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Paris Attendance Figures for Haring Show Suggest Coming Boom

August 26, 2013 by Marion Maneker

Haring Exhibition at Museum of Modern Art of City of Paris

There’s no direct link between museum show popularity and artist’s prices. Many artist’s markets grow in anticipation of major museum shows as there’s a run-up in buying (and selling) activity in advance of what many hope might be a “breakthrough”show. The Museum of Modern Art of the City of Paris just closed a four-month show of 25o Keith Haring works that drew an impressive 302,000 visitors. Not only was that figure well ahead of the anticipated 230,000 number but it also came close to the Jean-Michel Basquiat attendance figures of that artist’s Fall 2010 show which came in at 350,000 visitors.

Basquiat’s market went on a tear in the period following, not because of the show but because of the interest in the artist that made the show possible in the first place. Many collectors view the Haring market as undervalued.

Keith Haring Drew 302,000 Visitors (Le Figaro)

Sotheby’s S2 to Show Keith Haring Tarps & More

March 28, 2012 by Marion Maneker

This Friday Sotheby’s S|2 galleries will open Keith Haring: Shine On that includes canvases, tarps, sculpture, found objects and works on paper from Haring’s time at Club 57 and the Pop Shops that he opened in New York and Tokyo:

The show falls at a time of great interest in the artist, with the Brooklyn Museum’s exhibition Keith Haring: 1978 – 1982 is currently on view, as well as the new auction record for a sculpture by the artist that was set at Sotheby’s New York in November 2011 by Haring’s monumental work Untitled from 1986, which achieved $1.8 million in the Contemporary Art Evening Auction (est. $1/1.5 million).

Haring’s monumental tarps come to market only rarely, and Shine On will offer a total of three for private sale, including Untitled and Untitled, 1982 that both span nearly 8’ by 8’. The exhibition will also include several works that, while not available for sale, are incredibly rare and show the artist’s work in unusual mediums and forms: two excellent examples of masks that Haring created in a series of eight will be on view, one of which has never has never been on public exhibition, as well as a crib that Haring dedicated to Juan, his first love.

“Money Kind of Ruined It. Then Aids”

March 26, 2012 by Marion Maneker

New York Magazine looks at the background to the Brooklyn Museum’s show exploring the making of Keith Haring by focusing on the four years leading up to his breakout 1982 show at Tony Shafrazi’s gallery. Before that he was hanging out in a St. Mark’s Pl. basement with Kenny Scharf and Ann Magnuson:

At the time, the club scene had its own rigid taxonomy. CBGB was for punks; Max’s Kansas City, which had been for Warhol Superstars, was on its way out; the Mudd Club was for “No Wave” misfits and their hard-partying hangers-on. In the basement of that Polish church on St. Marks, yet another species thrived, one that overlapped with the Mudd Club crowd but was younger, scrappier, sillier, and more earnestly experimental than the rest. Scharf and Magnuson’s crew watched monster movies, read poetry, threw doo-wop dance parties, staged musical revues, played putt-putt, mounted art shows, and, on one occasion, hosted a ladies’ wrestling night where the contenders dressed up as cockroaches and nuns. Part basement den, part art gallery, part Dada cabaret, Club 57 was an ephemeral, anything-goes environment where artists and performers had carte blanche to test-drive their wildest dreams. It lasted only from 1978 to 1983. There was barely any money involved. Most events were one night only.

 Where the Radiant Baby Was Born (New York)

 

 

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