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    The self-produced exhibition: pros and cons for artists

    Mostra Autoprodotta Art Rights Magazine
    Mostra Autoprodotta Art Rights Magazine

    SELF-PRODUCED EXHIBITION: PRO AND AGAINST ARTISTS

    So many advantages, but so many obstacles: the self-produced exhibition can represent a turning point for the career of an artist, provided that…

    Milan Gallery Community

    Milan Gallery Community
    Milan Gallery Community

    MILAN GALLERY COMMUNITY

    Artsy launches the “Milan Gallery Community” which involves Italian galleries committed to enhancing contemporary art in the world.

    Interview with Ilaria Bonacossa Director of Artissima – ProfessioneARTE.it

    Intervista Ilaria Bonacossa Artissima Art Rights Magazine
    Intervista Ilaria Bonacossa Artissima Art Rights Magazine

    The interviews of ProfessioneArte.it

    She is Ilaria Bonacossa Director of Artissima

    Five questions to know in advance the great art professionals, the daily challenges to face, the choices that have determined their path in the art system and in the art market, the digital changes and the advice for those who want to start the same career in collaboration with ProfessioneARTE.it.

    The strategy of online auction houses

    Le Aste Online Art Rights Magazine
    Le Aste Online Art Rights Magazine

    LA STRATEGIA DELLE ASTE ONLINE

    The switch from analog to online was quick and forced for the auction houses during the lockdown as well.

    But apparently, in order not to give up their passion, collectors have also started to buy works of art with online auctions

    The rule of 3Ds in the art market

    THE RULE OF 3Ds IN THE ART MARKET

    The 3 D rule is the basis for the sale of works of art by a collector or his heirs. But beware of obstacles…

    Interview with Mauro Stefanini, Gallerist and President of ANGAMC – ProfessioneARTE.it

    Intervista Mauro Stefanini Open Art Art Rights Magazine
    Intervista Mauro Stefanini Open Art Art Rights Magazine

    Le Interviste di ProfessioneArte.it

    He is Mauro Stefanini, gallerist and president of ANGAMC

    Five questions to know in advance the great art professionals, the daily challenges to face, the choices that have determined their path in the art system and in the art market, the digital changes and the advice for those who want to start the same career in collaboration with ProfessioneARTE.it.

    Moncler and Art

    Moncler & L'arte Arte e Moda Art Rights Magazine
    Moncler & L'arte Arte e Moda Art Rights Magazine

    MONCLER AND ART

    The Moncler fashion brand also uses the values of art to promote itself and elevate its image.

    Interview with Sharon Hecker Art Historian and Curator – ProfessioneARTE.it

    Intervista Sharon Hecker Professione Arte Art Rights Magazine
    Intervista Sharon Hecker Professione Arte Art Rights Magazine

    The Interviews of ProfessioneArte.it

    This is Sharon Hecker Art History and Curator.

    Five questions to know in advance the great art professionals, the daily challenges to face, the choices that have determined their path in the art system and in the art market, the digital changes and the advice for those who want to undertake the same career in collaboration with ProfessioneARTE.it.

    Art historian, curator, the greatest expert of the great sculptor Medardo Rosso. 

    This is Sharon Hecker, an American who in the eighties, after studying at Yale University, came to Italy to begin her career in the art world.

    First stop was the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice, years that allowed her to train on the field covering different roles, until, just before leaving for America comes the turning point.

    In 1989 she met Jenny Holzer, an artist of international fame and the first American artist to represent the United States at the Venice Biennale. Thanks to her experience, Sharon became the only one able to help Holzer build the pavilion, taking care of every detail, in constant dialogue with the artist: it was a success, so much so that she won the Golden Lion.

    More than 30 publications on Medardo Rosso and today the foundation of the Hecker Standard for the due diligence of works of art with some news that she unveils in this interview…

    Sharon Hecker is an art historian and curator of modern and contemporary Italian art.

    She has dealt in particular with Medardo Rosso, editing more than thirty publications, including: A monument at the moment: Medardo Rosso and the origins of contemporary sculpture (Johan&Levi Editore, 2018), winner of the American Millard Meiss award. His work has been awarded by Getty, Mellon and Fulbright Foundations. He has curated exhibitions at Harvard University, Pulitzer Arts Foundation, and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac. He has lectured at the Master’s in Arts Management at the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore and the Master’s in Art Law at the Università Statale di Milano.

    He worked with the Peggy Guggenheim Collection and coordinated the American Pavilion at the Venice Biennale in 1990. He founded The Hecker StandardTM for due diligence on artwork. He advises collectors, lawyers, wealth managers, family offices, auction houses and trade shows. Among his new publications are Postwar Italian Art History Today. Untying ‘the Knot’. He is currently curating an exhibition dedicated to Lucio Fontana‘s ceramics at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice (2022).

    She is member of Catalogue Raisonné Scholars Association (CRSA), International Catalogue Raisonné Association (ICRA), International Foundation for Art Research (IFAR), International Council of Museums (ICOM), Italian Art Society (IAS) e Art Historians of Nineteenth-Century Art (AHNCA). 

    1. How did your path in the art world begin?

    I studied art history at Yale and then at the University of Florence. After my studies I won a scholarship to work at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice. This work led me to meet the American artist Jenny Holzer, who was chosen as the first woman to represent the United States at the Venice Biennale. 

    I coordinated his Pavilion, which won the Golden Lion, and as a thank you the artist sent me to work for the Christian Stein Gallery in Milan, where I met many artists of Arte Povera. It was at the gallery that I met Luciano Fabro and his family, and I went to work for him to help him prepare his first American retrospective at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. 

    With Fabro I translated many of the theoretical writings for that exhibition, so that the English-speaking world could begin to appreciate his art. I then went back to my studies and completed my doctorate at the University of California at Berkeley. At a certain point, on Fabro’s advice, I decided to make another trip to Italy to conduct my research on Medardo Rosso. It took me many decades of research, which I finally collected in a book and in several museum exhibitions at Harvard, Pulitzer Arts Foundation and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, to share Rosso’s international importance with the world. 

    I am now working on an exhibition of Lucio Fontana’s ceramics at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection for 2022. Based on my years of experience as an art historian and my curatorial work, I have thought about the importance of promoting dialogue between art history, art market and art law. So I founded The Hecker Standard®, an approach to conducting due diligence on works of art.   

    2. How would you describe your profession today?

    I think I have many “professions” in the art world, but in every sense things have changed a lot today.

    I see fewer people interested in conducting deep and sustained research to acquire skills in a slow and methodical way.

    There is much more desire for immediate recognition, especially linked to the acquisition of a social media presence, than there was when I was young (there were no social media!), and the market seems to move much faster than before, so today’s art world supports this way of being and working.

    I believe that whether it’s about curating an exhibition that will have a lasting importance in history, writing a book that lasts over time as an approach and content, or doing detailed research on the history of a work of art, time is the factor that is always at stake and it’s the thing I see constantly sacrificed.

    Artistic research, like creating art, cannot be forced or produced only quickly and immediately, or it risks being superficial. And things produced with immediacy must be the result of a certain amount of knowledge. And there has also been a negative effect on the ecological environment, with so much (perceived) need for movement and international travel in the art world for events and conferences.

    3. How has your profession changed over time?

    Research material has become more accessible through archives that have put a lot of information and documents online, but often people do not have the skills or patience to sift through a lot of material and weigh the validity and quality of the information.

    A well thought-out catalogue should take several decades, not several years!

    I think that having been forced to stand still, as happened in the months of COVID19 , will be a useful lesson for everyone and will help us indirectly to rethink the meaning of our professions and our ability to make intellectual and creative cultural contributions to the world that do not involve constant physical movement from one place to another.

    It’s a tough but perhaps effective antidote.

    Intervista Sharon Hecker Professione Arte Art Rights Magazine
    Jenny Holzer’s work in the American Pavilion of the Venice Biennale 

    4. What impact is digital having on your industry?

    The digitized archives, the availability of online images, online exhibitions, the endless and curious connections that can be found by cross-referencing on Google make the work very productive today.

    However, all good art historians and curators know that archives are almost never “complete” and many things are not online. Also, not everything you find online is valid or correct. You have to be more patient than digital.

    During COVID19, many museums added very interesting comments about the works in their collections, and this greatly increased our knowledge of the works of art from various points of view. I find this fantastic, to value the works in public and private collections in an intelligent and serious way.

    5. What would you recommend to a young man who wants to take up your profession?

    I think that, after the COVID19, young people have a great opportunity to rethink certain aspects of today’s art world, to propose new professions that are more ecological and clean, that do not always involve the unrestrained travel and public presence that continue to contribute to the model of endless growth of the art world.

    We need to slow down to make the most of what’s there. That’s why I really like the way to “cure” the art collections through small videos put online by museums right now. Young people have the chance to conceive and contribute to something new, precious and responsible in art. The idea that the COVID19 has cut down pollution should not escape us because the art world also contributes to the problem-we only think about the environmental damage done in Venice during the Biennial periods. Things have become unsustainable, and the younger generation knows it, but instead of fighting against it by bringing new ideas, they continue to join the system that already exists.

    In this period of forced reflection the art world could rethink what went wrong and try to correct some “diseases”.

    François Pinault VS Bernard Arnault

    Pinault vs Aranault Art Rights Magazine
    Pinault vs Aranault Art Rights Magazine

    FRANÇOIS PINAULT VS BERNARD ARNAULT

    The “rivalry” between two great art collectors

    François Pinault and Bernard Arnault, among the two richest men in France, are business rivals, but have a common passion that unites them: that of art collecting. 

    It’s a twenty-year battle that the two billionaires, Pinault, founder of the Kering group and Arnault of LVMH, are fighting, to the tune of millions and tricks, “to conquer the title of prince-patron of modern times”. 

    Bernard Arnault and François Pinault had cordial relations until 1999, when the hostilities that remain to this day began. The trigger of the war of luxury was the acquisition of the Gucci brand by Pinault’s fashion house at the expense of Arnault. 

    Over the years, the clear winner of the luxury war has been Arnault, currently the richest man in France, with an estimated wealth of 92.7 billion dollars, followed by Pinault with a wealth of 32.8 billion dollars.

    And so the “duel” moves onto the art scene, where Pinault, one of the world’s largest private art collectors to date – his collection includes over 3,000 works of art, ranging from the 20th to the 21st century, worth over $1.2 billion.

    In addition to collecting, since 2006, François Pinault’s cultural project has been structured around three axes: museum activities in Venice, initiatives to support artists and the promotion of art history.

    The exhibition activity of the Pinault Collection has found space in two excellent locations in Venice: Palazzo Grassi on the one hand, inaugurated in 2006, and Punta della Dogana on the other, opened to the public in 2009, whose spaces have been restored and set up by Japanese architect Tadao Ando. In addition to the Venetian museums, François Pinault will inaugurate a new exhibition venue at the Bourse de commerce in Paris in spring 2021. 

    For his part, Bernard Arnault has brought together a Corporate Art Collection that represents extraordinary support for his empire based on the marriage of luxury and art. Arnault earned his reputation on the art scene, not only by collecting but also by financing the exhibitions of the great Parisian national museums and then creating his own contemporary art foundation: the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris

    The foundation represents a significant new contribution to Parisian heritage thanks to the building that houses it: an emblem of 21st century architecture by Archistar Frank Gehry

    The exhibition activity of the Fondation Louis Vuitton focused on modern and contemporary art, attracting a number of visitors comparable to that of a large museum: the entrances in 2018 were 1,142,731. Although the headquarters is in Paris, with the program “hors les murs” Louis Vuitton Espaces have also opened in Venice, Beijing, Monaco, Tokyo and Seoul where works from the permanent collection are exhibited.

    A “battle” between two great art collectors that certainly fascinates, but which has also allowed the art public to enjoy great exhibitions such as the 2017 “Treasures from the wreck of unbelievable” with the incredible works of Damien Hirst between Palazzo Grassi and Punta della Dogana or even between 2018-2019 to visit the monographs dedicated to great artists such as Egon Schiele and Jean-Michel Basquiat at the Fondation Louis Vuitton.

    And you, are you ready to discover the two art collections?

    Get the showcases out of museums…Part I – By Roberto Concas

    VIA LE VETRINE DAI MUSEI DI ROBERTO CONCAS ART RIGHTS MAGAZINE
    VIA LE VETRINE DAI MUSEI DI ROBERTO CONCAS ART RIGHTS MAGAZINE

    GET THE SHOWCASES OUT OF MUSEUMS… PART I 

    By Roberto Concas