RECENT ART SALES BREAK RECORDS ACROSS THE BOARD

In the last month, records in art sales have been broken on multiple fronts. Pop artist extraordinaire Roy Lichtenstein’s Sleeping Girl from 1964broke a previous record of $43.2 million set by the artist at Christie’s in November by selling for $44.8 million at Sotheby’s - Christie, notably, also just sold Rothko’s Orange, Red, Yellow for the highest price of any Post-War piece at $86.9 million. But the most significant news of all in this crazy month of art sales was the transfer of Edvard Munch’s game-changing The Scream painting, which became the most expensive work of art in the world at $119,922,500. Arguably the second-most recognizable work of art in the world, the painting surpassed Picasso’s work and Giacometti’s sculpture - the only sculpture in the world worth more than $100 million - for the title. Yahoo! reports:

Besides “The Scream” and Picasso’s “Nude, Green Leaves, and Bust,” only two other works have sold for more than $100 million at auction. Those are Picasso’s “Boy With a Pipe (The Young Apprentice)” for $104.1 million in 2004 and Alberto Giacometti’s “Walking Man I” for $104.3 million in 2010.

INTERVIEW+ STEVE AOKI FT. KID CUDI & TRAVIS BARKER - CUDI THE KID VIDEO

It’s been ten years since Steve Aoki started down the road that led him intense success in the music business, a seat high atop the pop dubstep elite, and a friend list that stretches from Weezer to Weezy. The music video for “Cudi the Kid,” a track off his debut album Wonderland, which is in stores now, brings viewers back to their own childhoods, but in a surreal and visually stunning way. 

Check out this wonderful interview about the Wonderland development process, as well. Great read.

BEHIND THE SCENES OF “BAD GIRLS” - INTERVIEW WITH M.I.A. AND DIRECTOR ROMAIN GAVRAS

After an awe-inspiring video from M.I.A. made waves by featuring some viral video superstars doing crazy stunts in her video for “Bad Girls,” M.I.A. goes behind the scenes and discusses what the creative decisions that made up her much-hyped music video and what it meant to her. Director Romain Gavras gives a look into the initial concerns he had with exploiting Saudi drifting and the idea’s origins while on the set of “Born Free.”

M.I.A. and Gavras give hints of another future collab, and with such a huge success under the belts of the visionary director and controversial hipster hop star’s belts, let’s pray that this comes to fruition.

(Source: hypebeast.com)

TWELVE HEARTS X GREGORY SIFF TSHIRT
After a wonderful opening at Siren Studios in Hollywood last night, Brooklyn-born artist Gregory Siff is gaining a bunch of new fans. His departure from geometric abstraction in a street art style and into a conceptual amalgam of faces mixed with words in a stream of consciousness creates a beautiful Pop Art look, especially with his obsessive use of primary colors. You can see some of his work in the promo video for his show, below.

In a collaboration with the shirt brand Twelve Bar, Siff takes their signature heart and re-imagines it with Siff’s unique “faces” artwork, with the phrase “There & Back” between the shoulders. If you missed the event, which was one of two places you could buy the shirt, you can check out the online store to pick it up now.

TWELVE HEARTS X GREGORY SIFF TSHIRT

After a wonderful opening at Siren Studios in Hollywood last night, Brooklyn-born artist Gregory Siff is gaining a bunch of new fans. His departure from geometric abstraction in a street art style and into a conceptual amalgam of faces mixed with words in a stream of consciousness creates a beautiful Pop Art look, especially with his obsessive use of primary colors. You can see some of his work in the promo video for his show, below.

In a collaboration with the shirt brand Twelve Bar, Siff takes their signature heart and re-imagines it with Siff’s unique “faces” artwork, with the phrase “There & Back” between the shoulders. If you missed the event, which was one of two places you could buy the shirt, you can check out the online store to pick it up now.

THE AVANT/GARDE DIARIES: KEEP FEEDING THE MACHINE

One of the most powerful tools at an artist’s disposal is the inspiration provided by those other creative forces that he respects. A great thing about the lives of 21st century artists is that we have the opportunity to share our insights and the insights of others through video on the internet.

David Gensler of the KDU/SVSV and artist Kostas Seremetis talk candidly in the AVANT/GARDE DIARIES about how that same blessing can be a curse, and how the visibility of the arts and transparency of the artists behind them have slowed the process of achieving greatness down to a level artists like Picasso and Pollock never had to deal with in their Twitter-less age.

It’s a great commentary on moving from inspiration, to appropriation, and up to fashion, and it will give you a little more juice if you’re running low on creativity today.

(Source: hypebeast.com)