The Partial Week That Was, Plus Vacation Time

Art Market Views is going offline until Sept 9 to recharge our batteries. Photo: Knut Karlsen via Flickr
Please note that Art Market Views is going on vacation (finally) and will resume posting on Sept. 9 (hopefully). Thanks for your loyal readership, tips and good cheer. Ciao for now!
I leave you with a quickie round-up of stories posted in the past two days:
Touring the Neuberger Booty at Sotheby’s on a Summer Afternoon LINK HERE
Ovation Ramps up Arts Programming LINK HERE
A Visit to the Berkshires Frelinghuysen Morris House LINK HERE
Frederic Church Mingles with Diego Rivera at ‘Nueva York’ LINK HERE
Larry Gagosian Loans Art Collection to Abu Dhabi LINK HERE
$150 Andy Warhol Inspired Dom Perignon LINK HERE
Bon Voyage Christie’s Alexandre Carel LINK HERE
Touring the Neuberger Booty at Sotheby’s on a Summer Afternoon

Damien Hirst's 1993 "We've Got Style (The Vessel Collection - Blue/Green)" est. $800,000 - $1.2 M on view at Sotheby's. © Photo: Lindsay Pollock
By Mackie Healy, Art Market Views Contributor
A ramble around Sotheby’s sixth floor exhibition space on a sleepy August afternoon showed no signs of the cataclysmic economic upheaval which forced works by John Currin, Julie Mehretu and Yoshitomo Nara — all formerly part of the Neuberger Berman collection — onto the auction block.
The once prosperous investment bank Lehman Brothers acquired money management company Neuberger Berman in 2003. Bonus: a stellar art collection worth more than $10 million. The collection has been on view at Sotheby’s York Avenue headquarters over the summer.
The Sept. 25 auction includes 147 contemporary artworks, with sale proceeds going to Lehman creditors.
Highlights include John Baldessari’s Stares (with Lamps), a black and white collage of austere headshots and white silhouettes framed by floor lamps illuminated in blue and yellow. Tagged $350,000 – $450,000, the piece was acquired at Sotheby’s in 1991 for $29,700 (nice return!) With the opening of the Baldessari retrospective this month in Los Angeles and in October at the Met, the piece is money in the bank.
A middle-aged woman with a sassy stance and deadpan expression stars in…
Ovation Ramps Up Arts Programming, Shows Feature Art Collecting Oligarchs and Art Heists

Photo: Jonny Baker via Flickr
By Mackie Healy, Art Market Views Contributor
Ovation, the artsy TV network, premieres the first of a two week series of shows dissecting the cash and crimes of the art world.
The not so subtly titled series MONEY MONEY MONEY examines the relationship between money and fine art.
The Mona Lisa Curse, an expose by Time magazine art critic Robert Hughes, reveals Hughes’ theory that the world’s most famous painting came to influence the over-commercialization of art.
In Oligart British writer and broadcaster Marcel Theroux considers the growing presence of wealthy Russians in the London art market. Profiling the fraternizing circles of these collectors, the documentary offers an inside look at their impact on the contemporary art market.
On a less serious side, the series Art Race follows two artists as they use only their artwork to fund a 40 day race across the country. Painter Kenny Harris hitchhikes and sells classical pet portraiture to get the funds to try to beat out sculptor Ben Sargent, as he bargains with potential nude models for a buck. The competition airs each night this week at 8 PM.
Next week, Ovation profiles…
On the Road: Visiting the Frelinghuysen Morris House and Studio

George L. K. Morris' studio, with works by Juan Gris and Fernand Leger on view. © Image: Lindsay Pollock
One of the summer’s high points was a visit to the Frelinghuysen Morris House and Studio in Lenox, Massachusetts, a Bauhaus-inspired 1930s-40s time capsule preserving the bohemian upper-crust summer retreat of abstract painters, and wife and husband, Suzy Frelinghuysen and George L.K. Morris.
Kinney Freylinghuysen, the foundation’s director and Suzy’s nephew, guided us through the house, filled with a dazzling array of artworks, personal artifacts and period furnishings by designers including Donald Deskey and Paul Frankl.
Later in the summer, I saw Kinney Freylinghuysen at Larry Salander’s sentencing. The dealer had robbed the estate of several million dollars.
To read more about Morris and Freylinghuysen, go here. Photos from my visit follow below.
Frederic Edwin Church Mingles with Diego Rivera in ‘Nueva York’

Joaquín Torres-García (Uruguay, 1874-1949), "New York Docks," 1920. Oil and gouache on cardboard. Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of Collection Société Anonyme.
By Mackie Healy, Art Market Views Contributor
The New-York Historical Society and El Museo del Barrio unite to present a joint history lesson this fall.
Nueva York (1613-1945) examines New York’s long term romance with Spain and Latin America, and how those countries have helped shape Manhattan’s cultural character.
Combining the resources of New York’s oldest museum and its leading Latino cultural institution, the show highlights three centuries of history.
Using interactive displays, listening stations, video and over two hundred rare and historic maps, letters, and drawings, the exhibition spans from the founding of New Amsterdam in the 1600s as a bastion against the Spanish empire, to the present day.
Works by New York artists and writers influenced by travels to Spain and South America such as Washington Irving, Frederic Church and William Merritt Chase will be on display. Reflections of New York in paintings by modern Latin American artists including Diego Rivera, Jose Clemente Orozco and Joaquin Torres-Garcia, are also featured.
Documentary filmmaker Ric Burns, best known for his eight-part PBS series New York: A Documentary Film, has created a film for the…
Larry Gagosian Loans Art Collection to Abu Dhabi

Art dealer Larry Gagosian in background left, purple tie, speaking on panel at Abu Dhabi Art in 2009. © Photo: Lindsay Pollock
Art dealer Larry Gagosian is doing all he can to bond with the Abu Dhabi power brokers. Last year he participated in a panel during the oil-rich country’s new Abu Dhabi Art Fair. (I attended the panel and blogged about it here.)
This year Gagosian is shipping his art collection to Abu Dhabi for a first-time public viewing. The show, RSTW (an acronym for its all male roster — Rauschenberg, Ruscha, Serra, Twombly, Warhol and Wool) runs Sept. 22 to Jan. 24 and will be curated by Anne Baldassari, president of the Fondation Picasso. The show is being presented under the auspices of the country’s top honcho: HH Sheikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi.
The venue is a temporary exhibition space called the Manarat Al Saadiyat which last year displayed a group of Middle Eastern artwork. The building is located on Saadiyat Island, where new Louvre and Guggenheim museums are under construction, along with thousands of luxury condos.
Works in the show include Rauschenberg’s 1963 Overdrive, Serra’s 1984 Malmo Roll, Warhol’s 1960 Brillo Soap Pads and 1972 Mao.
$150 Andy Warhol-esque Dom Perignon Hits the Shops in October

via Freshness
By Mackie Healy, Art Market Views Contributor
Forget about the measly soup can. Andy Warhol’s Pop aesthetic is being used to hawk bottles of Dom Perignon in a promotional gambit done with the Warhol Foundation.
The champagne wizards commissioned the folks at Central Saint Martin’s School of Art & Design’s Design Lab to reinterpret its bottle with a Warholian twist.
Dom Perignon claims Andy was a big fan of their pricey bubbles and favored it as his beverage of choice at Studio 54.
The Warholesque bottles are vintage 2002 champagne, and will come in three hues – red, blue and yellow.
Each bottle is $150 and will be available for sale beginning October 15th at wine retailers nationwide.
Click here to watch a promo video.
Christie’s Contemporary Specialist Alexandre Carel Returns to Paris

Photo: via 123 People
After two years in New York, Christie’s Alexandre Carel will return to Paris as a postwar and contemporary specialist.
The French-born Carel joined the department in Paris in 2006, and was promoted to the New York office in 2008. He was instrumental in organizing the First Open sales, and helped obtain consignments including Tamara de Lempicka’s Portrait de Madame M which achieved a world record price at $6,130,500, and Jean-Michel Basquiat’s Mater which sold for $5,850,500.
Carel holds a B.A. in Finance and Strategy from the Institut d’Etude Politique in Paris. Carel will work with Laetitia Baudouin, head of sales, and Christophe Durand-Ruel, senior specialist (and heir to the famed French art dealing family) and other members of the team.
What You Need to Know from the Week That Was

Jack Tworkov (American, born Poland, 1900–1982) "West 23rd." 1963 Oil on canvas, 60" x 6' 8" (152.6 x 203.3 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Purchase © Estate of Jack Tworkov, courtesy Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York
Here’s a recap of Art Market Views top stories from last week:
Art in America Magazine Wants to Take You to Brazil LINK HERE
Kraushaar Galleries Turns 125, is New York’s Forth Oldest Art Merchant LINK HERE
Sotheby’s Offers Course for Aspiring Art Moguls LINK HERE
More Details Emerge about Futuristic On-line VIP Art Fair LINK HERE
Sotheby’s Launches New Russian Sale in New York LINK HERE
MoMA Curator Temkin Mingles Rothko and Pollock with Lesser Known Names LINK HERE
Al Miner Bolster’s MFA Boston’s Contemporary Team LINK HERE
‘Art in America’ Magazine Wants to Take You to Brazil

Oscar Niemeyer's 2006 Museum of Contemporary Art in Niteroi. Photo: Ruy Barbosa Pinto via Flickr
By Mackie Healy, Art Market Views Contributor
Our bikini, sun block and Portuguese-English dictionary are packed.
Art in America magazine has joined forces with art travel company Pinacoteca to create a deluxe tour of Brazil’s booming contemporary art scene. Coinciding with the 29th Sao Paulo Biennial, the trip takes place from Sept. 19-26. Brazil 2010 includes access to the fair, guided museum tours, trips to private collections and artists’ studios.
First stop is the Sao Paulo Art Biennial. Featuring more than 30,000 square meters of exhibition space, the Biennial hosts national presentations as well international exhibitions held under the direction of selected curators.
Heading to the coast, a behind-the-scenes tour of Niterói Contemporary Art Museum is the highlight of the trip to Rio De Janeiro, along with visits to the Brazilian tourist spots like Sugarloaf Mountain and Ipanema Beach.
Destinations along the way include major contemporary galleries – A Gentil Carioca, Andre Millan, Manoel Macedo and others. Studio visits include Sandra Cinto, Jeanete Musatti and Laura Vinci.
The trip concludes with a one-day visit to much touted Instituto…





