Menorah be the one

Menorah be the one
Menorah be the one. artbytonybulmer.com

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

$42m for a Lichtenstein? Ohhh…Alright…


A Roy Lichtenstein painting previously owned by billionaire money bags and sharp elbowed art fancier Steve Wynn made  $42.6 million at Christie’s International today.


Titled “Ohhh ... Alright...’’ (1964) this classic Lichtenstein represents Pop Art iconography at it’s most alluring.

The  picture topped out the current $16.3 million auction record for the artist. 



The Christies New York sale of contemporary and post-war  in  art achieved $272.8 million in sales. confirming a growing belief that the art market is heading out of the recession.

Warhol, Liz Taylor and a drunken night out with Hugh Grant





Actor and Hollywood boulevardier Hugh Grant is just one of the many men who have fallen before the enchanted countenance of Elizabeth Taylor. Grant now confesses he was drunk at the time. It was a night on the tiles that cost the floppy fringed star $3.3 million dollars. The Elizabeth Taylor in question was a 1962 Warhol print.

Grant ordered an underling to bid for the painting at an auction in New York, after indulging in a two-day drinking spree—never expecting the bid to succeed. When he sobered up, he discovered to his horror that he was the proud owner of a multi million dollar painting.

Grant sold the painting in 2007 for the vastly inflated price of $20.8 million. ‘I slightly regret selling it now, even though it made me rich.’ confessed the actor with characteristic sheepishness. 


Warhol is a master of the ironic flourish and the commoditization of popular culture, however Juicelings may notice in the  above painting a more than passing resemblance to Batman nemesis. The Joker. Intention or happen-chance? Discuss.


$35 Million for a Coke?

Rumors of inflationary pressures are hitting the US this week, but at $35 million dollars there is only one kind of Coke bottle we can be  talking about—one by Andy Warhol. Sotheby’s New York made the sale of the monochrome artwork tuesday. The sale was some what overshadowed the previous day by another piece of Warhol high campery: a 1962 Elizabeth Taylor repeat print, who’s grainy countenance fetched an astonishing $63 million at auction house Phillips de Pury & Co.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Jerry Robinson Legend



There has been much talk in Creative Juicings lately over the price of art.  If it is return on investment  you are looking for, it is perhaps the Golden age of Comics you should be looking to. Just as the work of  artists such as Titian and Picasso define the spirit of the age in which they lived. The graphic art of the illustrator and the comic book artist defines our age.  Perhaps galleries who are wringing their hands over high prices of art they cannot afford should talk to comic book legend Jerry Robinson while his work is still in their price range.


Jerry Robinson, the creator of Batman’s villainous nemesis the Joker is auctioning off two of the world’s most valuable pieces of comic art for up to $1.4 million. Robinson was the driving force behind such comic book legends as Detective Comics, Batman and  Superman. He created his ‘Double-guns Joker’ cover for Detective Comics No. 69  at age 18.  Now 88 he is reluctantly selling the artwork through the online auctioneer ComicConnect.com. The  1942 cover artwork is considered to be one of the greatest ‘Golden Age’ superhero covers of all time. Most original comic art work from this era no longer exists as publishers had no will or facility to store such artworks and they destroyed it as a matter of course. The Joker cover, one of Robinson’s first, is the only image to depict the Joker using guns. It survived because Robinson made a personal request to the printer for its return.

A student of literature at Columbia University, Robinson had the idea of creating a Shakespearean super villain  with maniacal tendencies and warped sense of humor. His brother and mother were champion bridge players, watching them play gave him the idea of creating The Joker. Subsequent to creating this cover he realized it was the Jokers twisted personality, rather than guns that would be his defining mark of villainy.

The record for a piece of original comic art, attained this year, is $380,000 (£235,000) for a 1955 Weird Science cover by Frank Frazetta. The record for a comic book is $1.5 million (£927,000), set last year, for a 1938 premier issue of Action Comics featuring Superman .

Robinson, who is the subject of a new biography,‘Jerry Robinson: Ambassador of Comics,’ is the only creator from the 1940’s  golden age of comics  still alive.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

The man who named Cubism & Fauvism

Henri Matisse The Roofs of Collioure (1905)
The Hermitage, St Petersburg

Influential French art critic Louis Vauxcelles (1870-1945) coined the terms  Fauvism (1905), and Cubism (1908).

The Fauves included  Matisse, Derain, Marquet, Rouault, Vlaminck, and the Dutch-born artist van Dongen. After visiting the Fauves influential first show at the Salon d'Automne 1905 Vauxcelles is reported to have pointed to a Renaissance-like sculpture in the middle of the same gallery and exclaimed: ‘Donatello au milieu des fauves!’ (‘Donatello among the wild beasts’). His comment was printed on 17 October 1905 in daily newspaper Gil Blas, and passed into popular usage.

What is not as widely known is that  Henri Rousseau’s large jungle scene The Hungry Lion Throws Itself on the Antelope was exhibited near Matisse’s work and may have had an influence on the pejorative used.

Vauxcelles first used the term Cubism in 1908 after seeing a picture by Braque. He described Braque’s work as bizarre cubiques and said, “M. Braque scorns form and reduces everything, sites, figures and houses, to geometric schemas and cubes.”

The term Cubism, quickly gained  use, although the two creators of the new style, Braque and Picasso, did not initially adopt it.