Our Moira Holohan Art Pieces On Exhibit At Zillman Art Museum, University of Maine

Thank you to the collectors who loaned their newly acquired Dits and Dahs.
@franciebishopgoodart @digidamelois @eliothess

Moira Holohan

Thank you Emerson Dorsch Gallery For Including Us

Message from Moira

Just returned from my opening of Dits … and Dahs _ _ _  at the Zillman Art Museum, University of Maine.
On view until December 28, 2024

A big thank you to the Zillman Art Museum.

Rochelle, your curatorial care and support for this exhibition has been both impressive and enjoyable, I can’t thank you enough!

George, Sara, Aaron, John, Kathryn and Mary Ellen thank you for all your attention to detail and hospitality.

Thank you to the Emerson Dorsch Gallery for your continued support, it means so much to me.
@emersondorsch

Thank you to the collectors who loaned their newly acquired Dits and Dahs.
@franciebishopgoodart @digidamelois @eliothess

@zillmanartmuseum @mythreecrows

moiraholohan #ditsanddahs #robertmotherwell #zillmanartmuseum #contemporaryart

America Is In Big Trouble

Iran now has enough nuclear fuel for a bomb. Iran blames Trump for his miscalculations and defiance. Trump cut off negotiations with Iran. The threat of war in America grows everyday thanks to a con artist who has repeatedly failed in most of his business deals. Stop worrying about the price of cheese. You won’t need it where we and your children are going.

Watch the video. 15 seconds

If You Know A Medical Professional Who Can Help, Please Let Me know

Jenna Choi and I worked closely together for years when my PR agency represented Samsung. I have been following this story for years. She and her husband have been everywhere to cure her daughter. This mystery has not been solved. If you can recommend a miracle please share with me so I can pass it along to Jeena. Thank you.

The following was posted yesterday on Jeena’s Facebook page.

Memories

HWH PR started out in 1977 directly across the street from the fabulous La Grenouille on East 52nd Street. Eliot and I spent a fortune entertaining clients who flew in from all over the world just to dine there.
The legendary French restaurant, located at 3 East 52nd Street, announced that it’s closing its doors this week.

We will never forget the day when hundreds of folks stood outside the restaurant to witness gossip columnist Liz Smith taking Ivana Trump to lunch at Le Grenouille after Donald ditched her for Marla Maples. Pandemonium broke out on the street just to get a glimpse of Ivana and Liz. The ladies wound up on the front page of the Daily News. We watched it all from our office windows.

Owner Philippe Masson, whose parents Charles and Gisele founded the French restaurant in 1962, will be pursuing other dreams.

La Grenouille has long been a New York institution, famed for its flower displays, gilded luxury and luminary clientele. Among its devotees were Gregory Peck, Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Sidney Poitier, Salvador Dali, Sophia Loren, David Bowie, Truman Capote, Lee Radziwill a veritable who’s who of the world’s most beautiful and celebrated. The restaurant’s loyal patrons added to the glamour and exuberance that was always in the air at La Grenouille, where power lunches and grand dinners were for the elite. Thank you Roger Friedman for your words.

If You Think We Have Too Much Art Watch This…….

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Wish We Were There

ARTPARTIES

Jason and Michelle Rubell Join Sarah Harrelson In Celebrating New York Art Week and the Magazine’s Provocateur Issue

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Michelle and Jason Rubell and Sarah Harrelson at the couple’s New York home. 

It’s that time of year. The worlds of art and fashion have converged in New York for the dual draws of fashion week and the September art fair rush. It’s the kind of deluge that results in bumper-to-bumper traffic and back-to-back lunch dates. To kick off the marathon, CULTURED Editor-in-Chief Sarah Harrelson and Jason and Michelle Rubell invited guests to the couple’s Upper East Side abode for a celebratory cocktail.

“Art is an amazing way to open your eyes to other people’s points of view,” Jason told CULTURED earlier this year. “In times like this, art is so vital. It’s one of the few mediums we can use to communicate with each other in a meaningful way.” At home, the pair are surrounded by pieces from Rashid Johnson, Sayre Gomez, Kim Dingle, Hernan Bas, and more.

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Dan Rothmann and Shirin von Wulffen

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Will Sacks and Annie Armstrong

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Christine Goppel and Desmond Smalley

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Adam Charlap Hyman and Todd White

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Casa del Sol

Joining them  were the likes of Bastide co-founder Shirin von Wulffen, MoMA Board President Sarah Arison, writer Annie Armstrong, writer and musician Johanna Fateman, gallerist Anton Kern, Gucci’s Terrence Charles, Object & Thing founder Abby Bangser, interior designer Alyssa Kapito, Cartier’s Christine Goppel, advisor Rob Teeters, Kasmin’s Molly Jean Taylor, architect and designer Adam Charlap Hyman, angel investor Debra Peltz, and Sophia Cohen.

Guests were treated to assorted hors d’oeuvres catered by chef Chris Kronner of Mayday, a seafood and produce market based in Los Angeles. The light bites were accompanied by sipping tequila from female-founded Casa del Sol, as well as Moët & Chandon’s iconic champagne and an assortment of options from all-organic Dry Farm Wines. Both Dry Farm Wines founder Todd White and his partner Cameron Carani were on hand to join in on the festivities and walk attendees through the plethora of artisan bottles, including A Time For White Flowers, Fidora Lorenzo Viti Doro, and Domaine Rouge Bleu Rosé.

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Jason Rubell, Anton Kern, and Rob Teeters

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Sarah Arison, Sophia Cohen, and Sarah Harrelson

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Thompson Harrell, Freja Harrell, and Terrence Charles

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Dry Farm Wines

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Frédéric Fekkai

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Moët & Chandon

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As conversation thrummed, attendees could be seen flipping through CULTURED‘s Provocateur issue, covered by Travis Scott and Rachel Sennott, and discussing the slate of programming promised at the Armory.

Hosted at the Javits Center, the 30th edition of the fair boasts more than 235 galleries from over 30 countries. “For the past 30 years, The Armory Show has been an anchor of the city’s cultural landscape,” Kristell Chadé, executive director of fairs at Frieze, said in a statement. “It has been a pleasure working with the team to build on the strengths of the fair and expand its reach.”

As the Rubells helped raise a toast to the week, one thing was certain: Anyone hoping to beat this power couple to the fair’s best picks better move fast.

Show Business

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We are thrilled to know that the sculpture we bought last February in South Africa by artist, Dominique Zinkpè (Benin), is gaining worldwide popularity. A bronze version, of our wood sculpture, is being shown at the Armory Show in NYC. Okay, it’s not exactly alike but the style is undeniable Zinkpe. The gallery is Southern Guild Gallery in Cape Town. They have a new gallery in Los Angeles and other locations are being determined. We bought another piece from them as well that I will unveil later. Thank you @FountainheadArts.

Celebrating Women Everywhere

We are in love with this unusual but meaningful sculpture (7 inches by 7 inches) from Israeli artist Ruth Patir. It represents the millions of women who are alive today (me too) because mammography machines detect breast cancer. Eliot and I bought it from the Baverman Gallery, Tel Aviv (gallerist Adi Gura) when the world learned that Ruth Patir, who was the exclusive artist representing Israel at the 60th Venice Biennale, decided to keep the doors to the Israel pavilion shut until there was a Ceasefire and Hostage Release. Through our good friend Tami Katz-Freiman, (art curator, writer, lecturer, and collector) we were able to buy “Motherland” as a way to celebrate Patir for her selfless decision.
Patir made the decision together with the exhibition’s curators, Tamar Margalit and Mira Lapidot. We met Patir when she was a resident at Fountainhead Arts.