Read more... Apr 18, 2008
1940), and Richard Tuttle (b ... Of the five wonderful wall drawings by Sol LeWitt, two are currently on view in the East Building, along with two sculptures by Lynda Benglis, and two sculptures by Richard Tuttle. (PNN Online)
MOCA gets part of nationwide windfall Apr 11, 2008
As one of the first 10 recipients in a three-phase gift program to be announced today, MOCA will enrich its collection with pieces by 21 artists, including Richard Tuttle, Lynda Benglis, Dan Graham and Carl Andre ... "We chose MOCA because we knew Jeremy Strick and [curator] Ann Goldstein, and they showed a lot of our works by Richard Tuttle," she said. (Los Angeles Times)
An unexpected gift for Harvard's art collection Apr 11, 2008
Today, Harvard revealed what it will receive from Dorothy and Herbert Vogel: a total of 50 works, including 10 drawings by post-Minimalist Richard Tuttle, an oil painting by Abstract Expressionist Michael Goldberg, and 39 other pieces by contemporary American artists. "This is not the kind of thing that normally happens, when you get a letter from a collector who wants to give you a whole bunch of drawings without your having asked them, wooed them, or begged them," said Helen Molesworth, HUAM's... (Boston Globe)
Toenges, Tollens test viewers' penchant for excessive pigment Jan 13, 2008
Sweetow has scattered Tollens' pieces over several walls to make the eye toy with seeing them now as discrete, now in ensembles, as small works by Richard Tuttle can. Tuttle came to mind more than once as I looked at Tollens' show. (San Francisco Chronicle)
SFMOMA's Neal Benezra balances art and money Sep 7, 2007
Benezra has overseen a remarkable string of special exhibitions, including retrospectives of American artists Brice Marden and Richard Tuttle, a revealing and tremendously popular survey devoted to Marc Chagall, the recent "Picasso and American Art," and the current "Matisse: Painter as Sculptor," which ends Sept. 16 ... Major exhibitions: "Gerhard Richter: Forty Years of Painting" (2002), "Marc Chagall" (2003), "Diane Arbus Revelations" (2003), "Philip Guston Retrospective" (2003), "Chuck... (San Francisco Chronicle)
New Mexico, Oldham style Aug 14, 2007
Today, you'll find residents such as artist Richard Tuttle, actresses Shirley MacLaine and Marsha Mason (who runs her organic lavender farm and skincare line here). Back at the house, Linda makes coffee while being trailed by the couple's happily codependent dogs: Emmy, the Pomeranian-Chihuahua, and Sweetie, a terrier mix with the dubious distinction of having survived both the pound and a rattlesnake bite. (AZCentral -- Home)
Galleries: Daniel Mendel-Black's colorful abstractions at Modernism Aug 12, 2007
The almost built-in allusiveness of the medium favors artists such as Robert Ryman and Richard Tuttle, who work the margins of artistic nullity. It stands in the way of someone such as Mendel-Black, who tries to wring a new, distinctive immediacy from materials and rhetoric infused with references beyond his control. (San Francisco Chronicle)
Light at the Museum Jun 2, 2007
Last year the artist Richard Tuttle and his wife aired complaints in the New York Times about a guesthouse Holl had designed for them. Then last fall Holl exited a Denver courthouse project after a series of disagreements. (Time.com)
More of this story May 5, 2007
In addition to hosting the opening of the spirited group show Poetics of the Handmade, the museum also debuted the expansive solo exhibit The Art of Richard Tuttle on April 22 ... The Art of Richard Tuttle: Organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, The Art of Richard Tuttle features more than 300 works spanning Tuttle's four-decade career. (Los Angeles Downtown News, CA)
Deaf, illiterate and self-trained, and with a perspective all his own Mar 25, 2007
A color piece such as the undated "Untitled (0523.40)" appears to pick up echoes of landscapes by Milton Avery (1893-1965) and little nothings by Richard Tuttle. Encountering things made by Castle, who literally could not explain the intentions behind them, refreshes for us the question of what we hope to see when we look at art. (San Francisco Chronicle)
Quietly Puzzling Jan 18, 2007
REVIEW / An artist who finds comfort (and discomfort) in his own shoes. OK, OK, OK" (1990), as if he wanted to expose the sinew of effort itself, the better to know its value. Even the early pieces, watched through, induce in the viewer a corrosive skepticism toward the most routine acts of will. "A Rose Has No Teeth," the brainchild of Constance Lewallen at BAM, contains a few discoveries, such as the very brief, oddly disorienting film, "Uncovering a Sculpture" (1965). It also revisits much of... (San Francisco Chronicle -- Entertainment)
HYPE STALKER Nov 16, 2006
While both VF and W went heavy with name dropping Kehinde Wiley (famous for gaying-up the hardcore hip-hop homies with extended pinkies and ornate flower arrangements in his paintings) and Kristin Baker (so much sexier than her art, her acrylic spattered skivvies are likely to be framed and sold to the highest bidder sometime soon), W successfully won the Art Issue battle with an incredibly well done DVD (included in the issue) that detailed the making of its main photo spread by Richard Tuttle... (New York Press)
- Adrian Searle picks his Turner prize favourite Oct 3, 2006
Inevitably, one thinks of Beuys's vitrines, of Richard Tuttle and a number of other artists. In these stage-set like interiors, populated with furry pompoms, mounds of clay planted with sticks, scraps of woodshavings, twigs, twisted bits of glowing neon, and odds and ends as seemingly inconsequential as a cherry pit and a single human hair, Warren manages to build up a strange and tense portentousness. (Guardian Unlimited)
Vital art of hanging museum exhibitions Jan 12, 2006
One day several months ago, the artist Richard Tuttle and David Kiehl, a Whitney curator, paced around the museum's third floor planning the artist's retrospective, which opened in November. Tuttle - whose art can seem delicate enough to evaporate under a viewer's gaze - was worried about his work being overpowered by the ceiling and the floor. (International Herald Tribune)
Art | Presenting 'Old Master' Rauschenberg Jan 8, 2006
Richard Tuttle, whose traveling retrospective occupies a floor at the Whitney Museum of American Art, is the anti-Rauschenberg ... The Richard Tuttle retrospective continues at the Whitney Museum of American Art, Madison Avenue at 75th Street, through Feb. 5. (Philly.com -- Entertainment)