Art in America - March 2016_

(Brent) #1

168 MARCH 2016


ARTWORLD


Art Association, was bestowed upon
Northwestern University professor
Krista hompsonfor her volumeShine:
he Visual Economy of Light in African
Diasporic Aesthetic Practice.
Lia Gangitano, founder of the
Lower East Side nonproit Participant
Inc., has won theWhite Columns/
Shoot the Lobster Award.he $5,000
prize, jointly presented by the galleries
to individuals who “create a context for
artists’ ideas and seek to build com-
munities around them,” also includes a
commissioned artwork by Michel Auder
and Soi Brazzeal.

OBITUARIES
Painter and writerRobert Berlinddied
on Dec. 17, at age 77. Over his 50-year
career, Berlind produced a body of
mostly semiabstract landscapes. From
1977 to 2012, he contributed almost
100 reviews on a far-ranging group of
artists to this magazine. Berlind won
many awards, including the American
Academy and Institute of Arts and
Letters Award in Painting and the
Benjamin Altman Award in Painting
from the National Academy. In 2013, he
received an Arts Writers Grant from the
Andy Warhol Foundation in association
with Creative Capital. At the time of
his death, Berlind was professor emeri-
tus at the School of Art and Design,
Purchase College, State University of
New York.
George Ortman, whose geomet-
ric paintings from the 1950s and ’60s
presaged Minimalism, died on Dec. 16
in Manhattan. He was 89. Ortman was
included in the seminal Jewish Museum
exhibition “Toward a New Abstraction”
(1963), and the Walker Art Center in
Minneapolis mounted a retrospective
of his work in 1965.hat same year, he
was awarded a Guggenheim Fellow-
ship. he artist served as the head of
the graduate department of painting
at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in
Bloomield Hills, Mich., from 1970 to


  1. In 2003 he received a Lee Krasner
    Lifetime Achievement Award.


PEOPLE
Nancy Spector, the longtime deputy direc-
tor and chief curator of the Guggenheim
Museum, New York, succeedsKevin Stay-
tonas deputy director and chief curator of
theBrooklyn Museum. Stayton, who held
the position for 35 years, now serves as the
institution’s deputy director and director of
collections and history.
heArt Gallery of Ontariohas
appointedStephan Jost, director of the
Honolulu Museum of Art, as director and
CEO of the Toronto-based institution.
Frances Morris, director of the Tate
collection of international art, has been
named director ofTate Modern, London.
Outgoing directorChris Derconhas
been hired to the same position at the
Volksbühne theater in Berlin.

Jess Wilcox, program coordinator
at the Brooklyn Museum’s Elizabeth
A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, is
now director of exhibitions atSocrates
Sculpture Parkin Queens.
hePortland Art Museumappointed
Jochen Wierichas curator of American
art. Wierich comes to the museum from
the Cheekwood Botanical Garden and
Museum of Art in Nashville, where he was
chief curator.
hePublic Art Fundhas hired
Emma Enderby, formerly exhibitions
curator at London’s Serpentine Galler-
ies, as associate curator.Andria Hickey,
who previously held the post at the New
York-based nonproit, has been promoted
to curator.

AWA R DS
hePritzker Prize, architecture’s most
prestigious award, was granted to Chil-
ean architectAlejandro Aravena. As

executive director of the Santiago-based
irm Elemental, Aravena has designed
low-cost housing units as well as other
social welfare projects.
English sculptorPhyllida Barlow
has been dubbed aCommander of the
Order of the British Empire(CBE)
for her services to the arts in Queen
Elizabeth’s New Year’s honors.
Creative Capital’s 2016 award
winners include 63 artists working on
46 projects in three categories: literature,
performing arts and emerging ields.
Grantees like artistLiz Glynn, writer
Eileen MylesandKCHUNGradio
receive up to $50,000 each.
heFoundation for Contemporary
Arts, a New York nonproit launched by
John Cage and Robert Rauschenberg
in 1963, presented sound artistJoan
La Barbarawith the annual $50,000
John Cage AwardandJennie C. Jones
with the $40,000Robert Rauschen-
berg Award. An additional 14 grants
of $40,000 each were conferred in the
following categories: visual arts, music/
sound, poetry, dance and performance
art/theater.
PainterLaura Owensis the win-
ner of the 2015Robert De Niro Sr.
Prize. Owens will receive the $25,000
prize, administered by theTribeca
Film Institute, for her innovative work
in the medium.
heMuseum of Photographic Arts
in San Diego announced Swiss artist
Fazal Sheikhas the recipient of the sixth
annualLou Stoumen Prize in Photog-
raphy. he $20,000 award recognizes
a midcareer photographer whose work
exempliies humanistic ideals.he
museum will also acquire 10 works by
Sheikh for its permanent collection.
heCharles Rufus Morey Book
Award, presented by theCollege

Alejandro Aravena.
Photo Cristobal
Palma.

—Artworld is compiled by
Julia Wolkof

Frances Morris.
Courtesy Tate,
London.

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