Robert Rauschenberg has died at the age of 82. Rauschenberg passed away on Monday night in his home. Recently the artist was hospitalized with pneumonia.
Here's a paragraph from the
NY Times article..
"Building on the legacies of Marcel Duchamp, Kurt Schwitters, Joseph Cornell and others, he thereby helped to obscure the lines between painting and sculpture, painting and photography, photography and printmaking, sculpture and photography, sculpture and dance, sculpture and technology, technology and performance art — not to mention between art and life."The story that I mentioned on Art News Blog a couple of weeks ago about
Robert Rauschenberg suing an artist seems so trivial after hearing this terrible news.
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Artist Deaths
Tobias Meyer - Sotheby's Contemporary Art Auction
Here's an interesting
link to a video of Tobias Meyer of Sotheby's talking about some important works from their upcoming contemporary art auction on Wednesday. He talks about a large triptych by
Francis Bacon which is expected to sell for a figure with lots of zeros on the end of it. You can also browse the catalogue online (I think you still have to register to view them, but it's free).

I like the left and right panel of the painting, but the center panel is an out of control mess..
Here's my picks from the auction (if only my bank account had more zeros on the end of the total).

George Baselitz - B.J.M.C. - BONJOUR MONSIEUR COURBET
One of my favorite German painters. I like his upside down paintings more, but this is a beauty too.

Richard Prince - MILLIONAIRE NURSE
To be honest, I'm not a big Richard Prince fan, but I really do like his
Nurse Paintings.
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Art Auctions
Spencer Tunick in Vienna, Austria

New York photographer and
flesh architect Spencer Tunick is rallying the troops again. Tunick is planning a shoot in Vienna, Austria, at the Ernst-Happel-Stadium. He is hoping to get more than 3000 participants to the Vienna football stadium on Sunday, May 11.
Here's some more details from the Spencer Tunick
website here..
The first 2,008 registered participants will receive a free return train ticket (coach) within Austria from the ÖBB. Arrival is possible as of May 10, 2008, departure until Sunday, May 11, 11.59 pm. The affirmation for your return journey will be certified at the Ernst-Happel-Stadium in the scope of the installation. In return for your voluntary participation all participants will receive a limited edition photograph of the installation in the Ernst-Happel-Stadium. Only participants will have access to the stadium. You will only be nude for a short period of time. The installation will happen Rain or Shine (the stadium's seats are covered). Participants under 18 years of age may only take part in the installation with written consent of a parent or guardian.>>
Spencer Tunick News
Jeff Koons Interview

ArtInfo has interviewed the king of kitsch and holder of the "
Most expensive artist at auction" title, Jeff Koons.
Here's a couple Jeff Koons quotes taken from the interview over at the ArtInfo
website here.
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"When you view work, it’s not just an intellectual experience. It’s also a physical, biological experience. People like work that makes them feel a certain way. I want my work to have a certain charge, and I think that people who view the work like it, that intensity." Jeff Koons
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"For me, art has been about living to my full potential and about having viewers increase theirs. My work has always tried to communicate acceptance. It’s not about a rarefied object, because art is about people, life, experience. It’s about giving attention to the viewer so that hopefully they maintain enough confidence to experience communication." Jeff Koons
The artist also has a
decent website online, which is surprisingly unusual for a famous artist. I haven't been able to figure out why so many well known artists don't have their own website. Most of them don't even own their own dot com name. I thought the internet was important, but I guess they don't see it that way.
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Jeff Koons News
Bank of America - Museums on Us
Bank of America has changed how its "Museums on Us" program operates this year. Last year the
bank paid for museum entries around America for the whole month of May. This year they have added more museums to the list, but it is now year round, with the first weekend of every month being free to holders of a Bank of America check, ATM or credit card.
Here's a list of the participating museums around the United States..
ARIZONA MUSEUM
Arizona Science Center
CALIFORNIA MUSEUMS
California Center for the Arts Escondido
The California Museum
Crocker Art Museum
de Young Museum
Discovery Science Center
Explorit Science Center
Laguna Beach Museum of Art
Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)
Mingei International Museum
Museum of African Diaspora
Museum of Latin American Art
Palm Springs Art Museum
Riverside Art Museum
San Jose Museum of Art
Birch Aquarium at Scripps
Tech Museum of Innovation
Yerba Buena Center for the Arts
CONNECTICUT MUSEUMS
Mashantucket Pequot Museum
Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art
DELAWARE MUSEUMS
Delaware Art Museum
Delaware Museum of Natural History
Winterthur Museum & Country Estate
FLORIDA
Miami Art Museum
Miami Children's Museum
Miami Science Museum
The Morikami Museum
Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), North Miami
Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale
Museum of Discovery & Science
South Florida Science Museum
GEORGIA
Atlanta Botanical Garden
Atlanta History Center
Fernbank Museum of Natural History
ILLINOIS
The Art Institute of Chicago
Chicago History Museum
Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
MAINE
The Farnsworth Art Museum
MASSACHUSETTS
Danforth Museum of Art
DeCordova Museum & Sculpture Park
Harvard Museum of Natural History
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
MARYLAND
The American Visionary Art Museum
The Flag House and Star Spangled Banner Museum
Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History & Culture
MICHIGAN
Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History
The Detroit Zoo
Henry Ford Museum
NEW JERSEY
Liberty Science Center
Montclair Art Museum
The Newark Museum
NEW YORK
Bronx Zoo and New York Aquarium
International Center of Photography
The Jewish Museum
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
New York Hall of Science
NORTH CAROLINA
Levine Museum of the New South
Mint Museum of Art
Mint Museum of Craft and Design
PENNSYLVANIA
National Constitution Center
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA)
Philadelphia Museum of Art
RHODE ISLAND
Museum of Work and Culture
Providence Children's Museum
The RISD Museum
TEXAS
Dallas Museum of Art
Fort Worth Museum of Science & History
Houston Museum of Natural Science
Museum of Nature & Science, Dallas
San Jacinto Museum of History
WASHINGTON
Museum of History & Industry
Tacoma Art Museum
The Wing Luke Museum
There's more information on Bank of America's Museums on Us program at their
website here.
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Art Museums
Most Expensive Living Artists at Auction
Over at the Art Newspaper there's an interesting story about the most expensive living artists at auction, with the baton being passed from Jasper Johns, to Damien Hirst, and now Jeff Koons.
"When the art market of the late eighties transmogrified into a deeply depressed bear, the living artist accolade went into hibernation, sleeping soundly until February 2007, when Peter Doig’s 1991 painting, White Canoe, sold for £5.7m ($11.3m) at Sotheby’s in London." Art Newspaper
Jasper Johns - False StartJasper Johns was the most expensive living artist at auction in 1988, when his White Flag painting sold for $7 million at Christies, then his False Start painting (above) sold at Sotheby's the next night for $17 million. He held the title for quite some time..
Damien Hirst - Lullaby SpringDamien Hirst took the title in 2007 when his Lullaby Spring sold for about $19.2 million. The Hirst pill cabinet was bought by the royal family of Qatar, the Al-Thani family.
Jeff Koons - Hanging Heart (Magenta/Gold)Jeff Koons is currently the most expensive living artist at auction, with his Hanging Heart work selling for $23.6 million in Novemebr 2007.
And, here's some great quotes about the price of art by the art critic Robert Hughes..
"The auction room, as anyone knows, is an excellent medium for sustaining fictional price levels, because the public imagines that auction prices are necessarily real prices." Robert Hughes
"Art prices are determined by the meeting of real or induced scarcity with pure, irrational desire, and nothing is more manipulable than desire." Robert Hughes
"Most of the time they buy what other people buy. They move in great schools, like bluefish, all identical. There is safety in numbers. If one wants Schnabel, they all want Schnabel, if one buys a Keith Haring, two hundred Keith Harings will be sold." Robert Hughes
"A fair price is the highest one a collector can be induced to pay." Robert Hughes
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Art Auctions,
Damien Hirst,
Jeff Koons,
Famous Artists