Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Larry Gagosian opened his first gallery in Los Angeles in 1980, [1] showing the work of young contemporary artists such as Eric Fischl and Jean-Michel Basquiat. The business expanded from Los Angeles to New York: In 1989, a new, spacious gallery opened on the Upper East Side of Manhattan at 980 Madison Avenue, with the inaugural exhibition "The Maps of Jasper Johns".
The collection of the Neue Galerie is divided into two sections. The second floor of the museum houses works of fine art and decorative art from early twentieth-century Austria, including paintings by Gustav Klimt, Oskar Kokoschka, and Egon Schiele and decorative objects by the artisans of the Wiener Werkstaette and their contemporaries.
The gallery was an early member of the Art Dealers Association of America [16] and participated regularly in major art fairs, including the Winter Antiques Show, [17] the ADAA Art Show, [18] and the IFPDA Print Fair [19] (all in New York) and Art Basel [20] (in Basel, Switzerland).
The gallery was known for showcasing unique emerging and established artists in its modest storefront space. [2] When the space was sold by the owners in August 2015, Rines moved the gallery to 56 Henry in New York's Two Bridges neighborhood of Lower Manhattan , bordering Chinatown, and changed its name accordingly. [ 3 ]
New York's the Hole gallery opened a second location in L.A. a year ago with the intent of bringing a fresh perspective to the West Coast. Now owner Kathy Grayson is enlisting galleries from ...
A longtime New York-based art dealer stumbled upon a painting at a Hamptons barn sale for which he paid just $50 — and now the rare piece is expected to be auctioned off for six figures ...
Gagosian Gallery in New York City Lawrence Gilbert "Larry" Gagosian (born April 19, 1945) is an Armenian American art dealer who owns the Gagosian Gallery chain of art galleries. Working in concert with collectors including Douglas S. Cramer , Eli Broad , and Keith Barish, he developed a reputation for staging museum-quality exhibitions of ...
Four years later, The New York Times wrote that Jin brought "the era of (forced) Communist propaganda art to a virtual end," and called her "one of [the Galleries'] most successful artists." [ 53 ] December 13, 1988: "New York: Empire City in an Age of Urbanism, 1875-1945," an exhibition to benefit the Soviet-American Cultural Exchange Program.