Oscar Niemeyer Back in the Hospital

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While it was sad to learn that Oscar Niemeyer wasn’t going to be able to make it to Brasilia’s 50th anniversary, it was probably better that he did decide not to make the trip. The 102 year-old starchitect has once again been hospitalized, currently battling a urinary tract infection. Although “doctors do not feel this is a serious illness” and he’s reported to be stable and otherwise healthy, this stay comes just six months after Niemeyer had been forced to spend nearly a month in the hospital following two surgeries, one unplanned. As such, he’ll be staying on as a patient for a few days, just to make sure he pulls through without any complications.

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Ambra Medda to leave Design Miami/

Design Miami/ director Ambra Medda will leave the organisation in June, five years after co-founding the limited-edition design fair. (more…)

JFK Grave Architect John Carl Warnecke Passes Away

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Some sad news released over the weekend: architect John Carl Warnecke has passed away. While you might not immediately recognize his name, you’re likely very familiar with his work, from the San Francisco and Boston airports to numerous university buildings, like Georgetown’s Lauinger Library. By the 70s, Warnecke’s firm was perhaps the largest architecture firm in the country. Arguably his most famous piece of work was the John F. Kennedy grave site, a project he was given by the former president’s family after having befriended Kennedy in college and had later worked in designing government buildings. Later, Warnecke would have a short relationship with Jacqueline Kennedy, the LA Times reports in their obituary. The Washington Post‘s coverage is also well worth the read.

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Brasilia Makes Oscar Neimeyer Feel Gloomy Again

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Oscar Niemeyer is sad again. And when our favorite grouchy starchitect (“Turning 102 is crap!“) is sad, it makes us sad. Following his battle and subsequent defeat to finish his massive city planning effort in Brasilia, Brazil last year, the city has begun it’s 50th anniversary, leaving Niemeyer to once again envision what could have been. He blames too rapid growth fueled by years of greedy capitalists as the culprit for not maintaining a growing city that he’d planned for under a million people but now exceeds that number several times over. But while he complains, one assumes that he’d still like to attend the celebration of his city; which is the second big tragedy of the hour:

His fear of flying, and the impossibility of him making the 1,400 kilometer (840-mile) car journey to the capital, meant he would watch the celebrations on television, he told AFP in an e-mail interview.

He said staying home would also allow him the time to work on his next jobs, including designing a football stadium “of a rather surprising form.”

Oscar Niemeyer, we love you.

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Pulitzer Prize Winning Photographer Nabs Bank Robber

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Proof that you don’t mess with Pulitzer Prize winners, the San Francisco Chronicle proudly reports that one of their former, Prize-winning photographers, Kim Komenich, single-handedly broke up a bank robbery this week. Komenich won the Pulitzer back in 1987, shooting a series about the revolution in the Philippines (though for the Examiner, not the Chronicle). He had also covered stories in El Salvador and Iraq, the paper reports, among a number of other places at their most dangerous, which helps explain how he decided to take the law into his own hands when he suddenly found himself in the middle of a bank job:

When Fernandes reached into his pocket, Komenich said he thought to himself, “If anything bad is going to happen, it’s going to happen next.”

So Komenich walked over to the suspect. “I clamped him down in a bear hug,” said Komenich, who stands 6 feet 2 inches tall and weighs 260 pounds. Fernandes is about 5-foot-10 “and maybe 180,” Komenich said.

Komenich said he wasn’t sure, but that he may have lifted the suspect off the ground for a moment. “That sort of established that I had him,” he said. Fernandes didn’t resist, he said.

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Jeffrey Deitch Says Goodbye to New York via Podcast

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We’re almost halfway through April already and that means May is right around the corner, and if things go as planned, June will be next. As such, art dealer Jeffrey Deitch is down to his final few days before showing some Shepard Fairey, hanging up (or passing along) his popular Deitch Projects gallery, and heading west to take over as the head of Los Angeles’ Museum of Contemporary Art. Before he says farewell, and likely after a lot more goodbye articles, he recently spoke at an event at apexart, talking to the critic Carlo McCormick for the Chicago group Bad at Sports. Art Info was on hand for the interview, wherein Deitch looked back at his career in New York and gave a couple of hints at what he’d be doing when he gets to the MCA: “He confirmed that he’ll present an exhibition of photography by Dennis Hopper to be called ‘Art Is Life,’ a title that Hopper himself proposed.” Read the whole story for a nice background on Deitch-thus-far and then pop over to Bad at Sports to listen/download the whole conversation.

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Judge Rules Against Shepard Fairey, Finances and Co-Conspirators Requested

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Artist Shepard Fairey spent a portion of the start of this year on something of a mea culpa tour, this after his admitting to having been less than honest during an investigation into copyright infringement surrounding his now iconic Obama “Hope” poster. But while he’s said he’s sorry any number of times, the strong arm of the law doesn’t let up with a few months of apologies. A judge has ruled in favor of the Associated Press, who had requested information on who might have helped Fairey in destroying evidence after the news organization had sued the artist for directly copying one of their photographers photos of the now-President in the aforementioned poster. Once Fairey fessed up to having lied about his inspiration being merely a composite of a number of photos, criminal charges were then added. And now with this latest ruling, which also opens the doors to allow a search of “financial records related to Internet sales of the Obama poster” it looks like Fairey’s earlier predictions about the case will be correct, that he’s going to owe some big money and might be in some serious trouble.

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The Selby is in Your Place

by Laura Neilson

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If a picture tells a thousand words, then consider Todd Selby a visual raconteur. Since the summer of 2008, the Orange County, CA-born, NYC-based photographer has shown an expanding and eclectic cast of creative characters—artists, musicians, writers, designers and the like—in their private homes on his website The Selby, an online Architectural Digest for the hipster set.

With a penchant for exploring real-life spaces and the personalities behind them, Selby chooses subjects whose domestic habitats are no less colorful than those of fantastic fiction. From funky, cluttered studios in New York’s Lower East Side to elegant and polished Parisian apartments and rustic hideaways near the beach, Selby’s project has made him a houseguest in residences around the world.

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His new book, “The Selby Is in Your Place,” is a lush, 250-plus page collection featuring 33 of these enviable abodes—most of which have never been shown on the site before. Through Selby’s vivid lens, subjects like Karl Lagerfeld, Purple Magazine’s Olivier Zahm, model Erin Wasson, and Simon Doonan and Jonathan Adler offer voyeurs spectacular peeks into their fashionable homes, where the relationship between personal style and interior space is most strikingly reflected.

Here, Selby talks to us about putting the book together, his own aesthetic preferences, and his dream shoot.

How did you choose what to include in the book?

It was hard to choose what shoots to put in and it took a lot of planning with my editor. I knew that I wanted most of the shoots in the book to be never before seen, so that meant that I needed to do a lot of shoots exclusively for the book. I did a lot of traveling and a lot of shooting, and kept my favorite shoots just for the book. And then after, we looked over those shoots and tried to include some of my favorites that had already run on TheSelby.com.

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Is there a particular aesthetic that you tend to gravitate towards?

I tend to not like minimalists. I like maximalists and you can definitely see that preference in the people I chose to be in the book.

In Lesley Arfin’s intro, she describes a kind of envy we all tend to feel towards other people’s lives. Did envy come into play when choosing your subject’s homes?

No, not really. I tend to pick my subjects based on inspiration rather than a sense of personal envy.

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When you go into a subject’s home, do you do it solo?

Almost all of the shoots were done by me solo style. The only time I bring someone is if is the space is very challenging in terms of lighting, or if it is part of an editorial assignment, like Helena [Christensen] for Vogue Paris.

For a while it felt like “nesting” had negative connotations—becoming boring, a homebody, domesticated, etc.—but now that association seems to have shifted.

Staying in is the new going out.

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What’s your favorite room in a house?

The living room. It has no real purpose and it’s just there for show, usually. Therefore its purpose is often more artistic, than purely functional.

Since Karl Lagerfeld’s a photographer also, did he dictate much of the shoot?

Karl is the man. He was 100% supportive of me and my project. Being a photographer himself was part of the reason perhaps that he was willing to take the time and open his home to my project.

Whose home do you wish you could shoot, but can’t?

Good question, I like this. I would shoot Napoleon in his island prison of Elba the night before he escaped.

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If you could swipe any piece of artwork or furniture from one of your subject’s homes for yourself, what would it be?

The Neistat Brothers‘ “Juicy” couch of course.

To get the book, visit Powell’s or Amazon.


Recovered After Beatings, Ai Weiwei Makes it to Germany and Pops Up on CNN

Back in early October, outspoken artist, activist, and co-designer of Beijing’s Bird’s Nest stadium, Ai Weiwei, had quieted down a bit, due to the surgery he had to undergo for a cerebral hemorrhage likely caused by a beating he received from Chinese officials. While the injury, and government pressure, a show at the DKM Museum in Duisburg, called “Barely Something.” He also popped up on CNN in the middle of last week, talking to host Chistiane Amanpour about China’s slow crawl toward opening up the internet to things like Twitter and YouTube. Video after the jump.

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Trump Tower Architect, Der Scutt, Passes Away

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You’ve heard that old adage that death comes in threes? Following the recent passing of legendary skyscraper architects Frank Williams and Bruce Graham, that’s apparently a continuing sad trend, with the news that Der Scutt has died. A protege of Paul Rudolph‘s, Scutt was responsible for designing such iconic New York buildings as Trump Tower and 100 United Nations Plaza Tower. Fred Bernstein pens this great obituary in the NY Times, explaining Scutt’s legacy. A full biography can be found on his firm’s site. Here’s a bit about his working on Trump Tower:

Mr. Scutt’s buildings, with their reflective facades, could be off-putting to some. But his son said that when Mr. Scutt began working on the Grand Hyatt, on East 42nd Street, “Trump had to do something brave and bold to resurrect the area.”

Indeed, in his 1987 book “Trump: The Art of the Deal,” [Donald Trump] remembered his first meeting with Mr. Scutt, at the restaurant Maxwell’s Plum, on a Friday night. There Mr. Trump described his plans to remake the “dingy” Commodore Hotel. “It was obvious to me that Der understood what I had in mind,” Mr. Trump wrote.

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