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Starting Next Week: ArtParis Puts Photography in the Place of Honor
Chen Jiagang, The Great Third Front-09, Chen Jiagang, 2008Who are the Miners. Extra large size: 240 x 400cm, Edition of 3. Courtesy Paris-Beijing Photo Gallery.
PARIS.- This year, artparis sets photography in the place of honor with fifteen galleries invited to participate in a special sector, “artparis photography”, which will unwind like a spool though the corridors of the Grand Palais. The participating galleries are:

Acte 2, Camera Obscura, Philippe Chaume, Emotion, In Camera, Galerie de L’Instant, CM Art, Nessim Galeria, Obsis, Paris Globe, Paris-Beijing Photo Gallery, Françoise Paviot, Olivier Waltman, Wanted Paris and Esther Woerdehoff.

Numerous other participants also choose to display photography on their stands, making it one of the most represented media at the fair.

Portraits of cities
The essence of photographic work, the city always inspires artists to a great degree, urging them to document its evolution, its fascinating character or its function as a receptacle for multitudes of dreams.

At gallery Philippe Chaume, Floriane de Lassée has been wandering the megalopolises of Paris, New York, Tokyo and Shanghai since 2005. Born in 1972, this young photographer focuses on hyper modern architecture, bringing a strange surrealist quality to them that reminds one of Edward Hopper. Fascinated by their light, she endows these places with a quasi-religious glory, her supersaturated light transfiguring them almost beyond recognition. For the first time ever, the artist Frederick Delangle is showing his series Ahmedabad, named for the eponymous Indian city. Several years ago, France decided to save this huge heritage which is rapidly degenerating, left in the hands of disrespectful bric-à brac traders who attack the precious teak facades of the wooden houses. Frederick Delangle contributes to France’s effort in showing his photos, which have been taken only at night because of overpopulation and the surrounding pollution, testifying to what was, according to him, “the most beautiful and richest city in the world”. For his part, Ambroise Tézenas records the last popular houses of Beijing, "Hutongs,” before they disappear forever. As for Jean-Claude Gautrand, he could be described as a constructivist photographer of architecture. Fascinated by states of construction and deconstruction, he tracks structures in metal- railings, girders or bearing scaffolding, the components of future cities. He has a taste for the high-pitched, the objective and for construction, and he develop a concept of geometry as applied to cities.

Patrick Tourneboeuf, presented by gallery Emotion, is interested in spaces without any human presence, work sites and land left fallow. His subjects are coulisses, construction sites, reservations or places not much visited by the general public. Having taken photos of the Grand Palais while it was under reconstruction, the Versailles Palace and the National Archives, he next chose to focus on the Ecole nationale supérieure d’architecture de Paris Val-de-Seine (National School of architecture of Paris, Val-de-Seine). In his photos, these empty and uninhabited sites play roles of decor. But for which game or which stage production? Patrick Tourneboeuf takes pictures that are suspended in time, between a history that is passed and one that is in the process of becoming.

At gallery Françoise Paviot, who also offers us classics such as Cartier-Bresson and Brassaï, the focus at this year’s fair is on the Canadian photographer Barbara Steinman. This photographer claims to be interested in the sociology of space, that is to say, in the manner a place, a museum, an abandoned plant, an art gallery or an open-air theatre are used and perceived. What are the histories of these places, and with what are they encircled? “The work recalls a feeling or a knowledge that the spectator remembers, recognizes or shares”. The purpose of her landscapes, like contemporary vanities, are also to show, in a purified and refined manner, the time which passes, damages, fades. The work is elliptic and conceptual, proposing the vicissitudes of history and the hazards of existence. The gallery’s program is further supplemented by photographs by Dieter Appelt from his series Traces of Memory, which is more centered on the different strata of the body, and works by Mark Ruwedel. Since the 1990s, Ruwedel has been traveling North America in search of sites which reveal traces of human activity, of prehistory which is still evident today. He dedicates several months of the year to the exploration of deserts, plains, hills and riversides and questions the place of man within the natural landscape.

At gallery In Camera, photographs are also the pretext for all kinds of voyages, particularly those that familiarize one with Anglo-Saxon culture. David Fenton thus immortalizes America at the end of the 1960’s with his portraits of the counter culture movement. Photos from his Unknown series by French artist Stéphane Duroy give an emotional portrayal of America as perceived as the land of welcome and a receptacle for the dramas of old Europe. Being interested in exile a more general way, Stephan Duroy left New York, a city which symbolizes the arrival of all immigrants, moving gradually towards the West Coast. He thus follows the natural evolution of the generations who, carrying out this geographical shift, forget their own roots. Many of them being European, he notes with regret, in the end it is a common expatriation with which we all live.

Everything in the world has touched the young photographer Aleix Plademunt, represented at artparis by the new exhibitor Olivier Waltman. His last project led him from China to Japan, the United States to Turkey and from Greece to Mexico. Criticizing the consumerist society that has even marketed the environment, the artist has enjoyed intervening in around thirty places in the world, working with advertising hoardings where the word NADA (nothing) is placed on a blank billboard, translated into the local language of the country. Another series of photos, Espectadores, shows a set of chairs arranged as in a theater, in front of diverse landscapes. The snag, if one looks closely, is that these landscapes are untouched by the presence of people, often decorated with diverse buildings, cables, threads, roads, planes, advertising hoardings or nuclear waste… Nature is most often used, then, as a backdrop for all the settings, which unfortunately most often evokes tragedy.

Founded in Budapest in 2005, gallery Nessim focuses on Hungarian photography and that of Central Europe. Names such as Moholy-Nagy and Kertész form a part of their programming, accompanied by the following generation which is still little-known to the general public. It is therefore necessary to retain these names: Gábor Kerekes, Zsolt Péter Barta and Ladislav Postupa. For the most part, their photos in black and white depart from reality, relying primarily on their structure.

Bernard Dudoignon of the gallery Paris Globe, a newcomer to artparis, puts the spotlight on photographer Erdös Gábor, a Hungarian artist born in 1973 who explores the relationship between the individual and the world. He also presents photos from the series, For the woman who wants to changes her looks, realized by Erwin Blumenfeld for Vogue USA in 1962. Under Blumenfeld’s lens, Victoria Van Hagan moves between being a vamp, a leaning lady and a Madonna.

Paris-Beijing Photo Gallery makes the move of bringing a host of Chinese artists to the fair. Numbering six in total, these artists represents the most common trends in contemporary Chinese photography. Among them, Chen Jiagang realizes large format photos in ochre tones, framed with monumental industrial landscapes, which he immortalizes thanks to the darkroom. Yang Yi is also inspired by urban landscapes, most of them in full decay and which he has imagined as being plunged under the sea. The artist Wen Fang is fascinated by bricks. During the Imperial Era, bricks of gold were meticulously conceived and signed. Today, bricks are fabricated in cement, reproducible, short-lived and reflective of the evolution of the country. The artist thus questions the current identity of China while also honoring its centuries-old culture.

Constance de Malleray of CM Art works between Paris and Moscow. Among those whom she represents, Nikolay Polissky is certainly one of the only Russian artists to have chosen the countryside for his studio, rather than one of the big cities where cultural life flourishes. He intervenes in the landscape with reconstructions of classic architectural forms and reflects that memory through his photos. He has also written that, "the place most secure for my works is in the memory". Believing that contemporary art is too much removed from the spectacle of nature, he wishes to rehabilitate the rural world. The sculptor Mona Breede, also born in Russia, chooses rectilinear and impressive architecture which she discovers in the United States, in China or in Russia, to serve as the backdrops for the human comedy which parades indefatigably in those places.

… Portraits of Lives
Gallery Acte 2 specializes in fashion photography. Two photographers in particular will be spotlighted on their stand. Steven Klein began by working for the magazines Vogue, Vanity Fair and The Face, making himself known for his strong colors and unusual settings. Stars and models alike have been thrilled to be included in his signature baroque trash universe. His photos are not simple pictures of fashion or insipid publicity campaigns but rather images that plunge one into a veritable scenario where violence, submission and sexual ambiguity meld together. Steven Klein thus glorifies his models, conferring strong personalities on them that shatter our images. Very much inspired by the equestrian universe, he dedicated a series to this animal fetish, merging elegance, character, strength and delicacy - the qualities that he holds in esteem. This series will be shown during the fair, accompanied by work by Michel Comte. Compte had been a restaurant owner before becoming a photographer, thus also explaining his predilection for the nude as subject matter. Having worked for Vogue, Vanity Fair and numerous campaigns since 1979, he has also photographed many figures from the world of art and cinema. His personal touch adds profound interest and an exploration continually renewed by the human, reflected by his portraits that have transformed so many people into icons.

Gallery Camera Obscura puts a spotlight on artists whom one rarely sees presented. One example is Paolo Roversi who has become one of the most sought after fashion photographers of the last decades. Cultivating his blacks and whites in serious settings devoid of any décor, he is a photographer of severe beauty, almost brutal in its qualities. His nudes look out at us in total honesty with an intense and captivating look in their eyes. His images seem to be a-temporal and engrave themselves in the spectator’s memory despite his economy of means. Sarah Moon, who has an immediately identifiable style, will also be displayed on the gallery stand. Her blurry images are legendary, her refined settings also evoking a certain nostalgia for childhood. Beautiful and poetic, the images nevertheless call forth the idea of a world always threatened by its own loss. Sarah Moon first came to the public’s attention thanks to her publicity shots for Cacharel and more recently for Comme des Garcons, images from which will be on display at the fair.

There are just a few steps from fashion to the cinema, which are easily traversed by gallery Obsis who puts an emphasis on photography of the cinema, bringing us back to the 1920’s when the great figures of Hollywood created their own departments of photography. In Europe, the means turned out to be a little less plentiful and specialized photographers were taken on here and there. But a new genre had been born. The particularity and the paradox of stage photography is that it was designed to look like instantaneous although in the majority of cases it was conceived as a pose, as in a still life. On the contrary, this kind of work-photography, also presented by the gallery, appeared to capture the reality of a film in the process of being made. This is in evidence through the examples of Buster Keaton, immortalized in his studio in 1932, Serge Eisenstein, shot on the set of La ligne générale, as well as through an image from the film, Mountain Justice by Michael Curtis.

The young Galerie de l’Instant brings a selection of photos of cinema stars to the fair. François Gragnan immortalized these stars of the era in the 1960’s and 70’s: Jane Birkin, Brigitte Bardot, Jeanne Moreau, Juliette Gréco, Simone Signoret, Romy Schneider, Sophia Loren, among so many others… And among the men were those such as Alain Delon, Johnny Hallyday and Steve McQueen. Most of them found themselves at some point in time under the flash bulbs of Giancarlo Botti. Many of the images were taken at Cannes during film shoots and conform to the most glorious images we could have of the 7th art. Bert Stein was spotlighted together with Marilyn Monroe in La Dernière séance where glamour, sensuality and beauty came to the fore, not knowing at the time, however, that she would become the most celebrated blond alive.

At Esther Woerderhoff, the German photographer Herlinde Koebl focuses her lens on hair. Having studied drawing and fashion, she turned to photography in 1975, mixing a curiosity about people with a critical analysis of society. She published numerous images which are perceived as a mirror for life in Germany and a mordant commentary on contemporary history. The fair will be the occasion to discover her last title, Hair. For Herlinde Koebl, hair and the contact which we develop them is a part of our humanity which accompanies us from birth to death. Our relationship with hair is among the most intimate and sensual which exists. This publication is the fruit of a voyage across five continents during six years that has permitted her to identify and to show the social and cultures roles of the world of hair.

… more photography, beyond the corridors of “artparis photography”
David LaChapelle heats up the stand of gallery Maruani & Noirhomme. According to legend, his first model was that of his mother, wearing a bikini and holding a martini in her hand… and his vocation was born! His inimitable style, characterized by extremely bright colors and outrageous burlesque settings has earned him great success. He risks showing everything: sex, drugs and alcohol. Even top stars don’t resist his wiles, accepting the most risqué scenarios. For example, Angelina Jolie is ecstatic when Pamela Anderson or Paris Hilton – personifications of the Barbie doll – are drawn into the most outrageous and exciting situations one can imagine. The photos exhibited at artparis testify to the limitless imagination of LaChapelle’s imagination: mountains of candies which form a mosque, a personalize version of the Déluge (decorated with a array of arrogant bosoms), and further, for the pleasure of all the ladies, 72 dolls symbolizing veiled virgins who have taken a nearly naked gentleman hostage, of whom we would like to be in charge. Having fun and delivering messages at the same time, this is David LaChapelle’s style. As he would remind us, “If we want to photograph a girl sitting on a mushroom, it is much more fun to create the mushroom and to sit her on top of it than to fabricate it on a computer. And if we want to photograph a naked girl sitting on a monkey in the middle of Times Square, it is the same principle.”

For Françoise Huguier at gallery Patrice Trigano, the body is like a rooster, humorous in its association. It appears as red and black, it is overwhelming. It is big and fat and takes pleasure in being so. The body is oiled. It approaches at close quarters. Women like fairies floating in the grass, go and get yourselves ready or you won’t count among the models of Francoise Hugier! Transgressive in her choice of models and settings, at artparis she reveals a portrait of a brothel where “the three beauties cross the mirror to take refuge in the Indian lounge from which escapes the sound of music, caresses and kisses.. “. Françoise Huguier wonders who these dames are, so majestic, powerful, sensual and totally available? They appear to be the ladies of the house.

The young artist Thiphaine Popesco (born in 1982) at gallery Vidal-Saint Phalle presents a much more distanced version of the body, as she invites her models to merge with the decor. Isolated figures, abandoned bodies, they reflect solitude, lassiscitude and boredom. Taken in aesthetic terms, their nudity permits them to regain their sculptural dimension. “The staging of these bodies is even more accentuated by my choice of black and white and the perspective effects,” comments Tiphaine Popesco. “In my photos,“ she explains, “another theme appears: the loss of ones sense of direction, of place. Placed in their ‘natural environment,’ and sometime in complicated and unusual poses, models are like stage dolls, controlled by an exterior power.

Gallery Protée presents the Moroccan artist Lalla Essaydi who aims her eye at the isolation and silence of young women who have gone against convention and flouted the laws of a male society. Working as a documentary photographer, she shows the daily life of women who seem to have been enclosed their whole lives. The decor reminds one of a room where banished teenagers would be locked away. After having completely covered the floor, walls and ceiling with calligraphy drawn in henna, she now directs her models to reconstitute situations with which they are familiar. It is important to understand here that calligraphy as a form of writing is banned for women. Lalla Essaydi introduces into this prison, therefore, a gentle and elegant kind of subversion.

New to artparis, YU Gallery specializes in Chinese artists. Among them, Li Wei is an artist who dangerously sets his own body into the work, using the city as if it were a theater. His head can be stuck on the road, his body reproducing the trajectory of a basketball and then coming to balance – or not! – on a scaffolding. He can also mime the act of falling from a building, being pushed by a young woman or landing his head on a windscreen. For him, this violence against the body serves to illustrate the irrationality of mankind. Li Wei seeks to demonstrate that man is capable of the very worst as well as the best, but especially of the worst… In 2006 he took home one of the awards for “the best photographic works in the world,” granted by the Getty Institute.



Last Week News

March 9, 2009

Richard Rogers + Architects Shows From the House to the City at Caixaforum Barcelona

Masks: Metamorphoses of the Face from Rodin to Picasso on View at Mathildenhohe Institute

Empty Space as a Recurrent Artistic Theme Explored at Centre Pompidou

Sotheby's Hong Kong to Stage Contemporary Asian Art Spring Sale on April 6

Folk Art Gallery at Birmingham Museum of Art Exhibits Three Installations by Self-taught Artists

Malcom Rogers Honored with Distinction from President of the Republic of Italy

Acclaimed South African Artist William Kentridge to Speak at Detroit Institute of Arts

Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin to Present Picturing America: Photorealism in the 70s

La Salle University Art Museum Presents Susan Moore, Second Skin: Drawings

Printed Matter: Set 6 from the Collection of the Fotomuseum Winterthur

Museum Presents Exhibit of Paintings by Howard A. Curtis

George Always: Portraits of George Melly by Maggi Hambling on View at the Walker Art Gallery

Milwaukee Art Museum Presents The Eight and American Modernisms

Breaking Through: Women Leading Museums: A Panel Discussion Celebrating Women's History Month 2009

MoMA Announces Focused Exhibition of Monet's Late Paintings of Water Lilies and his Pond at Giverny

British Columbia's Best Take On the Province's Landscape in New Vancouver Art Gallery Exhibition

BP British Art Displays: Turner/Rothko at Tate Britain

First Iris Viewing Festival at New Orleans Museum of Art April 4

Columbia Museum of Art Announces Summer Fun at the Art School

Filmmaker Peter Forgacs Lectures on the Archaeology of Memory at the Jewish MMuseum

March 8, 2009

National Gallery of Victoria Announces First Comprehensive Salvador Dalí Retrospective

Exhibition Examining 20 Years of Innovation in European Design Premieres in Indiananapolis

Sotheby's To Sell Rare and Important Painting by Albin Egger-Lienz in June

The Walters Art Museum Announces Major Restructuring

Hammer Museum Presents its Next Invitational Exhibition Celebrating Los Angeles-based Artists

Dallas Museum of Art Announces $100,000 Endowment Gift

Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Approves Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Expansion

Valencian Institute of Modern Art Opens 1929-1949 From Torres Garcia to Vieira da Silva

Endangered Plants on View at Statens Museum for Kunst

Comic Art Exhibition Opens at the National Museum of the American Indian

The Artistic Furniture of Charles Rohlfs Announced at the Milwaukee Art Museum

The Smithsonian's National Postal Museum Announces a New FDR Exhibition

Frick's Center for the History of Collecting in America to Award New $25,000 Biennial Book Prize

After More than 20 Years Rothko's Seagram Murals Return to Tate Liverpool

National Endowment for the Arts Announces Emergency Funding Opportunity

The Getty's Free Lecture Series on Conservation Issues Spotlights Ethical Dilemmas in Art Conservation and Others

See Life in Iran from the Inside: Views from Iran Series Highlights New Narrative and Documentary Works

NMWA Director Susan Fisher Sterling Recieves Women's Caucas for Art 2009 President's Award

T. J. Clark to Present Picasso and Truth at the National Gallery of Art

Enjoy Drinks and Décor Under the Stars During Evening in the Garden at the Taft Museum of Art

March 7, 2009

Turner to Cézanne: Masterpieces from the Davies Collection, National Museum Wales Opens

The Louvre Presents Today The Gates of Heaven - Visions of the World in Ancient Egypt

New Art Exhibition at National Museum Cardiff Presents Alfred Sisley in Wales

Centre de la Photographie Presents Gerhard Richter - Overpainted Photographs

Staatsgalerie Stuttgart Presents Today Open Store: Viennese Actionism

Sotheby's Hong Kong Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asian Paintings Sale to be Held in April

Lentos Art Museum Linz Presents Michaela Melian - Speicher

Nashville Portraits: Photographs by Jim McGuire Opens at the Morris Museum of Art

The Winnipeg Art Gallery Presents Fitzgerald In Context

UBS 12 x 12 Presents Paul Preissner Opens at MCA Chicago

Galerie Scala Presents Tomas Erhart 'CellPhonology and the mobile diaries'

"In the Full Light of Day" - Unique daguerreotypes of and by the Enschedé family

Joslyn Art Museum Presents A David Small World

Finland Prime Minister Office Forwards Hindus Request of Nude Photo Removal

CSUF Grand Central Art Center Celebrates 10 Years

First Saturday Eco-Art Walk Featuring: Eco-Logical Art Glass

Acclaimed Painter John Asaro To Unveil Newest Work at Bergamot Station

Delaware Art Museum Presents The Possibilities of Pause: Delaware Women's Conference 2009 Juried Exhibition

Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson Gives Free Public Lecture at the Akron Art Museum

March 6, 2009

Neues Museum Restored By Architect David Chipperfield After World War II Bombings

Nauman, U.S. Representative at Venice Biennale, Presented at Three Venues

Hamburger Kunsthalle Presents Nicolai Abildgaard. The Artist Who Taught Friedrich and Runge

The Museum of Modern Art Launches Redesigned Website on March 6

Art Gallery of South Australia Presents Today the Golden Journey

Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center Acquires Three 19th Century Paintings

Guy Maestri Announced Winner of the 2009 Archibald Prize

Highlights and Special Projects at the Armory Show in New York

Sotheby's to Sell What May be One of the Earliest Photographic Views of New York City

SFMOMA Appoints Marnie Burke de Guzman as Director of Marketing and Audience Strategy

Michael Hoppen Gallery Presents Russian Criminal Tattoo- Bodies as Text Sergei Vasiliev

VOLTA NY Showcases 78 Solo Artist Presentations, Inspired by this Year's Curatorial Theme, "Age of Anxiety"

Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum To Present Today "Fashioning Felt"

Christie's Director to Move to Middle East to Further Strengthen Team in Region

Wilfrid Moser. Milestones - A Retrospective - Swiss Artist of the Postwar Avant-Garde

The Sheldon Museum of Art Presents Art by Women

Major Figure in Minimalist Art to Speak at Miami Art Museum

Mingei International Launches Discover Mingei! Treasure Hunt

New DVD of Exclusive Maurice Sendak Interview Footage Released

MoMA Monday Nights - March 9

March 5, 2009

King Juan Carlos Welcomes Philippe de Montebello as Director of Art Courses for the Prado

Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa of SANAA to Design Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2009

Yoko Ono and John Baldessari to Receive Golden Lions for Lifetime Achievement at Venice Biennale

The Intimate Portrait: Drawings, Miniatures and Pastels Opens at the British Museum

Penrith Art Project Transforms Recyclable Material into Large-scale Installations

Sotheby's Inaugural Dedicated Sale of Contemporary Turkish Art Achieves $1,838,597

Detective Work of Curators Reveals New Portraits of Constable's Parents

Fotomuseum Winterthur Presents Joakim Eskildsen's The Rome Journeys

First Exhibition of Traditional Korean Painting at the Art Gallery of New South Wales

Art Karlsruhe 2009 Bets on "Serious Growth" for This Year's Edition of Art Fair

Artist Kehinde Wiley Discusses his Art and its Influences at the Getty Center

Vancouver Art Gallery Announces Largest Exhibition of Dutch Masterpieces Ever Shown in Canada

The Museum of Modern Art to Present Exhibition Exploring 20 Years of the Work of Gabriel Orozco

Portland Museum of Art Breaks February Attendance Record

Wine Writer Max Allen Connects Green Fairies and Liquid Stones with Degas at the National Gallery of Australia

Eastman House and RPO Collaborate to Present "Cinematic Symphony" May 3

National Endowment for the Arts Announces Research on Artist Unemployment Rates

All Things Ming: Saint Louis Art Museum Presents Asian-Inspired Programs

MoMA's International Program Presents Initiatives Involving Latin American Art and Artists in 2009

The ICA/AIGA Speaker Series Presents Design as Social Agent, a Full Day of Conversation

March 4, 2009

The Prado Museum in Madrid Rearranges its Collection and Gains Exhibition Space

Sotheby's Launches Inaugural Sale of Arts of the Islamic World in Doha

Museum of Design and Applied Arts Opens Packaging - Wrapping to Design

Unique Selection of 17th Century Paintings Included in The Age of Rembrandt

Installations II: Video from the Guggenheim Collection Opens in Bilbao

The Art Fund Announces that David Barrie will Step Down as Director and Trustee

Solo Exhibition by Becks Futures Prize Winner at Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art

Face Off: A Selection of Old Masters and Others from The Menil Collection

Dulwich Picture Gallery Presents First Ever Exhibition Devoted to Sickert's Pictures of Venice

John Eskenazi to Show Buddhist and Hindu Sculpture in New York

Ancient Ukraine, like Diamonds, is not Forever...

Corning Museum of Glass Announces Radiant Survey of Studio Glass

James Adams at WIDE ANGLE 3: Discovered/Undiscovered

Samsung Digital Discovery Centre Opens

Smithsonian Celebrates Women's History Month

LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph Announces 2009 Featured Photographers Martin Parr, Gilles Peress and Sylvia Plachy

Perturbed Hindus Ask for Photo Removal from Helsinki Museum, Calling it Hurtful

Aperture Foundation Announces Publication of: Sawdust Mountain Photographs by Eirik Johnson

The Nocturne in Printmaking to Close March 8 at Saint Louis Art Museum

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6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

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