Monday, October 15, 2012

Congrats Larry Gagosian for his new (and second) art gallery in Paris!

Inaugural exhibit on Oct. 19, 2012: German artist Anselm Kiefer



The world's biggest mega art dealer Larry Gagosian  is opening another presence in Paris, France in the private jets airport of Le Bourget. This will be his second art place in this beautiful city, two years after opening his gallery in Paris.







(Art dealer Larry Gagosian as featured in the French newspaper Le Figaro. Credits photo: Patrick MC Mullan Photo; Photo BILLY FARRELL/Patrick McMullan.com)





Location of new art gallery: Le Bourget. A former 1950s private airport hangar, 2 storeys, with area of 1,650 square meters or 17,760 square feet. In the outskirts of Paris City, France.

Gallery address: 800 Avenue de l'Europe 93350, Paris, Le Bourget

Telephone:  +33.1.48.16.16.47
Fax:  +33.1.70.24.87.10

Email: P A R I S @ G A G O S I A N . C O M

Designer of new art space: French architect and Pritzker Prize winner Jean Nouvel


Some informations on the inaugural art exhibition of Anselm Kiefer works

First art exhibit: "Morgenthau Plan" art exhibit by conceptual painter Anselm Kiefer of Germany

Opening reception for the artist: Thursday, October 19th, from 4:00 to 8:00pm

Opening schedule to the public: October 19, 2012

End of Kiefer show: January 26, 2013

Gallery hours: Tuesdays to Saturdays 11 am  to 7 pm


(German artist Anselm Kiefer)





(The new Gagosian gallery)




(Photo below: Interior shot of new Gagosian Gallery at Le Bourget, just outside Paris. Photographer: Thomas Lannes/Jean Nouvel/HW Architecture/Claudine Colin Communication via Bloomberg)

Gagosian Gallery at Le Bourget


For detailed informations about the inaugural art exhibition of Anselm Kiefer, click this link: http://www.gagosian.com/exhibitions/anselm-kiefer--october-19-2012

 

To view map of the art gallery location, just click this link https://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&q=Avenue+de+l%27Europe,+%C3%8Ele-de-France,+France&aq=&sll=48.910901,2.40886&sspn=0.005987,0.013937&vpsrc=6&ie=UTF8&geocode=FaL86gIdR0QlAA&split=0&hq=&hnear=Avenue+de+l%27Europe,+%C3%8Ele-de-France,+France&ll=48.95453,2.442312&spn=0.002991,0.006968&t=m&z=18

 


Wow! 

Musician Eric Clapton’s Gerhard Richter painting auctioned for $34 Million, 30 Times Purchase

Clapton's Richter


Additional news report from Scott Reyburn of Bloomberg said: 
Eric Clapton's 1994 oil-on-canvas “Abstraktes Bild (809-4)” was sold by Sotheby’s in London for its “Frieze Week” auction of contemporary artworks with an estimate of 9 million pounds to 12 million pounds. 

The buyer was Natasha Mendelsohn of Sotheby’s, acting for a client on the telephone. She was underbid by her colleague Tobias Meyer, Sotheby’s worldwide head of contemporary art, also taking instructions for another client.
The predominantly red, dark blue and yellow abstract was one of three Richters bought by the U.K.-born guitarist for $3.4 million at Sotheby's New York in November 2001. At the time, this was an auction record for a lot containing abstracts by the German artist, with each worth about a third of the figure. Last night's sale was both a record for Richter at auction and for a living artist at auction.

“People are still ready to pay top prices for great paintings,” Christophe Van de Weghe, a New York dealer, said in an interview. “While the market is selective, the Clapton provenance made a difference. It could have added as much as 20 percent to the price.”
Richter, 80, who works in Cologne in both figurative and abstract idioms, has become the world’s most bankable living artist, dealers said. His highly decorative abstractions, often painted with a squeegee, have become particularly sought-after by wealthy international collectors and set seven of the 10 highest prices paid for the artist at auction.

Rising Richter

When Clapton bought his painting, the average auction price of a Richter work was $461,910, according to the database Artnet. 
Values have been boosted by the critical and popular success of recent retrospectives at Tate Modern, London, and the Pompidou Center, Paris, dealers said.
The previous auction record for the artist was the $21.8 million for the 1993 “Abstraktes Bild (798-3)” at Christie’s International, New York, in May.