Vis pritrūkstate idėjų? 4 paprastos strategijos, sužadinsiančios prisnūdusį kūrybiškumą lrt.lt - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lrt.lt Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
South Korean Art Organizations Are Scrambling to Keep the Heirs of the Samsung Art Collection From Selling It Off to International Buyers
The heirs are considering selling the collection to pay off their $9.7 billion tax bill.
Lee Kun-Hee, former Samsung Group Chairman. Photo: Seung-il Ryu/NurPhoto via Getty Images.
South Korea’s cultural leaders are worried about the fate of the multibillion-dollar art collection amassed by the late head of the Samsung empire. The heirs to the fortune are considering selling off prized artworks to pay a mountainous inheritance tax, rather than keeping the collection in the country as many had expected. Now, Korean arts organizations are all calling on the state to step in.
Random International, Rain Room, Sharjah. Courtesy the artists and Sharjah Art Foundation.
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, March 4.
NEED-TO-READ
W Photos – Cultural critic Naomi Fry pens a defense of Teller’s recent photo shoot, which quickly became a laughingstock on Twitter. According to Fry, the casual depictions of celebrities including Riz Ahmed and Jonathan Majors are not about disrespecting the sitters, but instead about being “disrespectful to the very notion of stardom.” What’s more, Teller has always been on the edge in these pictures, he reminds us that “being just a little bit ugly is cool.” (
10 new spring TV shows to watch, including Genius: Aretha, Debris and Hemingway
FacebookTwitterEmail
Aretha Franklin (Cynthia Erivo) rehearses in the studio in a scene from “Genius: Aretha,” one of the 10 most promising new TV shows of the spring.Richard DuCree /National Geographic
As temperatures warm and spring approaches, it’s becoming abundantly clear that women are finding more fertile ground to blossom on television and streaming services.
Female leads are blooming in new series in March, April and May, with more women taking major roles behind the camera, too.
For example: National Geographic Channel’s “Genius” series, which has drawn acclaim for its “Einstein” and “Picasso” dramas, introduces its first female subject, Aretha Franklin, in March.