Tag: Art

  • The boom of the Turkish art market

    The boom of the Turkish art market

    By Ivan Watson and Yesim Comert, CNN

    STORY HIGHLIGHTS

    In past 10 years, Turkish economy has stabilized, and people have taken interest in art

    Today, Turkish works are selling for tens and even hundreds of thousands of dollars

    But are people buying the art for its beauty or because they see it as a good investment?

    Istanbul (CNN) — The auctioneer rattled off prices and artists’ names with breathtaking speed, punctuating every sale with the announcement “Saa … saa … saa — TIM!” meaning sold in English.

    The bidding was fast and sometimes competitive at the Nisantasi Auction House, in one of Istanbul’s most posh neighborhoods. Within an hour, auctioneer Ali Ulukaya sold off more than $300,000 worth of paintings, almost all of them by living Turkish artists.

    After being virtually ignored for decades, both at home and abroad, Turkish modern art has rapidly developed into a booming market.

    “These numbers have gotten quite astronomical,” said Kerimcan Guleryuz, owner of the recently opened Empire Project art gallery.

    Guleryuz is the son of Mehmet Guleryuz, one of Turkey’s most famous living painters.

    “Unfortunately, until five or 10 years ago … the number of artists I could count who were making a living just off of their work was three to five, maybe,” Kerimcan Guleryuz said. “Now you can look at a work from Taner Ceylan being put in the Sotheby’s auction and reaching more than 280,000 pounds sterling ($444,000).”

    Just 10 years ago, artist Kezban Arca Batibeki said, she had a hard time explaining her art to Turks. Her loft studio in a rapidly gentrifying Istanbul neighborhood was decorated with large tableaus, one of them featuring a cartoonish, scantily clad woman lying bound, gagged and frightened in the corner of a ruined house.

    Industry insiders say the Turkish art market has paralleled the rapid growth in Turkey's once crisis-prone economy.
    Industry insiders say the Turkish art market has paralleled the rapid growth in Turkey's once crisis-prone economy.

    “Everybody asked … ‘Is it a painting? Is it an illustration or what?’ I was always trying to explain what I was doing,” she said.

    Now, Batibeki’s pop-art confections sell for tens of thousands of dollars, mostly to Turkish buyers.

    “Turkish people like trends,” she said with a smile. “When it became a trendy movement, they began buying contemporary works.”

    In 2009, Sotheby’s held its first auction of Turkish modern art in London. The auction grossed more than $2 million in sales. The next year, those numbers nearly doubled.

    Traditionally, wealthy industrialist families have been the biggest art patrons in Turkey. The privately funded Sakip Sabanci Museum opened in Istanbul in 2002. Two years later, the Eczacibasi family launched the Istanbul Museum of Modern Art.

    Independent collectors, however, have started making inroads. Downtown Istanbul has seen dozens of new art galleries in just the past few years.

    “It’s like mushrooms after rain,” said William Greenwood, a curator at the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, Qatar.

    Industry insiders say the booming Turkish art market has paralleled the rapid growth in Turkey’s once crisis-prone economy. Since a financial meltdown brought Turkey’s banking sector to its knees in 2001, the economy has stabilized and more than doubled in size the past 10 years.

    “The influence of the Turkish economy’s growth has unquestionably been one of the most important catalysts to this growth in the sales of artwork,” gallery owner Guleryuz said. “They go hand in hand. Unless you have economic stability, unless you have growth, you will not have sales in art. It’s just not possible.”

    But Turkey’s transformation is not only economical; it is also cultural. Since its launch in 1987, the Istanbul Biennal Contemporary Art exhibition has introduced many once-skeptical Turks to contemporary art.

    “The impact of the Biennal on the Turkish art scene has been immense,” said Susan Platt, art critic and author of “Art and Politics Now.” “The artists are now exposed to many, many different strategies and media and also artists from all over the world.”

    Batibeki said her work is now being displayed in a New York gallery after its owner saw her pieces on display in Istanbul’s Biennal. But she conceded that newfound Turkish appreciation of modern art is not what has been driving sales.

    “Very few of them buy because they love the piece,” she said. “Most of them are buying because you’re famous.”

    Guleryuz notices this, too.

    “We’re starting to lose track of why it is that we are looking at the art,” he said. “Are we looking at it because it’s worth $150,000 or because it describes something about the human condition?”

    At the Nisantasi Auction House, Ulukaya said the majority of his buyers were looking for something valuable to invest in.

    “We see it as a lucrative business,” said Salime Adali, who came to watch the auction. Adali said that in addition to his iron business, he recently opened an art gallery with his wife in Istanbul.

    “We see this as a good investment for our retirement and something to leave our daughter,” he said.

    And there is one rule to collecting art that still appears to dominate this newfound market.

    After a series of landscapes of the Turkish countryside sold for 1,000 lira ($568) a piece, one buyer in the back of the crowded room quipped to his neighbor, “Those paintings will only become valuable after the artist dies.”

    CNN’s Joe Duran contributed to this report.

    via The boom of the Turkish art market – CNN.com.

  • Los Angeles Police investigating Jackson’s death

    Los Angeles Police investigating Jackson’s death

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    Pop star Michael Jackson has died in Los Angeles, aged 50.

     

    Video Link

    Paramedics were called to the singer’s Beverly Hills home at about midday on Thursday after he stopped breathing.

    He was pronounced dead two hours later at the UCLA medical centre. Jackson’s brother, Jermaine, said he was believed to have suffered a cardiac arrest.

    Jackson, who had a history of health problems, had been due to stage a series of comeback concerts in the UK, beginning on 13 July.

    Speaking on behalf of the Jackson family, Jermaine said doctors had tried to resuscitate the star for more than an hour without success.

    added: “The family request that the media please respect our privacy during this tough time.”

    “And Allah be with you Michael always. I love you.”

    TV footage showed the star’s body flown from UCLA to the LA County Coroner’s office where a post-mortem is expected to take place on Friday.

    Concerns were raised last month when four of Jackson’s planned comeback concerts were postponed, but organisers insisted the dates had been moved due to the complexity of staging the show.

    A spokeswoman for The Outside Organisation, which was organising the publicity for the shows, said she had no comment at this time.

    Broadcaster Paul Gambaccini said: “I always doubted that he would have been able to go through that schedule, those concerts. It seemed to be too much of a demand on the unhealthy body of a 50 year old.

    “I’m wondering that, as we find out details of his death, if perhaps the stress of preparing for those dates was a factor in his collapse.

    “It was wishful thinking that at this stage of his life he could be Michael Jackson again.”

    Uri Geller, a close friend of the star, told BBC News it was “very, very sad”.

    Speaking outside New York’s historic Apollo theatre, civil rights activist Rev Al Sharpton paid tribute to his friend.

    “I knew him 35 years. When he had problems he would call me,” he said.

    “I feel like he was not treated fairly. I hope history will be more kind to him than some of the contemporary media.”

    Melanie Bromley, west coast bureau chief of Us Weekly magazine, told the BBC the scene in Los Angeles was one of “pandemonium”.

    “At the moment there is a period of disbelief. He was buying a home in the Holmby Hills area of Los Angeles and the scene outside the house is one of fans, reporters and TV cameras – it’s absolute craziness.

    “I feel this is the biggest celebrity story in a long time and has the potential to be the Princess Diana of popular culture.”

    Musical icon

    Tributes from the world of music and film have already flooded in from celebrities including Madonna, Arnold Schwarzenegger and ex-wife Lisa Marie Presley.

    Large numbers of fans have also gathered outside Jackson’s home and at the UCLA medical centre with lit candles to mourn the star while playing his greatest hits. Facebook groups have also been set up for fans to share their memories.

    The singer’s albums are occupying the top 15 slots of online music retailer Amazon.com’s current best-seller chart, led by his 1982 smash hit Thriller.

    Paramedics were called to the singer’s house in Bel Air at 1221 (1921GMT) following an emergency phone call.

    They performed CPR on Jackson and rushed him to the UCLA medical centre.

    A spokesman for the Los Angeles Police Department said the robbery and homicide team was investigating Jackson’s death because of its “high profile”, but there was no suggestion of foul play.

    Jackson began his career as a child in family group The Jackson 5.

    He then went on to achieve global fame as a solo artist with smash hits such as Billie Jean and Bad.

    Thriller, released in 1982, is the biggest-selling album of all time, shifting 65m copies, according to the Guinness Book of World Records.

    He scored seven UK number ones as a solo artist and won a total of 13 Grammy awards.

    “For Michael to be taken away from us so suddenly at such a young age, I just don’t have the words,” said Quincy Jones, who produced Thriller, Bad and Off The Wall.

    “He was the consummate entertainer and his contributions and legacy will be felt upon the world forever. I’ve lost my little brother today, and part of my soul has gone with him.”

    The singer had been dogged by controversy and money trouble in recent years, becoming a virtual recluse.

    BBC

  • Turk art in Miami

    Turk art in Miami

    ISTANBUL – Art Basel Miami Beach is the most important art show in the United States, a cultural and social highlight in the region. It is the sister event to Switzerland’s Art Basel, the most prestigious internatıonal art show for the past 39 years

    Turkish artist Gülay Alpay will create worlds within worlds at an artist fair in Miami. The artist will make use of every inch of the 10 x 6 x 10 foot space that delineates artists’ booths by making this measurement also the size of her work. This is a method Alpay has come to be known for as a means of entering her paintings and existing within them. The use of space is a way visitors are welcomed to interact and participate in her world and her art.

    Alpay will recreate her studio at the Artist Fair in an Open Studio Tour where visitors can enter the artist’s state of mind. Alpay has an extensive social and technological network with artists and non-artists alike and visitors can make submissions to her work within her recreated studio space. All doodles submitted to her space will appear in Alpay’s final installation, creating a multi-colored base, with all the spontaneity the Miami Artist Fair can handle.

    This world made of silk and acrylic paint will offer many surprises including painting clothed in silk, that will have its last strokes of paint spontaneously added by the artist as a collaboration between the artist and the visitor or buyer. Alpay is looking forward to exchanging and fusing her volatile and brilliantly colorful energy with each and every person who visits her studio at The Artist Fair, doing so playfully, spontaneously and for the sake of peace and beauty.


    Most important art show in the US
    The Art Basel Miami Beach show is the most important art show in the United States, a cultural and social highlight in the region. As the sister event to Switzerland’s Art Basel, the most prestigious worldwide international art show for the past 39 years, Art Basel Miami Beach combines an international selection of artists from top galleries with an exciting program of special exhibitions, parties and crossover events featuring music, film, architecture and design. Exhibition sites are located in the city’s beautiful Art Deco district, within walking distance of the beach and many hotels.

    An exclusive selection of more than 220 leading art galleries from North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia and Africa will exhibit 20th and 21st century artworks by over 2,000 artists. The exhibiting galleries are among the world’s most respected art dealers, offering exceptional pieces by both renowned artists and cutting-edge newcomers. Special exhibition sections feature young galleries, performance art, public art projects and video art. The show will be vital event for art lovers, allowing them to both discover new developments in contemporary art and experience rare museum-caliber artworks.

    Venue: Shelborne Hotel, Miami Beach, Florida
    Date: December 4-7, 2008 Interactive Public Art
    Installation/ Performance
    Curated by Tchera Niyego