Art World
We Hit Publish on Thousands of Stories in 2023. Here Are Some of Our Favorites
Revisit our sprawling coverage of artists, art fairs, exhibitions, museum openings, and art-tech outings.
Revisit our sprawling coverage of artists, art fairs, exhibitions, museum openings, and art-tech outings.
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It was yet another busy year at Artnet News, one in which we published thousands of stories covering every inch of the art world. We were there for major art fairs, multimillion-dollar auctions, landmark exhibitions, museum openings, and every other hot topic. In between that, we conversed with artists both emerging and established, tracked the rise and rise of A.I., followed art and pop culture crossovers, and uncovered the latest in art-world scandals.
What a ride! Before we get ready to do it all over again, here’s a mammoth list of our favorite stories in 2023.
“Lewis was out-of-step with the straight art world for being too gay, but his longing gaze was anachronistic in the queer art of the time… The tide has now shifted where the quieter voices from the era are now being recognized.”
“The full scale of Emily’s practice only became clear in 1998, when a family member discovered a forgotten trunk containing a stash of 440 of her watercolors.”
“‘None of us signed up to work for the Sarah Hoover studio, but none of us felt that we could say no, because she was the boss’s wife,’ studio alum Dawn told Artnet News.”
“As an instrument used to justify consumer preference within a landscape of complex values, a Quantitative Aesthetic often just becomes a way to deal with the problem of not wanting to spend much time thinking—the opposite of deep thought.”
“These room-sized machines are the products of nearly a decade’s worth of research and development that leans on the expertise of artists and scientists from MIT. Their purpose is to help artists physically realize digital artworks with maximal control and creativity.”
“One could say Würthle’s craft was to create a myth out of the bar, the art, and the people in it. Put another way by Bruno Brunnet, an art dealer and close friend of the restaurant owner and one of the bar’s unofficial cultural attachés, it is a social sculpture.”
“Tulips’ widespread popularity has also led them to become perennial muses for artists, a reliably understood symbol of spring and a cornerstone of vibrant, nature-inspired landscapes.”
“At stake here, against the backdrop of the heartland and its history of industrial capitalism and land dispossession, is a broader consideration not just of how we can use art to incur change, but whether or not art can incur change at all.”
“Over the past decade, Ju went from being a widely exhibited Asian artist in the west to a name adored exclusively by Asian audiences or lovers of Asian culture.”
“But, of course, in this moment of A.I., with society bracing itself to be bamboozled, belittled, and rendered jobless by the very thing, Ai-Da is more, much more: she’s a physical embodiment of the future that happened yesterday.”
“I can’t give away all of my secrets, but here are a few words to the wise I’ll share with you today.”
“Tate’s overhaul has promised to do that, not only by shaking up exactly what is on display (which tops over 800 works), but by adding renewed context and connections between artists, their work, and the wider socio-political context of the day.”
“The emphasis on due diligence is all the more striking given that Sheffer himself appears to be one of the aggrieved parties, although not a plaintiff, in the suit brought against Schiff.”
“For committed patrons of the arts, London’s nascent gallery weekend poses something of an impossible task… Between exhibitions, opening parties, and dinners, there is perhaps too much competing for your attention.”
“Hypersentimentalism’s laser-focus on niche knowledge and micro-communities offers a way to keep faith with the strengths of figuration, while still positioning oneself against some of these frustrations. It follows an ‘IYKYK’ logic, playing up a layer of insider opacity.”
“The consequences of the horrific crash, which was the most deadly to date, are what many in Atlanta blame for the arts community’s failure to launch.”
“The more I think about it, the more certain I am that Vicky Cristina Barcelona—a late-period, but pre-Vanity Fair exposé trifle from Allen—is channeling Gilot’s tell-all. Which is unsettling, for reasons I’ll explain.”
“The comparatively nascent field of new media art conservation needs to take urgent action if it hopes to save valuable contemporary artworks from the accelerating pace of technological transformation.”
“A new era has arrived. Welcome to the buyer’s market. At the spring sales, ‘I made out like a bandit,’ said art advisor Ben Godsill.”
“In locating and rekindling this passion for London, Anderson makes a point of reveling in the city’s more unseemly elements. He insists that these have informed his creative vision just as much as the more rarified influence of fine art.”
“Will admissions officers know whether the artworks in an applicant’s portfolio were created with a few keystrokes, for instance? How should professors appraise works created entirely with A.I.?”
“In New Mexico, Hunter said, O’Keeffe could be left alone—a feeling she sought out after her time in Bermuda.”
“The 33-year-old illusionist is determined to bring magic back to an elevated sphere.”
“She wore jeans and bare nails, her slicked back hair streaked with grey, and toured me around the colorful works on the walls before delving into her singular journey.”
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