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    The Prado Will Show a Newly Discovered Caravaggio That Nearly Went to Auction for a Pittance

    A newly discovered and restored work by Italian Baroque master Caravaggio will soon go on view at Milan’s Prado Museum, in the same city where it was identified as a signature work by the artist. Ecce Homo (1605–09), is one of only about 60 known works by the artist, and shows Roman governor Pontius Pilate presenting Christ to the people, a scene from the Passion of Christ as recounted in the Gospel of John.
    The work had not left Spain for four centuries, having passed through the collections of several high-ranking officials and even King Phillip IV before going to Spanish diplomat Evaristo Pérez de Castro Méndez in 1821; it has remained with his descendants ever since. It will go on view from May 28 through October.
    Ecce Homo had been offered for sale for a pittance as the work of another artist. It was scheduled to go to auction in April 2021 at Madrid’s Ansorena auction house, at which time it was attributed to a follower of Spanish artist José de Ribera (himself an admirer of Caravaggio) and bore a reserve price of just €1,500 ($1,780). But experts at the Prado Museum placed an export ban on the work, saying that there was “sufficient stylistic and documentary evidence” to suggest it might have been done by Caravaggio himself. 
    Caravaggio, Ecce homo (1604-05), during restoration. Courtesy private collection.
    Maria Cristina Terzaghi, an associate art history professor and Caravaggio expert at University Roma Tre, immediately booked a plane ticket to Madrid and was among the first to identify it as a signature work by the master, telling El Pais, “It’s a Caravaggio. I have no doubts.” She identified the red of Christ’s robe and the face of Pilate from other Caravaggio works. 
    At that time, Italian art historian Vittorio Sgarbi told the Sunday Times that the piece could sell to private collectors for between €100 and €150 million (about $108 million and $162 million) or to the Prado for €40 or €50 million (about $43 million to $54 million).
    The painting’s new owner will lend it to the Prado for exhibition; the loan is handled by Colnaghi Gallery (which has locations in London, New York, Brussels, and Madrid). The painting was restored by Andrea Cipriani and his team in collaboration with two London dealers, Filippo Benappi of Benappi Fine Art and Andrea Lullo of Lullo Pampoulides gallery.
    The painting’s provenance will also get the documentary film treatment. Madrid producer Morena Films is teaming up with Estrategia Audiovisual and Italian entertainment company Fandango to create The Sleeper, a “thriller doc” to be produced and directed by Álvaro Longoria. It started production at the end of 2023, reported Variety, with the guidance of Colnaghi CEO Jorge Coll.
    “You can’t ask for a better thriller plot,” Longoria told Variety. “The world of art is fascinating and somewhat obscure. The variables that affect the artistic versus economic value of a painting are plenty and this has always fascinated me.”  
    In an accompanying catalogue, four experts make the case for the painting as an authentic piece by the master: along with Terzaghi, there’s art historian Gianni Papi, University of Naples art history professor Giuseppe Porzio, and Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Kieth Christiansen.
    “The Prado played an important role in the recovery of this work by alerting the Ministry of Culture of its importance, which prevented its departure from Spain,” said Miguel Falomir, director of the Prado. “Thanks to the generosity of its current owner, the Prado now makes an exceptional work by one of the greatest painters in history available to the public and the scientific community.”
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    Kosovar Artist Petrit Halilaj’s Whimsical Met Roof Installation Belies a Dark History

    Petrit Halilaj, a Kosovar artist born in the former Yugoslavia, has unveiled a major installation in the roof garden of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City inspired by his childhood in Balkan country. The installation, Abetare (2024), borrows its name from the book Halilaj and his peers used to learn the alphabet in school. The work—his first major piece in the United States—was conceived by the artist in consultation with curator Iria Candela.
    Petrit Halilaj, Abetare (2024) on view at the roof garden of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Photo by Adam Schrader.
    Halilaj was raised in the small Kosovar village of Runik before he was displaced by the Kosovo War in the late 1990s as Serbians sought to expel ethnic Albanians from the land. At 13 years old, he was sent to a refugee camp called Kukas where his family survived the war. The phrase “Return to Kukas” appears in part of the installation.
    The artist, now based in Berlin, was inspired by the doodles of children he saw on desks while visiting his former school in Runik, which, in 2010, was in the process of being demolished after surviving the war. “We are a very small village, and that school was one of the few architectural landmarks that survived the war,” Halilaj recalled during a press preview on April 29.
    Petrit Halilaj, Abetare (2024) on view at the roof garden of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Photo by Adam Schrader.
    Halilaj said he didn’t understand why the town was happy to tear it down and build a new school, even if it came with fewer “holes and traces of war.” But while on a quick stop to take a picture for posterity, he saw a band of kids playing in the school’s garden. The children pointed him to desks that had been thrown out—to look at drawings on them.
    “These desks were from the ‘70s, years I was not yet born. They have seen the fall of Yugoslavia, all the conflicts of the ‘90s, all the segregation, all the war. They still survived. All those generations of kids were all coexisting in a very beautiful mix with each other,” he said.
    Petrit Halilaj, Abetare (2024) on view at the roof garden of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Photo by Adam Schrader.
    He said he loved seeing the symbols of United Nations peacekeepers juxtaposed with the name of the Argentinian soccer star Lionel Messi. He called the drawings “moments of freedom and expression” for the children who made them.
    In his work, Halilaj has rendered details in the sculptures that include the famous “Super S” that children often draw in their notebooks, as well as a rendering of Batman, a penis, the word “tiddies,” and the phrase “2+2=5”—a symbol of dystopian groupthink from George Orwell’s 1984.
    Detail of Petrit Halilaj, Abetare (2024) on view at the roof garden of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Photo by Adam Schrader.
    The works also have references to pop culture, including flowers inspired by those painted by Andy Warhol and references to fellow creative Dua Lipa, the Albanian singer who lived in Pristina with her family after Kosovo declared independence in 2008.
    Candela said Halilaj also spent time visiting other schools across the Balkans for research—photographing children’s desks and creating an inventory of the drawings on them. “He organized them by subject, like hearts or sexual elements or reference to history or houses, and he made a huge catalogue of them across the Balkan region,” she said.
    Iria Candela in front of sculptures by Kosovar artist Petrit Halilaj installed in the roof garden of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Photo by Adam Schrader.
    In the studio, he decided which drawings he would select and enlarged them to scale then worked with a scale model of the Met’s rooftop garden to orchestrate the placement of the installation’s elements. Candela said all the drawings come directly from the sources they were taken from and that Halilaj did not add or change their designs other than transforming their material and enlarging them.
    “The large spider has a couple of legs out of the planters, so you don’t know if the spider is trying to escape or it’s coming in from the park,” Candela said. She emphasized that she also enjoyed the contrast of the dark contours of the sculpture against the white sky of the foggy day of the interview.
    Abetare, she added, follows another outdoor commission in Pristina, the capital of Kosovo, in which Halilaj installed five stars on the rooftop of a former five-star hotel—now abandoned—that was used as a prison and torture chamber by Serbian forces who took over it when they invaded Kosovo.
    Petrit Halilaj, Abetare (2024) on view at the roof garden of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Photo by Adam Schrader.
    “Petrit is, among our Met staff, our most favorite and beloved artist and he won all competitions of who we want to work with,” Max Hollein, the CEO and director of the Met, said as the installation was unveiled. “We love the excitement, the energy, the imagination, and artistic ambition. Petrit’s work is also of course deeply rooted in areas the museum engages with in many way—history, homeland, and migration.”
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    ‘Lost’ Photos of Andy Warhol and Robert Indiana Go on View in London

    When he lived in New York in the 1960s, William John Kennedy may have made his living as an advertising and commercial photographer, but he also had a fine art practice. A new show highlights yet another dimension of his career: a previously unexhibited trove of photos showing two giants of Pop art, Andy Warhol and Robert Indiana, in unguarded moments in their studios, posing with some of their most recognizable works, and at the openings of New York exhibitions.
    Robert Indiana photographed in his studio by William John Kennedy.
    Kennedy’s central London residence is now a showcase for his photographs of the artists from 1963 and 1964, when they were both early in careers that would go on to help define contemporary art.
    Kennedy (who died in 2021) met Indiana at the opening of the latter’s first New York solo show, and soon began photographing him at his studio in the legendary Coenties Slip neighborhood. Indiana then connected Kennedy with Warhol at the “Americans 1963” exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art (in which Indiana was included).
    Andy Warhol and Robert Indiana, photographed by William John Kennedy.
    Kennedy would soon bring his camera to Warhol’s legendary Factory and photograph him and the people around him, including poet Gerard Malanga, “Superstar” Ultra Violet, and writer Taylor Mead. Kennedy had ideas like photographing Warhol standing in a field of flowers with his paintings of the same subject.
    Robert Indiana, photographed by William John Kennedy.
    Former Warhol Museum director Eric Shiner noted a special quality to the photos of the father of Pop. “The Kennedy photos are perhaps the most intimate portraits of Andy that I have ever seen,” he said. “They capture him at the point of his arrival as a true art star and yet he remains his humble, fun-loving, playful self in each frame. They humanize him in a way that few photos do, and if anything, they add to the mythology of Warhol as the benevolent, happy person that he truly was, and yet is rarely celebrated as.”
    Andy Warhol, photographed by William John Kennedy.
    One striking photo shows Warhol in his studio, holding up a piece of clear plastic printed with the image of Marilyn Monroe that would come to emblazon some of his most famous works.
    Another former Warhol Museum director, Patrick Moore, pointed out the poetic dimension of the photo: “In the image, Warhol stands in the Factory, sunlight flooding through the window, illuminating him as he holds aloft the acetate of Marilyn Monroe that would later make some of his most famous paintings. Here we see Warhol in a new way—young, triumphant, about to conquer the art world through transforming the images of movie stars that were his childhood refuge. We literally see Warhol through his art.”
    Robert Indiana, photographed by William John Kennedy.
    Kennedy seemed to have a special effect on Warhol, the photographer’s wife Marie told the Guardian in 2022, when some of the photographs were published in a book, William John Kennedy: The Lost Archive.
    “Andy, of course, was this strange bird,” she said. “When I was in his company, he was very shy, you had to draw him out. But he was much more relaxed with Bill. Bill came up with all these ideas for pictures—getting Andy to wear paintings like sandwich boards or pose behind the acetate for his Marilyn Monroe screen prints—and Andy always went along with him.” 
    Marie Kennedy told the Guardian that during a move from New York to Florida, Kennedy almost threw the photos away. 
    Robert Indiana, photographed by William John Kennedy.
    A photo of Indiana with his best-known work, Love, which has become one of the world’s most-reproduced artworks, resulted from a call that came in with no notice, the photographer recalls: “He said, ‘Bill, come on down I want to show you something.’ So I went down to the studio and there he was, holding his Love painting.”
    “When I look back on my involvement with the Pop artists, it all came off my initial involvement with Robert Indiana,” said Kennedy. “He was the linchpin.”
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    22 Rising Artists Designed Tarot Cards for This Copenhagen Show

    Although tarot and art have flirted over the past few centuries, a new show opening in Copenhagen on May 3 unveils their all-out affair. Danish artist Rose Eken has curated “The Fool’s Journey” for Eighteen Gallery in the Danish city. Some 22 artists of many backgrounds and bents encapsulated whichever one of the tarot’s Major Arcana cards Eken pulled for them. The curator herself drew the highly misunderstood Death.
    Eken’s relationship with tarot “began with my interest and study of the female artists connected to the surrealist movement; such as Leonora Carrington and Remedios Varo, or Ithell Colquhoun,” she said, “who all have worked a lot with the symbolism of tarot or even made their own tarot decks.”
    Rose Eken, Death (2024). Black mirror and glazed ceramic. Photo: Eighteen Gallery
    Interest in divination is exploding as global uncertainty intensifies, yet few fine artists—save for Hilma’s Ghost—have dared yet to design their own deck. “The Fool’s Journey” took shape years ago, as Eken and artist Albin Werle (also in the show) played with taking on the project themselves. They soon realized, as Eken recalled, that “even daring to attempt to render all 78 cards could take a lifetime!”
    Frederik Exner, The Devil (2024). Photo: Eighteen Gallery.
    Instead, Eken focused on the most iconic cards—tarot’s Major Arcana, which begins with the Fool (symbolizing a fresh start and total innocence), and ends with the World (symbolizing completion). Each of the 20 sequential archetypes in between illustrate “the fool’s journey,” or the character’s ascension from naivety to knowing. Eken asked her gallery of 10 years whether it would let her host the show to accommodate the “tight white cube hang” she envisioned. Then, she amassed 21 artists and pulled cards to determine their assignments.
    Nina Harman, Justice (2024) Encaustic medium, pigment and inkjet print on wood panel. Photo: Eighteen Gallery
    In addition to requesting that all contributions measure ​​around 28 by 18 inches for continuity, Eken also asked her artists for entirely new works. Every single result is surprising, but some are more straightforward. Nina Hartman’s Justice, for example, embodies balance through printed scales and the work’s sculptural, triangular form. Frederik Exner’s mixed-media relief of The Devil features Satan’s throne and perfunctory dark overtones.
    Anna Stahn, Strength (Tribute to us all) (2024). Photo: Eighteen Gallery.
    By contrast, Anna Stahn’s patinated bronze evokes the minor arcana’s Three of Cups card more than the assignment she actually got, but while “the tarot card of Strength resembles a woman alone with a lion,” Stahn said, “I feel the most strength in groups of friends.” Siri Elfhag’s decision to envision The Magician as an octopus reminds viewers that poltergeists don’t make the tarot function—the cards simply harness semiotics to access a reader’s innate ESP.
    And although Caroline Absher was at work finishing her solo booth for the Independent art fair with New York gallery Fredericks & Freiser, she channeled the full rainbow—and what looks like a self-portrait—into The World. “I learned that I enjoy working from a conceptual prompt,” she said. “It helps that The World is one of the most positive and encouraging cards.” Her work will join its cohorts in a tarot book to be made commemorating the show.
    “The Fools Journey” will be on view at Eighteen Gallery, Slagtehusgade 18c, 1711 Copenhagen, Denmark, May 3–31. On-site tarot readings will be available to book through the gallery’s website.
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    Why Swizz Beatz Is Welcoming A.I. in Art-Making

    Beyond the sensory overload of the national pavilions in the Giardini della Biennale, there’s another trippy garden in Venice.
    This enclave nestled inside a 16th-century church is the brainchild of the Belgian artist Arne Quinze and the U.S. producer, musician, and art collector, Swizz Beatz. Their exhibition titled “Are We The Aliens_” showcases Quinze’s bold exploration into glass, ceramics, and bronze alongside A.I.-generated visuals. At its core is a collaborative sonic installation: an immersive aluminum sanctuary, inviting visitors to recline and absorb its dynamic soundscape.
    We caught up with the artist and musician to hear more about their collaboration, marrying sound to art, and taking a leap with the next generation of creators.
    Arne Quinze and Swizz Beatz, Sonic Levitation. Photo by Dave Bruel for Arne Quinze. Courtesy of Konig Galerie.
    Arne Quinze: We finished installing a half hour ago. The experience is fresh—we just came down from sitting in our garden. Even after making this piece, I’m still discovering. I’m still enjoying. I’m still traveling, I’m still in wonder at what we did.
    Swizz Beatz: The collaboration came about because we have a brother in between us but we’ve been a fan of each other’s work for many years.
    AQ: The first time I came here was two, three years ago, to check the location, because it’s difficult to find the right location in Venice. After I found it, I started to make the molds and I flew to San Diego and I showed him the model, and we were sitting around the model and talking.
    SB: His model, it’s still on the table where he left it. It’s a model of the sculpture that I was looking at while I was doing the music, vibing, listening to music in the speakers and just asking: How would the sound look coming out of the sculpture? How would you feel?
    AQ: The concept of the exhibition title “Are We The Aliens_” came up because we have the same view on the world, from the discussions that we had. The theme is actually questioning ourselves. We need to learn to approach again our planet with beauty and with our art and to communicate and to embrace and to live in harmony. That’s the message. Because on this planet, there’s just one race, one species as humans, we are all the same.
    Photo by Dave Bruel for Arne Quinze. Courtesy of Konig Galerie.
    SB: This is my first, I like to call it sonic installation score, to this amazing sculpture masterpiece. I’m usually scoring for a movie or doing music-production for a song. This was different because the medium was different. The energy is different. His vision is different. So, it was a pure collaboration. I went through it, like, three or four times and then a last time because we’re still learning each other. Usually, if I’m producing something I’m taking the lead, but you know, he’s the main producer as the artist for his vision, I had to kind of like walk side-by-side, see if this works, right? And then eventually I was like, “Okay, we can jibe from here and then we got to a masterful place together.”
    AQ: I think we are here to bring beauty and I think through beauty we try to communicate and bring us all back together. When you see a white, flower field, you need to embrace that and to learn to see that again and that will bring the music and the art back into our lives—and that will reunite us. I think this is important.
    SB: We also want people to be a little uncomfortable. Because when you create intensity, when it smooths out, you can actually feel everything else happening. If we had it just with garden sounds, you wouldn’t really notice the change—it’s a blackout in your mind. So, this is designed to test all your senses.
    The hardest thing with scoring this was actually: How do you keep changing the direction, and keep it interesting to keep playing after this period of time? I started with soundscape that would put you to sleep. Then I started to get a little experimental, put the rough ends on it, and then started formatting it so we go, low, high, low, high, high, low, low, high, low—and it’s almost not calculated. Because you think, “Oh, here comes a big sound.” You think it’s that and it just goes into a drum and it’s playing with your senses.
    Arne Quinze, Ceramorphia. Photo by Dave Bruel for Arne Quinze. Courtesy of Konig Galerie.
    AQ: I think the thing that we did together is not 2D, it’s not 3D. I think it’s beyond 4D. And that is all the layers that you will see. It’s a magic garden when you dive in. I’ve been working in installation for 30 years now, I have a lot of experience. What I really like with this one, I’m always in places, like somewhere in the middle of the jungle or in the desert or far away and making big monumental installations. This is a very intimate garden. You come in our secret garden.
    We used many things to put it together, and we asked artificial intelligence to be as artificially intelligent as possible. Because I’m questioning, are we the humans and they are the aliens—or are we the aliens and they’re the humans? Because artificial intelligence is maybe the first new species on this planet. And it’s everywhere, it’s in your microphone, it’s in your telephone, and we have to learn to live with it. Still, I think artificial intelligence is far off being able to produce the emotions that we did here.
    SB: Well, for me, I’m not bothered by using A.I. in many ways. You can use it for speeding up processes. But the thing is when you don’t have talent and you use it, it’s a disaster. But if you do have talent and you have a plan to enhance something that’s already great but that would have taken you probably like six months, it could take you four hours. My son has been writing this animation movie for eight years and the hardest thing was him finding the designer for his characters. Now, he has almost all of his characters done in one month, when this would have cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. So, in these ways it’s good but I think that it should be in the right hands.
    Arne Quinze, Impact Glass. Photo by Dave Bruel for Arne Quinze. Courtesy of Konig Galerie.
    AQ: I think artificial intelligence will also challenge us to take the next step. I’m not afraid of that, not afraid. It’s a new generation. I think we need to dive into that, to use that.
    SB: The world is a smaller place now because of technology. I think the creators are now getting more confident, of stepping outside and not being afraid, which is going to push the art little further to even like what you have seen from us. And I’m seeing artists, who would have normally tried to put their hands behind their back for the perfect curator or the perfect gallery or the perfect museum to notice them. But now, I’m seeing more of the art world, they’re like, “Listen, if I get in a museum, I’m cool with that. If not, I had fun doing the piece.” And this is how you keep art alive, is by taking the risk. And I love that I see people around the world taking the risk now and I hear all type of stories of people telling me their new ideas. This is good.
    AQ: Yeah, and you see also our kids, the next generation, they have possibilities that we never had. They are diving into a new world—I’m so encouraged to see what they will produce.
    SB: Yeah. Because you can’t really produce for the hype; you have to produce for the passion. It’s a disaster when I see artists producing for the hype, and getting misled and their market is ran up and then one bad sale and you don’t hear from these people again—and nobody’s helping them get back on their feet. And so, I encourage all artists to take their time and really do the passion and don’t worry about the hype. Worry about the longevity and what you can change in that period. The hype, that’s going to come and go.
    I apply that to myself as well, because being in the music industry is a big hype business, so naturally you bring that with you anyway. With art, when I first started, I collected for the wrong reasons. I was collecting for the hype so I was just going for the big names, just to impress people coming to the house. And then I was like, “I don’t need all this.” I need to be able to meet the artists, treat them as family, you know, not be so transactional. Most people are very transactional when they’re talking to the artist. What’s in their mind is “how can I get a piece?” instead of “is this artist at peace?” Emotionally, spiritually, physically, all of these things.
    AQ: But you also worked here as an artist. It’s really not just as a composer or as a musician—a musician is an artist but this is different. You are touching material, we are sculpting together. That is how I see it.
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    LG OLED Returns Kim Whanki to New York with Luminous Abstractions at Frieze

    Five digital expressions of legendary late Korean abstractionist Kim Whanki’s iconic paintings are casting a glow over the LG OLED Lounge at Frieze New York.
    In the spirit of LG’s initiative at the Guggenheim and its involvement in Britain’s Venice Biennale pavilion, LG OLED has invited a group of Korean multimedia artists to reimagine a select few Kim masterpieces on screens, setting new standards for digital art display.
    The showcase, titled “We Meet Again In New York,” coincides with “Whanki in New York,” a new show on view through June 13 at the Korean Cultural Center New York (KCCNY), presented in collaboration with Seoul’s Whanki Museum and LG OLED. Together, they mark Kim’s first extensive posthumous exhibitions in the city.
    Installation image of Whanki x LG OLED showcase “We Meet Again In New York” at Frieze New York. Courtesy LG OLED and © Whanki Foundation. Whanki Museum
    Stunning Displays
    The concurrent showcases highlight Kim’s last decade as a working artist, which he spent in New York. Amidst the rising art capital’s thriving abstract expressionist scene, Kim’s practice of painting Korean cultural icons through international new styles developed into his now-legendary “all-over dots” paintings, which have since sold for millions. Each mark is entirely organic, rather than mechanically perfect, encapsulating the artist’s hand while creating a mesmerizing viewing experience, which is only emphasized by their new translation to LG OLED screens at Frieze.
    They portray his paintings with startling clarity and even greater color precision than the 50-year-old artworks themselves. Some of the originals have faded and others aren’t suited to public display, due in part to their fragility or ownership by private collectors in Korea.
    Kim Whanki, Duet 22-IV-74 #331 (1974). Digital Expression of Whanki’s painting, 2023. © Whanki Foundation.Whanki Museum
    The five works across the presentation were translated by Seoul National University professor Je Baak, media art creator group Verseday, Ahn Graphics CEO Mano Ahnand, and BESIGN CEO Jason Kim. Each artist added touches of their own style to compliment the works.
    7-VI-69 #65 (1969), animated by Ahn, radiates while layering the composition’s geometric elements piece by piece, to assemble the whole painting. Kim made the lines of 7-VII-74 (1974) dissipate and reemerge amongst the newly swirling and fading textures surrounding them.
    The show’s centerpiece beams on a massive LG OLED screen featuring Kim’s scarlet, sun-themed 14-III-72 #223 (1972). At intervals, Verseday has made its sunspots and brushstrokes shimmer, accenting their textures. The animations emphasize Kim’s interest in creating a time-based viewing experience.
    Kim Whanki’s masterpieces digitally expressed by LG Signature OLED M. © Whanki Foundation.Whanki Museum
    An International Artist Drawn to New York
    Though Kim was born in Korea and helped found the country’s pioneering Dansaekhwa movement, he also carried elements of Korean culture as he moved around the globe.
    As an art student in Tokyo during the 1930s, Kim was drawn to Matisse and Picasso and started translating Korean motifs through modern styles. He returned to Korea and co-founded the influential New Realism Group. Decades later in the 1950s, Kim moved to Paris to tackle the canon. Despite his association with Korean lyricism and meditative abstraction, he sought a seamless integration of Eastern and Western aesthetics. He then traveled on to New York in 1963, thanks to a grant from the Asia Society.
    Kim immediately fell in with the city’s expanding art scene, where he befriended Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman. He also inspired Nam June Paik. “Many people, even his most devoted fans, might not know that Kim Whanki, despite his achievements and comfortable life in Korea, moved to New York at the age of 50, where he passed away,” noted KCCNY curator Hee Sung Cho.
    At the same time, he retained traditional imagery like moon jars in his work, balancing his cultural origins with the eye of an international artist. “By becoming a foreigner in a new city, he turned to his inner voice and created his own new world of art,” observed Park Mee-Jung, director of the Whanki Museum.
    Installation view of “Whanki in New York” at the Korean Cultural Center New York (KCCNY), presented in collaboration with the Whanki Museum and LG OLED. Courtesy KCCNY and LG OLED.
    Celebrating Kim’s Legacy
    KCCNY and LG OLED Art shared the vision of reintroducing Kim Whanki to New York audiences through the Frieze display and the Whanki exhibition currently unfolding across KCCNY’s new seven-story home near Koreatown in Manhattan. “This collaboration was envisioned to create a unique showcase that combined cultural depth with cutting-edge technology,” said Hee Sung Cho, who helped make the partnership possible.
    The KCCNY exhibition features loans from private collectors, including the famed sculptor John Pai, as well as numerous works provided by The Whanki Museum. Describing Kim’s legacy, the museum’s director, Park Mee-Jung, said: “​​His work, and the inspiring narrative of his life and artistic evolution across Korea, Brazil, Paris, and New York, has led to an ever-increasing global recognition of his art and impact on the history of Korean art.”
    Kate Oh, Vice President of the Brand Communication Division at LG, emphasized the importance of the collaboration: “With this incredible presentation of digital expressions of Whanki’s artworks at Frieze New York, and our partner exhibition at the Korean Cultural Center New York, we hope to contribute to Whanki’s lasting legacy in New York City.”
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    A Disney Resort Will Show George W. Bush’s Portraits of Veterans

    In time for National Military Appreciation Month in June, EPCOT’s American Adventure Pavilion, at the company’s Walt Disney World Resort in Florida, is mounting an exhibition of former president George W. Bush’s paintings of surviving military veterans. “Portraits of Courage: A Commander in Chief’s Tribute to America’s Warriors” includes more than 60 portraits, each accompanied by “the inspiring story of the veteran depicted” as written by Bush. The exhibition is organized in collaboration with the George W. Bush Institute.
    “Celebrating those who give so much to our country has been part of the fabric of The Walt Disney Company throughout our 100-year history,” said Josh D’Amaro, chairman of Disney Experiences. “We’re grateful to the Bush Institute for allowing us to feature this special collection and share it with our guests.”
    Bush’s painting hobby first came to light when a Romanian hacker released photos of Dubya’s daubings in February 2013 (later earning a four-year jail sentence for the act). The paintings were also the basis of a 2017 book by the same name, which became a #1 New York Times bestseller. In 2019, he set out to follow up with a book of portraits of immigrants; as Artnet News’s Taylor Dafoe dryly commented when it was published a year later, referring to a notorious press conference at which W. landed on an aircraft carrier and prematurely declared victory in the Iraq War, “Well, mission accomplished.”
    George W. Bush, Army Sgt. 1st Class Michael R. Rodriguez. Courtesy of Grant Miller/George W. Bush Presidential Center via Crown Publishing.
    The exhibition will stay on view for a year. In addition to displaying the portraits, it will serve as a place for veterans to access information about free, high-quality mental and brain health care via a program called Check-In. Thousands of veterans of the post-9/11 wars are homeless; many suffered traumatic brain injuries as a result of the improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, that were used to attack them as they patrolled Iraqi cities.
    Bush’s paintings of veterans were widely derided as hypocritical when they emerged; in the New Yorker, Peter Schjehldahl wrote, “Having obliviously made murderous errors, Bush now obliviously atones for them. What do you do with someone like that?” By the accounts of his painting instructors, Bush takes the activity seriously; he counts Lucian Freud, Wayne Thiebaud, Jamie Wyeth, Ray Turner, Fairfield Porter, and Joaquín Sorolla as influences.
    The United States military operation in Iraq began in 2003, in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, an armed conflict that spanned eight years. About 7,000 U.S. service members died in post-9/11 war operations according to the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University, which also notes more than 30,000 suicides among service members and veterans of the post-9/11 wars. While it’s difficult to know exactly how many Iraqis died, the organization Iraq Body Count records some 113,728 civilian deaths. Brown University’s Costs of War Project estimates that the conflict ran up a bill of $6.4 trillion.
    “Portraits of Courage” has been touring the U.S. since 2017, opening at the George W. Bush Presidential Center on the SMU campus in Dallas, Texas, before traveling to venues including Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Arkansas, and the Museum of the Southwest in Texas. Speaking to CNN at the launch of the exhibition, Bush said of his painting practice: “It keeps me active, so I’m not on the couch chewing potato chips all the time. It’s one of the great learning experiences.”
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    ‘Fear and Loathing’ Illustrator Ralph Steadman Kicks Off a Marathon Touring Retrospective

    There’s a call atop Ralph Steadman’s X account to “Enter the Steadmanverse.” Click the link and you travel to a Discord server comprised of two dozen or so sleepy channels. It’s a holdover of Steadman’s flirtation with NFTs that came at a time when web3 was seemingly imminent and inevitable.
    The move spoke of an octogenarian who remains curious, an artist whose instantly recognizable works of spidery lines and grotesque subjects have remained both relevant and in-demand. Case in point, Harley-Davidson and Supreme recently dropped apparel splashed with Steadman ink. But for enduring popularity, look no further than college campuses where Steadman’s status as the irreverent illustrator-in-chief of ‘70s counter-culture has made his work a dorm wall staple.
    Fitting then, that U.S. universities are set to play host to a comprehensive retrospective of Steadman’s varied and long-lasting career. Postponed in 2020, “Ralph Steadman: And Another Thing” makes amends with a marathon tour that begins at American University Museum in Washington, D.C. in September, and will run on-and-off through the fall of 2027.
    Ralph Steadman, In the Beginning from Animal Farm (1994). Photo: courtesy Ralph Steadman.
    As shown by the topical drawings he posts almost daily on social media—recent examples include bat day, scream day, St. George’s Day, world water day—Steadman remains prolific and engaged. The exhibition starts by presenting a young art student with a rather different palate. While studying at London’s East Ham Technical College in the ‘50s, Steadman dabbled with abstraction, creating geometric watercolors that echo the likes of Joan Miró and Wassily Kandinsky. Early sketchbooks and writings tell the tale.
    Steadman’s caustic wit and social conscience, however, were not going to be contained by artfully arranged squares and circles. He began as a cartoonist at Kemsley Newspaper and by the early sixties his biting drawings began gracing outsider magazines such as Punch and Private Eye. He critiqued imperialism, class inequity, and political greed. All of British society, in other words.
    Ralph Steadman, Fear and Loathing in Elko for Rolling Stone Magazine (1991). Photo courtesy Ralph Steadman.
    Still, the going was tough. “I don’t make a lot of money,” he told an interviewer in 1965. This reality, paired with the country’s narrow publishing industry saw Steadman begin traveling back-and-forth to the U.S. in the early ‘70s. There, of course, he was introduced to Hunter S. Thompson and his anarchic vein of reporting, Gonzo journalism.
    Naturally, “And Another Thing” traces this most raucous of relationships, one that rumbled on-and-off for 35 years until Thompson’s death in 2005. But it also delivers a fuller picture of Steadman’s prolific output over the past six decades. Yes, there are nearly 150 original works, but personal photographs, notes, and miscellaneous ephemera help out too.
    “Steadman’s art challenges us, teaches us, and alters how we see the world,” said Andrea Lee Harris, the exhibition’s co-curator. “He has given us all a great gift and raised the bar for the generations following in his footsteps. The exhibition will delight diehard fans and uninitiated audiences eager to learn more.”
    Ralph Steadman, Soldiers in Stripes from Alice Through the Looking Glass (1971). Photo: courtesy Ralph Steadman.
    In contrast to the blood and bones drawings for which Steadman is best-known are his charming illustrations for children’s literature. These predate his work with Thompson and bear names such The Big Squirrel and Little Rhinoceros that offer Steadman working at an altogether different temperature.
    There’s a cluster of political cartoons—the likes of Bill Clinton, Ronald Regan, and Richard Nixon, all savaged in pen and ink—but a balance between Steadman’s extremes typically comes in his illustrations for literature.
    Chief among these is Steadman’s take on Alice in Wonderland in which he lowered characters he had observed around London into Lewis Carroll’s work. White Rabbit is a frazzled commuter, the Cheshire Cat appears looming and leering as though on top of a billboard, the playing cards are burly laborers complete with union numbers. It’s a frazzled world of chaos and corruption. A Steadmanverse, in other words.
    “Ralph Steadman: And Another Thing” will be on view at the American University Museum, Katzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, Washington, D.C., September 7–December 8.
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