Fashion designer Hana Mori dies at 96 – and more art news – ARTnews.com

To receive morning links in your inbox every day of the week, register on our site Breakfast with ARTnews the news.

Newspaper headlines

Hani Mori, Japanese fashion designer that made its way to the upper class of its industry, Died at the age of 96The The New York Times reports. During his career that began in the early 1950s with a workshop in the Shinjuku district of Tokyo and officially ended with a farewell show in Paris in 2004, Mori won fame – and big business – for his Japanese motif patterns with Western brooches. In 1977, she was accepted by Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couturemaking her “the first Asian woman to join the Guild of the World’s Leading Designers in Paris” Robert D McFadden Writes. two years ago , Bernadine Morris observed in times Review of her clothes: “The artwork is for sure.”

Related Articles

View of the exhibition "colored people

The most important functions. Halle Ringle It was Appointed Principal Coordinator subordinate Institute of Contemporary Art In the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Artforum reports. Wrangel is currently Curator of Contemporary Art at Birmingham Museum of Art In Alabama the coordinator is at large MOMA PS1 in New York. Artforum He has news that Lynette Allston exploited To be the next Chairman of the Board of Trustees in Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond. Alston, the first Aboriginal person to lead the board of a major art institution in the United States, is also president and honorary chairperson of the Tribal Council in the United States. The Nottoway Indian Tribe, Virginia.

Summary

Artist interviews. Thyster Gates Chat with Design about him crooked wing in London, and Bibilotti Rest I was announced in CNNtalking about her presentation in Tae Kwon in Hong Kong. She noted that “dropping light from a sink is a common motif in Rist art.” “It’s where we saw the light when we came out of our mums,” she explained.

Architect Santiago Calatrava He paints for three hours every morning in a studio at his residence, before heading to his architecture office in central Zurich. “I find a lot of beauty and inspiration in the natural world,” he said. Here’s a look inside the spaces he calls home. [Architectural Digest]

New ZealandThe government said it was introducing a royalty program that would pay artists or their property five percent when their work is resold. It is scheduled to enter into force by the end of 2024. [Stuff]

The Helen Frankenthaler Foundation‘s Frankenthaler Climate Initiative Provided $3 million in grants to nearly 50 foundations, including Good Foundation in Marfa, Texas, which is working to create carbon-neutral facilities. [The Architect’s Newspaper]

Art is owned by Horst Richelbacherthe late founder of Aveda Institutewill be sold at Revere Auctions in St. Paul, Minnesota. Much includes work before Salvador Dali And the Carlo Bugatti. [Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal]

kicker

Galileo, Galileo, Figaro, Magnifico. The University of Michigan Library He recently came to a heartbreaking conclusion: a manuscript in her collection believed to have been drafted in 1610 by Galileo Galilei forgedThe The New York Times reports. Nick Wildinga forgery expert who teaches at Rare Book School In the University of Virginia , first raised the possibility that it was not the original article, which was confirmed by further research. Still, there is some kind of silver lining. As interim dean of the University of Michigan Libraries, Donna L HaywardHe said, “The forgery is really good. The discovery in some ways makes this item even more amazing.” [NYT]

[ad_2]

Related posts

Leave a Comment