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The Hollywood Roosevelt. Photo courtesy Hollywood Roosevelt.
Every week, Artnet News brings you Wet Paint, a gossip column of original scoops reported and written by Nate Freeman. If you have a tip, email Nate at [email protected]
Last week,
Wet Paint detailed the demise of
Frieze Los Angeles, undone by permitting issues that restrict retail entities from operating out of residential houses. Not allowed, alas. And so, instead of an ambitious edition of an art fair staged in a series of Modernist houses, we’ll have to wait until the fair takes over the
Beverly Hilton-adjacent grounds in February 2022.
The David Hockney pool at the Roosevelt. Photo courtesy Hollywood Roosevelt.
Frieze Los Angeles at Paramount Pictures Studios in Hollywood. Photograph by Casey Kelbaugh.
Every week, Artnet News brings you Wet Paint, a gossip column of original scoops reported and written by Nate Freeman. If you have a tip, email Nate at [email protected]
After a year in which fairs got cancelled across the country,
Frieze looks like the lone survivor. Come May, the fair company owned by
Hollywood behemoth
Shed, the fancy glass box at
Hudson Yards with a terrifyingly expensive retractable door thing. Rules for entry are super strict vaccine passport or PCR test required for entry but for those who get in, the highlights are voluminous, as the big galleries are not holding back.
Wet Paint: David Zwirner Goes Downtown, Dealer Flips Amy Sherald Work He Pledged to Donate, & More Juicy Art-World Gossip
Which Dia board member banned Succession from filming on site? What mega-collector partied late with the downtown crowd? Read on for answers.
April 9, 2021
David Zwirner at left; at right, the future site of the gallery s Tribeca outpost. Photo courtesy Getty; photo by Nate Freeman.
Every week, Artnet News brings you Wet Paint, a gossip column of original scoops reported and written by Nate Freeman. If you have a tip, email Nate at [email protected]
Regular
Manhattan neighborhood of
Tribeca, a place replete with wall-less lofts upstairs and tall-ceilinged storefronts downstairs. The appeal is obvious: As one neighborhood dealer said the other day, all the kids of the canonical contemporary art collectors on the
Wet Paint: MoMA Director on Defensive Amid Toxic Leon Black Fallout, Ridgewood Gallerist Takes Manhattan, & More Art-World Gossip
What gallerist-actress couple was dining at a hip NoHo spot? What a-lister jetted to Brussels for a museum show? Read on for answers.
Glenn Lowry, director of MoMA. (Photo by John Lamparski/WireImage)
Every week, Artnet News brings you Wet Paint, a gossip column of original scoops reported and written by Nate Freeman. If you have a tip, email Nate at [email protected]
Museum of Modern Art reached a fever pitch, and since then, the museum’s leadership has struggled to handle the situation. At first, the board dragged its feet on whether to let Black retain his grip on the chairmanship or leave amid scandal. (In case you missed it, the scandal is that Black, the billionaire financier, gave hundreds of millions of dollars to sex offender