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MoMA Appoints Marie-Josée Kravis Chairperson To Replace Tarnished Leon Black The Museum of Modern Art has replaced their Chairman Leon Black, a private equity investor and owner of Phaidon Press, with Marie-Josée Kravis, a highly regarded Canadian philanthropist and collector. The museum felt the long-running saga was too much of a distraction for the institution, which hopes to get back to business after the COVID hiatus. Black is best known as the co-founder and former CEO of private equity firm Apollo Global Management. He stepped down as CEO and chairman in 2021 after revelations that he paid Jeffrey Epstein $158 million for family office tax-related advice over the period from 2012 to 2017. Black is also the owner of a version of Edvard Munch’s The Scream, which realized $119.9 million, the highest price ever paid for a work of art at auction at that time. ....
Apollo. Preview and subscribe here. These days there are few places quieter than the City of London. Recently, on a sunny February afternoon, I decided to take a bike ride through the financial district, making the most of the empty roads and cobbled back streets of this ghost town. At one point, I had to hit the brakes, startled to encounter another person standing at a junction where I was about to turn. Once I’d stopped, I realised it was not a human figure but a sculpture: Antony Gormley’s Resolution (2005). Up close (and if the sun is not in your eyes), the cast-iron sculpture – a shade over six feet tall – is quite clearly not an actual person but a tower of cuboid blocks, stacked to follow the contours of an upright body and vaguely reminiscent of the pixels that appear when you zoom in too close on an image on your phone or computer. Its hard-edged feet are fixed firmly to the ground, on the curb on the corner of Shoe Lane and St Bride Street. ....
Tuesday 6 April 2021 After a year of postponements, cancellations and online streaming, the UK’s arts and cultural sector is looking to stage a cautious but determined real-life comeback this summer with outdoor, socially distanced indoor and digital events designed to lift our battered spirits, let our imaginations soar and travel without having to get on a plane. Flexibility is the name of the game for cultural organisers up and down the country. Fargo village in Coventry COVENTRY First up in the nation’s arts reawakening is Coventry’s year as UK City of Culture, which kicks off on Saturday May 15 with a festival of street art and artist-designed shop windows and launches with an even bigger bang on June 5 with ....