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25 July '10 by the editors

The jury selecting the 20 videos for YouTube Play, the video biennial in October that is the brainchild of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and YouTube, has been finally been chosen. And it includes recognizable names in the fields of art, music, film and video.

Last month the Guggenheim and YouTube announced they would inaugurate the event, in collaboration with HP and Intel and invited members of the public — whether they consider themselves artists or not — to post videos made within the last two years on a special Web site, youtube.com/play.

Judging the submissions will be Takashi Murakami, Ryan McGinley, Douglas Gordon, Marilyn Minter and Shirin Neshat, artists known for their work in a variety of mediums; Stefan Sagmeister, a graphic designer; Laurie Anderson, the performance artist, musician and filmmaker; the music group Animal Collective; and the filmmakers Darren Aronofsky and Apichatpong Weerasethakul.

“I felt it was important that the jury be international and multidisciplinary,” said Nancy Spector, deputy director and chief curator of the Guggenheim Foundation, who is the heading the jury.

The winning entries will be shown at all the Guggenheim’s international branches — as well as on the YouTube Play channel.

The Web site has received about 6,600 submissions so far. The deadline is July 31.


More news

You'd better hurry if you want to see the hats, shoes, dresses and immaculate gloves that were an essential element of the style which made Grace Kelly a fashion beacon for millions of women around the world.
24 July '10


Jewels bought by Britain's King Edward VIII for his American wife Wallis Simpson are expected to fetch up to 3 million pounds ($4.55 million) at auction in November, Sotheby's said on Thursday.
24 July '10


A scientific reconstruction of one of the oldest sets of human remains found in the Americas appears to support theories that the first people who came to the hemisphere migrated from a broader area than once thought, researchers say.
24 July '10


What could be the world’s earliest illustrated Christian manuscript has been found in a remote Ethiopian monastery. The Garima Gospels were previously assumed to date from about 1100AD, but radiocarbon dating conducted in Oxford suggests they were made between 330 and 650AD.
24 July '10


LONDON. Henry Moore’s heaviest bronze sculpture, Large Divided Oval: Butterfly, has been restored in Berlin. Weighing nearly nine tons, it was his final major work, completed just before he died in 1986. Butterfly stands in the middle of a circular basin, outside the entrance to Berlin’s House of World Cultures, a centre for non-European arts.
24 July '10


rome. The Vatican Museums in Rome are set to open a room devoted to the works of Matisse later this year. The move is designed to further boost the profile of its modern and contemporary religious art department. Large-scale preparatory sketches by the French artist, relating to items adorning the Chapel of the Rosary in Vence on the Cote d’Azur, will go on public display for the first time. The works were donated to the Vatican by the artist’s son Pierre in 1980.
22 July '10


PARIS— After five years of renovations, the house that Jean Cocteau bought with the French actor Jean Marais in 1947 in Milly-la-Forêt, about 30 miles south of Paris, is finally open to the public. Having lived there for the last 17 years of his life with his companion, Edouard Dermit, the writer and director worked on some of his greatest projects under its roof, including the film "Le Testament d’Orphée" and the poem "Le Requiem."
22 July '10


NEW YORK. Sotheby’s New York will sell the Neuberger Berman and Lehman Brothers corporate art collections on 25 September, now that a bankruptcy court has approved the sale. Proceeds will go towards paying off Lehman’s creditors.
22 July '10


Chief Judge Loretta Preska approved a settlement in the Portrait of Wally case. Herrick Feinstein's press release reporting the settlement terms of the Portrait of Wally case here - Portrait of Wally Case Settles
21 July '10


PARIS.- Held at the Carrousel du Louvre from 18th to 21st November 2010, Paris Photo, the world’s leading fair for 19th Century, modern and contemporary photography will bring together 103 exhibitors including 90 galleries and 13 publishers. With 78% of foreign participation, 25 represented countries, 31 new comers, the 14th edition is rich in discoveries. This year’s edition marks the return of US galleries and a stronger showing of contemporary art galleries with Beaumontpublic (Luxemburg), Ernst Hilger (Vienne), I8 (Reykjavik), Anne de Villepoix (Paris), Hervé Loevenbruck (Paris) or Yossi Milo (New York). The vintage photography section will be enhanced by the participation of Stephen Bulger (Toronto), Sage Paris, Stephen Daiter (Chicago) and Barry Friedman (New York).
21 July '10


LONDON.- The Culture Minister has placed a temporary export bar on a painting by the Spanish artist Murillo. This will provide a last chance to raise the money to keep the painting of The Virgin and Child in the United Kingdom.
21 July '10


VALENCIA.- The old Church of San Esteban, on Colón de Valencia Street, had been its hiding place for centuries. The piece, which was completely blackened, had gone unnoticed for many years. The weather had harmed the painting, in fact, 40% of the paint was gone.
20 July '10


Art experts in Rome are analysing what they believe is a previously unknown painting by the Italian Baroque master Caravaggio.
20 July '10


LONDON.- The Jewish Museum has successfully raised the funds to secure the ‘Lindo lamp’, the earliest known English Hanukah lamp and one of the treasures of British Jewish heritage, ensuring its continued place in the museum’s collection.
20 July '10


TEL AVIV.- A selection from the works of provocative photographer David LaChapelle (b. Connecticut, 1963) is exhibited in Israel for the first time, giving a comprehensive view of his unique and daring style of the past twenty years.
19 July '10


Japanese superstar artist Takashi Murakami has told French newspaper Le Figaro that he's a little nervous about his forthcoming blockbuster show at the Palace of Versailles outside Paris this September.
19 July '10


GUATEMALA CITY (REUTERS).- Archeologists in Guatemala have discovered a Mayan king's tomb packed with a well-preserved hoard of carvings, ceramics and children's bones that cast fresh light on the vanished civilization.
19 July '10


Just in: Artworks from Dennis Hopper's collection - including prized pieces by Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat - will sold at Christie's during its Post-War & Contemporary Evening and Day Sales in New York on Nov. 10 and 11, 2010.
17 July '10


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