Thursday, November 27, 2025

Art Market: Highlights From Fall Auctions 2025 @ Phillips New York

 


(Drivebycuriosity) -  It`s November again and the world`s largest auction houses have their annual huge fall auctions in Manhattan. This post is about the galleries @ Phillips, the number 3 of the global auction houses (phillips ). The company has the reputation to be more focused on contemporary works than her bigger competitors and to show more cutting edge art by up-and-coming artists. But they also had some big names. I display here some of my favorites from the exhibition - as usual a very subjective selection.

  This time the most interesting exhibits were fossils. On the top of this post you can see “Cera” - The Most Complete Juvenile Triceratops Skeleton Ever Unearthed, circa 66 Million years old - Cera was discovered in 2016 in the fossil-rich badlands of Perkins County, South Dakota.






Cera is followed by "King Gidhora" - A very fine subadult Pteranodon -mImmature male from the Smoky Hill Chalk (Niobrara Fm. Western Kansas
Upper Cretaceous circa 87 Million Years Ago 60 1/2 x 132 7/8 x 1 in. (153.7 x 337.5 x 2.5 cm).

 



Above follow the "Guardian of the Fossil Lake" - Exceptionally Large Amia Fossil - Eocene, 50 Million Years Ago - Kemmerer, Wyoming, USA
96 x 46 in. (243.8 x 116,8 cm) & "The Ouroboros-Steneosaurus bollensis" - A world-class specimen preserved without restoration Lower Jurassic (Toarcian, "Lias &") circa 180 Million Years Ago - Urweltsteinbruch Holzmaden Quarry, Baden-Württemberg, Germany length of fossil 66 7/8 in. (170 cm) slab 70 7/8 x 70 7/8 x 2 3/4 in. (180 x 180 x 7 cm).

 

                         Animal Abuse 

 



The image above this paragraph tells a heartbreaking story of animal abuse: Walton Ford`s "Guilty Elephant". Apparently the innocent animal gets electrocuted as victim of a cruel physical experiment.  

Ford specializes in animals, often in historic settings. I admired his majestic Berber Lions at Gallery Kasmin (my report ) and Milanese heiress Luisa Casati with her fancy leopards at Gagosian ( driveby).

 



Above follow 2 images by German artist Sigmar Polke: "Untitled (Crime Story-Happy End)" plus "Untitled".

 

                            Islamophobic? 


  



Above this paragaph you can see: Jll Mulready`s "Schindler House"; Reggis Burrows Hodges`"Swimming in Compton: Look Ma'"
 & Ben Aston`s "Chasing Waterfalls". 

 


Last but not least Banksy. Will the woke and the libtards call this work Islamophobic? 

Stay tuned 

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Books: Tidbits From "Why Machines Learn: The Elegant Math Behind Modern AI"

 


 (Drivebycuriosity) - AI is eating the world. There are not many parts of the economy that are not yet influenced by Artificial Intelligence and its influence is rising with exponential speed. Anil Ananthaswamy describes in "Why Machines Learn: The Elegant Math Behind Modern AI" how mathematicians developed the building blocks (algorithm) for ChatGPT and other versions of machine learning ( amazon).

Ananthaswamy narrates the evolution of AI, the breakthroughs, the setbacks and the fermentation process of thinking. Scientists have been developing algorithms that can learn to discern patterns in data without being explicitly programmed to do so. "Machines can learn because of the extraordinary confluence of math and computer science, with more than a dash of physics and neuroscience added to the mix".

The book is full of information, spiced with mathematics & anecdotes. This humble blog can only present some tidbits here:  

 

                   Inspired By Biology

 

The AI developers are inspired by biology and evolution. For instance: "Even fruit flies are thought to use some form an algorithm to react to odor: When a fly senses some odor and another odor most like it for which it already has the neural mechanisms to respond behaviorally."  

The scientists noticed that "our brains learn because connections between neuron strengthen when one neuron`s output is consistently involved in the firing of another, and they weaken when this is not so". 

Psychologist Frank Rosenblatt designed "artificial neurons that reconfigure as they learn, embodying information in the strength of their connections".  The machine (the algorithm), once it had learned, contained knowledge in the strengths (weights) of its connections. 

 

              Learning About Patterns 

In 1982 the American Physicist John Hopfield declared that neurobiological systems - our brains included - are dynamical and can be mathematical modeled as such. Given one instance of data, the network can memorize it. But an awful lot of the learning our brains do is incremental: Given enough data, we slowly learn about patterns in them. 

An LLM (Large Language Model) is an example of generative AI. It has learned an extremely complex, ultra-high-dimensional probability distribution over words, and it is capable of sampling from this distribution, conditioned on the input sequence of words. There are other types of generative AI, but the basic idea behind them is the same: They learn the probability distribution and then sample from the distribution, either randomly or conditional on some input, and produce an output that looks the like training data.   

Ananthaswamy writes "Every deep neural network today - with millions, billions, possibly trillions of weights - uses some form of gradient descent for training". Google AI explains: "Gradient descent is an iterative optimization algorithm used in machine learning to find the minimum of a function by taking steps in the opposite direction of the function's gradient. It works by repeatedly calculating the gradient of a cost function and updating the model's parameters (like weights and biases) to reduce the cost. This process is repeated until a minimum is reached, which can be a local or global minimum".

 

                    Listening To Neurons

 

ChatGPT & Co. are based on huge networks. A network could solve a problem or have a function that was beyond the capability of a single molecule and a linear pathway. In our network each neuron is listening to every other neuron. Neuron 1 is getting inputs from 99 other neurons. Then neuron 1 will calculate the weighted sum of the inputs from 99 neurons and will set its output to 1+ if the weighted sum is greater than zero; otherwise to -1. Of course, these network are simulations inside a computer, so they don´t really have a physical energy. But one could use this formula to calculate a number that`s analogue to physical energy.  

The French-American computer scientist Yann André Le Cun said: "I always thought that human engineers would not be smart enough to conceive and design an intelligent machine. It will have to basically design itself through learning. I thought learning was an essential part of intelligence."

A team member who was training the neural network went on vacation and forgot to stop the training algorithm. When he came back, he found to his astonishment that the neural network had learned a general form of the addition. It`s as if it had understood something deeper about the problem than simply memorizing answers for the sets of numbers on which is was being trained.

 

               Broadly Accurate Predictions 

If the network works on something for long enough time, which is a very long time, many orders of magnitude longer than it takes to memorize the training set, then suddenly they figure out the deeper underlying patterns and are able to generalize and kind of make broadly accurate predictions about the other problems in the dataset. 

These large networks are extremely adept at machine learning, meaning figuring out the patterns that exist in data (or correlations between inputs and outputs) and using the knowledge to make predictions when given new inputs.  

Most of the mathematics is beyond me, but Ananthaswamy reintroduced me into the magic of calculus - and I learned much more. Anyway, the book helps me to follow the discussion about AI which is getting more important every day.  Recommended! 

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Art Market: Tidbits From Fall Auctions 2025 @ Sotheby`s New York

 


(Drivebycuriosity) -  It`s November again and the world`s largest auction houses have their annual huge fall auctions in Manhattan.  This post focuses on the auction galleries  @ Sotheby`s (sothebys).

They had moved from the banks on the East River to Madison Avenue, close to Central Park. For financial reasons they gave up their huge tower and squeezed their administration and the auction galleries into the smaller Breuer Building, famous for its "Brutalist" architecture.  



Unfortunately the new location and apparently a huge buzz on Instagram and other social media attracted quite a crowd and I had to stand in line about 30 minutes to be allowed in, the first time at any auction gallery visit. There were no crowds at Christie`s & Phillips, who had their autumn auctions as well. The crowd, apparently steered by influencers on Instagram and other social media, clustered in some rooms and made them barely accessible, but many remarkable works, including some Magrittes, were ignored. 




Anyway - as usual - quality & quantity of the displayed art works were overwhelming and admission was free. I display here just my favorites, a very subjective selection. 

I start the post with 2 works by Mark Tansey. I have been a sucker for his surreal compositions for a while. The first image is called "The Myth of Depth". Their website explains: “The artist transposes the biblical miracle of Christ walking on water into a contemporary drama of twentieth-century art history, recasting its spiritual protagonists as the champions of Abstract Expressionism and its theoretical apostles. The daring Christ figure becomes Jackson Pollock, striding audaciously across the rippling teal surface, while in the lifeboat to the left, Clement Greenberg lectures an uneasy congregation of Kenneth Noland, Helen Frankenthaler, Mark Rothko, Robert Motherwell, and Arshile Gorky".   

The second image is called "Nature´s Ape". Fortunately both paintings didn`t get the attention of the Instagram crowd.

 

                          Concealed Orgies 

 



Above this paragraph follows another favorite of mine: Dorothea Tanning with "Interior with Sudden Joy". I discovered her surreal worlds at show at London`s Tate Modern in Summer 2019 (driveby ).  

 


Cecily Brown likes to paint concealed orgies. Above you can study her "High Society". I had enjoyed her exhibition at Paul Cooper gallery in 2017 ( driveby).

 



 

Above are 2 of René Magritte`s masterpieces: "La Représentation" & "Le Symbole Dissimulé". 

 



Above follow Neo Rauch with "Production"  & Huddon Sundbloom with "Around the Corner from Everywhere".

 


I also admire Andrew Wyeth´s realist paintings: Above his "East Waldoboro". 

 



Aren`t they cute? Maurice Dennis`"L'ORATORIO POUR 'L'ÉTERNEL PRINTEMPS" 

 


Carlos Enriquez`s "Banistas" remind me August Macke and other representants of German Expressionism. 

 

                               Bohemian Life 

 




Above you can see Pierre Auguste Renoir`s  "Femme Nue` Assise"; Paul Devoux`s "Composition"; Phillip Pearlstein`s "Nude on Kilim Rug"  & Hans Bellmer`s "Les Bas Raves".

 


And last but not least Richard Overstreet`s "Scenes from Bohemian Life - No. 5". 
 

Stay tuned

 

Saturday, November 15, 2025

Economics: Was China`s One-Child Policy Really So Bad?


(Drivebycuriosity) - There is much lamentation about China`s One-Child-Per Family policy. Was it really so bad?

"China's one-child policy significantly influenced population growth by dramatically slowing it. The policy, implemented in 1979 and ending in 2016, is credited by the Chinese government with preventing an estimated 400 million births.", says Google´s AI (google ).

We don´t know how accurate the official numbers are. But if China had kept the original population growth the country today might have some hundred million people more. A higher population growth might have led to more economic growth, but not very much because the construction of the necessary infrastructure (railways, streets, energy plants etc. ) got already stressed. So, without the One-Child policy China would have to feed more people; as a result the incomes per capita (GDP divided by population size) and living standards would be lower. Would the Chinese be happier?

If China today would have a far larger population, the country would emit even more greenhouse gases, making the global warming issue even more severe. 

If China would have continued an unconstrained population growth the country would today consume more oil, more rice, pork, more of everything. The global prices of oil, rice, pork and many other commodities might be higher today and slowing global growth.

It seems that China did the world a favor. We should be grateful for that! 

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Art Market: Tidbits From Fall Auctions 2025 @ Christie`s


 (Drivebycuriosity) - It`s November again and the world`s largest auction houses have their annual huge fall auctions in Manhattan. This post focuses on the auction galleries @ Christie`s (christies). As usual quality & quantity of the displayed art works was overwhelming and admission is free. I display here just my favorites, a very subjective selection as usual.

 



On top of this post you can see David Hockney`s "Christopher Isherwood and Don Barchady" (acrylic on canvas 83 ½/2 x 119 ½ in. (212 × 303.5 cm.) followed by Francis Bacon`s violent lover Lucian Freud with "The Painter Surprised by a Naked Admirer" & Genieve Figgis`"Sunday Tee in the Garden".

 



Above this paragraph follow Rudolf Bauer`s huge nipple "Composition with Red Circle" & Firelei Báez`s "Untitled ((Colonization in America, Visual History Wall Map, Prepared by Civic Education Service).

 

                         Consent S&M? 

 



Artists like to provoke: Maurizio Cattelan`s "Untitled" (2007, resin, paint, human hair, clothing, packing tissue, wood and screws). A crime scene or consent S&M? Anyway I spotted this girl already at Christie´s Spring Auction in 2017 (driveby ) & Takashi Murakami`s "Miss Ko (Project Ko)".

 



Above you can see Cecily Brown`s "It`s not yesterday any more" & Adrian Ghenie´s "Bogeyman".

 



Then follow George Condo`s "Untitled" & John Currin`s "Lake Place".

 

                   Forests With Tiny Figures 

 



Tomás Sanchez specializes in huge forests with tiny figures. Above his "Discovering the other Shore".

 



 

Then follow Julia Jo`s "Rhyme or Reason" & "Catherine Goodman`s "Solo".


 



And last but not least Caroline Walker´s "Study for Troupes, Backstage I" & John Singer Sargent`s "Corner of the Church of San Stae. Venice". 


To be continued.