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Hauser and Wirth Is Hiring a Full-Time Head of Environmental Sustainability as Part of a Bid to Halve Carbon Emissions by 2030

Hauser & Wirth, Durslade Farm, Bruton, Somerset. Photo: Jason Ingram. After an unprecedented pause in business-as-usual caused the art industry to grind to a halt, the mega-gallery Hauser and Wirth has decided that it will not, in fact, be returning to its old ways, at least when it comes to carbon emissions. The international gallery, with hubs in New York, Hong Kong, and London, to name a few, is overhauling aspects of its business to meet ambitious new sustainability benchmarks. It will align itself with the goals set in the 2016 Paris Agreement, a historic decision signed by nearly 200 nations pledging to help hold the global temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Art Industry News: Damien Hirst Confesses He First Wanted to Put Pickled People in His Vitrines Before Going With Sheep + Other News

Art Industry News: Damien Hirst Confesses He First Wanted to Put Pickled People in His Vitrines Before Going With Sheep + Other News Plus, Art Dubai shrinks its exhibitor list and changes dates, and MoMA gets a treasure trove of photographs by female artists. Damien Hirst. ©Damien Hirst and Science Ltd. Art Industry News is a daily digest of the most consequential developments coming out of the art world and art market. Here’s what you need to know on this Thursday, February 18. NEED-TO-READ New Arts Hub Near Marfa Takes Shape – Marfa Invitational is a new year-round arts and cultural foundation planned for the tiny Texas enclave that Donald Judd once called home. Artist Michael Phelan hopes to complete the project, which includes a pair of exhibition halls on a five-acre plot of land, this fall. He previously founded an art fair of the same name. (

Hauser and Wirth s Menorcan quarantine island will open in July with Mark Bradford show

New Cuban rum Eminente aims to show new side to island

La Paz to Lima: Inca culture, adrenalin thrills and dressing up as Spider-Man

La Paz to Lima: Inca culture, adrenalin thrills and dressing up as Spider-Man 22nd Oct 2013 1:21am | By Andrew Westbrook Travelling from Bolivia s capital to Peru s counterpart in two weeks, via Lake Titicaca, Cusco and Huacachina. Standing on a soft-footed pyramid of sand, I gawp at the scene that surrounds me. On all sides, like an undulating mountain range, the seemingly endless landscape of sand dunes rises from the desert. In the near distance lies the tiny Peruvian town of Huacachina, a postcard-perfect bubble of exotic greenery centred on a desert lagoon. Squinting through the heat haze, I spot people paddling their way across the lake, surreally crossing one of the world’s driest deserts in a rickety old pedalo. To say it’s beautiful simply doesn’t do justice to this stop on the South American Gringo Trail, and indeed, whoever first coined the phrase ‘an oasis of calm’ was, I’d like to think, inspired in some way by this hidden enclave of

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