ART iT from Japan

ART iT launched in 2003 as a bilingual Japanese-English quarterly print publication, the first of its kind in Japan. From its inception, the magazine's mission was to link contemporary art events happening in Japan to those taking place elsewhere in the region and around the world.

In 2009, ART iT began the next phase of its development by converting to an exclusively online publication and social networking site combining both editorial and user-generated content created by leading Japanese and international artists and art professionals as well as casual art enthusiasts.

ART iT intends to rethink the nature of online media. Rather than focusing on constantly updated information, the publication features in-depth, articulated ideas about contemporary art and culture.

http://www.art-it.asia/

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spatula:

Rachel Whiteread, House 1993

(via Gallery of Lost Art | Tate)

contemporary-art-blog:

Fiona Banner, Intermission, 2012
Contemporary-Art-Blog

artlately:

Franz West, Three Adaptives (1997)

sfmoma:

Phaidon looks at Naoya Hatakeyama: Natural Stories.

Excerpt:

“You look at these landscapes where humans have interacted with the landscape, and you see the pictures after the tsunami, and just how much nature really does still have power over us.”

See the full article here.

Pictured: Naoya Hatakeyama - Lambda Archival Photographic Print - courtesy Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography and Taka Ishii Gallery

Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama in her studio, 1958

(via kureator)

artnet:

Warhol in Germany

For those of you planing a visit to documenta (13): 

Stop by Kassel’s Galerie Krätz and check out their new show featuring photographs of Andy Warhol in Germany. 

Leo Weisse: Andy Warhol in Deutschland (1971) - Fotografien runs through September 15, 2012. 

(via sfmoma)

sublimespy:

Hiroshi Sugimoto

sublimespy:

Hiroshi Sugimoto

sfmoma:

johnfekner:

Cindy Sherman Untitled Film Still #13 [1978] Photograph Gelatin Silver Print 

The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art July 14 - October 8, 2012

One of the most influential artists of our time, Cindy Sherman creates provocative artworks that explore wide-ranging issues of identity and representation. Working as her own model, she deftly transforms her appearance using wigs, costumes, makeup, prosthetics, and props to create intriguing tableaux and characters inspired by movies, TV, magazines, and art history. The first major exhibition of Sherman’s work ever presented in San Francisco, this retrospective brings together more than 150 photographs made from the mid-1970s to the present.

Learn more about Cindy Sherman, the most anticipated show of the summer, here!

sfmoma:

valencia23rd:

Legibility

Nice photograph of a large Cy Twombly work, now on view in our 5th-floor Contemporary Painting exhibition.

sublimespy:

IT’S DIFFERENT WHEN YOU ARE IN LOVE // TE - 2012

TRACEY EMIN

kiameku:

Roman Ondak
Poster
2003

(via defacedbook)

renaissancesociety:

Ryan Gander, as part of 2009 group exhibition Several Silences at The Renaissance Society.  Gander currently is included in Documenta 13 in Kassel, Germany.

sublimespy:

Christopher Wool

renaissancesociety:

Danh Vo, Kunsthaus Bregenz.  Vo will have a solo exhibition at The Renaissance Society running from September 23 - December 16, 2012.

renaissancesociety:

Danh Vo, Kunsthaus Bregenz.  Vo will have a solo exhibition at The Renaissance Society running from September 23 - December 16, 2012.

welovecindysherman:

Cindy Sherman & fellow artist Richard Prince collaborated on this untitled piece in 1980.

(via sfmoma)

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