Abstract Expressionist Grace Hartigan Dies at 86
Published: November 21, 2008
Courtesy Maryland Institute College of Art
Painter Grace Hartigan
ATLANTA—Bonhams has announced the establishment of an Atlanta, Georgia, regional office and has appointed Mary Moore Bethea regional representative for the Southeast. An appraiser and importer of European art and furniture, Bethea has been the principal of Mary Moore Fine Art & Antiques since 1995. She is a candidate member in good standing of the American Society of Appraisers. She worked previously as a real estate broker for more than two decades. LOUISVILLE, Ky.—The Speed Art Museum has appointed Suzanne Weaver curator of contemporary art. Weaver joins the Speed after 13 years at the Dallas Museum of Art, where she served as associate curator of contemporary art. Before that, she worked as a curatorial associate of contemporary art at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, exhibition coordinator at the Center for Research in Contemporary Art, University of Texas at Arlington, and editor in chief of Circa, a Texas journal of contemporary art. She starts at the Speed in mid-January.
Farewells PARIS—Belgian illustrator and cartoonist Guy Peellaert died of heart failure at the age of 74 on November 17. Pellaert had a surrealist, Pop-art style; he mixed painting, drawing, photography, and comics in his work. He designed numerous well-known album covers, including for David Bowie's Diamond Dogs and the Rolling Stones' It's Only Rock 'n' Roll. He designed posters for countless films, such as Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver, and produced an acclaimed and much-imitated comic, Pravda. LONDON—British printmaker Edgar Holloway, whose portrait and landscape etchings were central to Britain's Etching Revival during the 1920s and '30s, died on November 9 at the age of 94, the Telegraph reports. The son of a print seller, Holloway found success early; by the time he turned 20, his prints had been purchased by the Victoria and Albert Museum and the British Museum, and he had had two well-received exhibitions at the Twenty One Gallery in London. He joined the Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic, a community of Catholic craftsmen, in the 1940s, causing him to renounce his status in the fine art world and work as a letterer, cartographer, illustrator, and book-jacket designer. In the 1970s, he took up etching again, and in 1979, print dealers Garton & Co staged an exhibition of his work in London. Many other touring retrospectives around Britain followed. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1991.
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