Munich's Galerie Kronsbein to Stage Banksy's First Solo Show in Germany

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Munich's Galerie Kronsbein to Stage Banksy's First Solo Show in Germany artnet artnet Auctions English Market Art World People Videos Topics Search ART WORLD Munich's Galerie Kronsbein to Stage Banksy's First Solo Show in Germany Henri Neuendorf, Tuesday, March 29, 2016 SHARE Banksy Kate, London (2005). Photo: Courtesy of Galerie Kronsbein, Munich. Presenting the first comprehensive survey of Banksy's work in Germany, Munich-based Galerie Kronsbein's upcoming exhibition "Banksy King of Urban Art" will showcase originals and editions by the mysterious and celebrated British street artist. Opening on April 14 and gathering over 40 works, the show will include highlights such as Banksy's Gangster Rat and Paparazzi Rat stencils, as well as his homage to the great street art pioneer Keith Haring. Also on view will be two original versions of Toxic Mary, which depict the Virgin Mary feeding baby Jesus with toxic fluid. Other well-known originals such as Balloon Girl and Heavy Weapons will also be on display at the exhibition in southern Germany, and visitors and collectors can also look forward to seeing Banksy's portrait of super model Kate Moss à la Andy Warhol in the flesh. Banksy Girl With Balloon (2004). Photo: Courtesy of Galerie Kronsbein, Munich. “Banksy is the Andy Warhol of urban art," gallery director Sarah Kronsbein told artnet News in a telephone conversation. “He's responsible for establishing urban art in art history. “We want to show a cross-section of his work, and show key pieces that guide the viewer through Banksy's world," she added. The Munich exhibition will be of particular interest to German collectors and street art enthusiasts, since Germany's last remaining Banksy mural was destroyed by vandals in Hamburg in February 2015. Banksy has built a reputation for his witty and ironic comments on social injustice and contemporary society, completing a seemingly seamless transition from illegal graffiti vandal to contemporary art darling. Banksy, Paparazzi Rat. Photo: Courtesy of Galerie Kronsbein, Munich. Indeed, nobody straddles art market legitimacy and street credibility quite like the anonymous British artist. Banksy carefully maintains his street credibility by tirelessly pursuing his original guerrilla vocation. Recent examples include Banksy's stencil-based comments on the ongoing European refugee crisis, which popped up in “the jungle" refugee camp in Calais, northern France, and in London. Meanwhile, the air of mystery around the artist only increases his market price. Rare original works can fetch up to six figures at auction, and now German collectors have the opportunity to get their hands on his works in their home country. "Banksy King of Urban Art" will be on view at Galerie Kronsbein, Munich, from April 14-September 10, 2016. Follow artnet News on Facebook. #artists #exhibitions #galleries #painting Henri Neuendorf Related Stories PEOPLE Mystery Solved? Scientists Reveal Banksy's Identity March 4, 2016 MARKET Banksy Gives Artwork to Teenager on Train January 12, 2015 ART WORLD Banksy Gives Controversial Mobile Lovers Artwork to Bristol Youth Club May 8, 2014 Newsletter Signup ENTER YOUR EMAIL SUBMIT ART WORLD Untitled Art Fair to Expand Its Reach to San Francisco In 2017 Henri Neuendorf, Tuesday, March 29, 2016 SHARE San Francisco's Pier 70. Photo: Courtesy of Pier 70 Partners via Untitled Art Fair Untitled Art Fair has announced that it is expanding to San Francisco. The fair's inaugural edition is scheduled to take place from January 12—15, 2017. Organizers have already earmarked a site at the city's Pier 70 in the arts district of the city's Dogpatch neighborhood; the area is currently home to 1275 Minnesota Street, which will host Anton Kern and Andrew Kreps' pop- up gallery space this May. According to ArtInfo, Untitled San Francisco will operate on a smaller, more intimate scale than its Miami-based fair, at least in the beginning. The first edition is set to include 40 to 60 participants in order to focus on quality and to test the interest of a market that is still emerging. Three art fairs are now vying for the tech-wealthy Bay Area collectors. Photo: Wikimedia Commons According to a statement from Untitled, the San Francisco-based fair will be a “long-term platform" that plans to "contribute to and grow alongside of the pioneering community in the Bay Area." This community, the press release states, involves "health care, bio-tech, high-tech, real estate, finance, venture capital and NGOs." The Bay Area is viewed as a market with strong potential for growth due to the high concentration of wealth in nearby Silicon Valley, and Untitled is the latest art organization seeking to be the latest fish in the pond. Pace Gallery already has spaces in Palo Alto and Menlo Park, while dealers Larry Gagosian and John Berggruen recently announced that they will open new branches across from the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Untitled Art Fair has operated in Miami since 2012. Photo: Untitled Art Fair via Facebook Untitled faces competition from rival fairs Art Silicon Valley, and Silicon Valley Contemporary, but fair organizers remain confident. Meanwhile, a number of institutions are adding to the Bay Area's appeal: the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's extensive $610 million redevelopment will be revealed May 14, while the Berkeley Art Museum and the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco—which recently announced Max Hollein as its new director—remain on the radar. Follow artnet News on Facebook. #art fairs Henri Neuendorf Related Stories ART WORLD Larry Gagosian and John Berggruen To Open Adjacent Galleries in San Francisco March 10, 2016 ART WORLD Will Art Silicon Valley Transform the Art World? October 8, 2014 MARKET Silicon Valley Contemporary Art Fair Hopes the Tech Sector Will Byte April 7, 2014 Newsletter Signup ENTER YOUR EMAIL SUBMIT ART WORLD Expert Says Dilapidated Banksy Mural 'Spy Booth' is Worthless Henri Neuendorf, Monday, March 28, 2016 SHARE https://instagram.com/p/7P1MxLg5q0/?tagged=spybooth The art dealer and Banksy specialist Robin Barton, who previously valued the anonymous British street artist's mural Spy Booth (2014) at £1 million ($1.4 million) has lowered its valuation to zero. The mural, picturing trench coat-wearing detectives holding listening devices near a BT telephone box, appeared in Cheltenham, England in April 2014. The artwork—located near the UK intelligence headquarters GCHQ—popped up in the wake of whistleblower Edward Snowden's revelations of the NSA's controversial surveillance tactics. After Banksy confirmed that it was in fact his handiwork, reports emerged that the property's landlord had sold the piece. (The owner which was subsequently denied such allegations). Local residents banded together to save the mural for the community, with the local council eventually stepping in to block its removal on the basis of the home having Grade II listed status. Banksy's Spy Booth mural turned up in the English town of Cheltenham in April 2014. Photo: Wikimedia Commons In a report commissioned by the local council and and property owner, Barton wrote, "It is my professional opinion that the dilapidated state of the mural and the listed status of the flank wall that the work has been applied to has resulted in the work having no cable commercial value." He explained, "This assessment is based on more than ten years of experience working with and successfully marketing similarly difficult works by this artist." Since appearing two years ago the mural has been vandalized not once, but twice, and has been punctured with large holes. Located close to UK's intelligence headquarters GCHQ, the mural criticized international surveillance tactics. Photo: Wikimedia Commons The owner David Possee told the Mirror that plans are in place to restore the property and the mural. “The first is to renovate the property myself and the second is to offer it to local businessman Hekmat Kaveh, who has made me an offer to purchase the property and restore the Banksy for the benefit of Cheltenham." The property was put on the market in January for £210,000 ($306,000) after Possee claimed that the mural "caused me signifiant financial problems," because the artwork prevented him from conducting necessary repairs to the house. In the sale listing the property is advertised as "a rare opportunity to acquire a Grade II listed, Victorian, three bedroom end terrace property with a genuine 'Banksy' on the gable wall." However it also states that the house will need a "comprehensive schedule of refurbishment." Follow artnet News on Facebook. #artists #painting Henri Neuendorf Related Stories ART WORLD Buy a Home with Banksy's Iconic 'Spy Booth' Mural for Just $300,000 January 8, 2016 ART WORLD Banksy's Spy Booth Mural Punctured August 12, 2014 ART WORLD Vandals Completely Deface Banksy's Spy Booth August 1, 2014 Newsletter Signup ENTER YOUR EMAIL SUBMIT artnet artnet Auctions Contact Us Advertise Press Releases Terms Privacy Cookies About artnet Magazine Archive: English (US) Deutsch Francais facebooktwittergoogle+pinterestinstagramtumblrlinkedinyoutubeweibo ©2016 Artnet Worldwide Corporation. All Rights Reserved. .
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