Friday 
              August 31 
            
 
              THE 
                AUCTION WARS: Amid rumors of a possible sale of Sotheby's 
                to Phillips, the auction house wars heat up. Competition and scandals 
                have squeezed profits at Sotheby's and Christie's, while costly 
                aggressive maneuvering by No. 3 Phillips has cost a small fortune 
                or two. It's possible in the not too distant future that all three 
                houses could be French-owned. The 
                Economist 08/30/01
              LATIN 
                COLLECTION FINDS A HOME: "One of the world's great collections 
                of Latin American art is set to go on permanent display in the 
                Argentine capital, Buenos Aires. . . The Museum of Latin American 
                Art or 'Malba' will feature more than 220 works valued at some 
                $40m (£27m), from artists ranging from Mexico's Frida Kahlo to 
                Colombia's Fernando Botero." BBC 
                08/31/01
              LESS 
                MAY BE MORE AT MOMA: New York's Museum of Modern Art is in 
                the middle of a massive expansion that will eventually double 
                its size by 2004. But for the moment, MOMA's exhibit space is 
                severely limited, forcing curators to make some very interesting 
                decisions on what hangs where. "With so little space, time 
                also collapses, continuity is destroyed, and works usually hung 
                galleries apart are brought into unaccustomed proximity..." 
                The New York Times 08/31/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access)
              ART 
                FOR THE REAL WORLD: Much contemporary art is made to be displayed 
                in museums, large galleries or in the large homes of the very 
                rich. But what about art for the real lives of everday people? 
                "It is one thing to make and exhibit your work in the culturally 
                privileged context of a fine art infrastructure, quite another 
                to immerse yourself in the mundane demands of the wider world, 
                where you really are putting yourself on the line." Irish 
                Times 08/31/01
              UNDERSTANDING 
                VERMEER: What is it about Vermeer that has captured the imagination 
                of so many people? "He has inspired five novels, three exhibitions 
                and an opera in the last six years. A new film based on the best-selling 
                novel Girl with a Pearl Earring — the title comes from 
                a Vermeer painting — is likely to add to the momentum." MSNBC 
                (Reuters) 08/20/01
            
            Thursday 
              August 30 
            
 
              RETURN 
                TO SENDER: Why did Fort Worth's Kimbell Museum return a $2.7 
                million Summerian statue to a New York dealer seven months after 
                it was bought? "You don't do that in the art world. If you've 
                changed your mind, sell [the piece] back on the open market. This 
                is not like a sweater boutique in a department store, where they 
                would take something back in the name of good customer relations. 
                Why should the dealer take it back?" Fort 
                Worth Star-Telegram 08/23/01
              ART 
                AS A BUSINESS - IT'S BAD: Australia's Bureau of Statistics 
                did a survey of art gallery economics and made some dismal discoveries. 
                "Overall, the gallery industry told the bureau it had a pretax 
                profit margin of 7 per cent - a return that suggests dilettantes 
                would be better off playing the stock market. Galleries had total 
                sales worth $218 million, of which $36 million was for Aboriginal 
                art." Sydney Morning Herald 08/30/01
              DANIEL 
                DOES DENVER: Denver is not a city known for its architecture. 
                But the Denver Art Museum's plan for a dramatic new wing designed 
                by Daniel Libeskind and set to open in 2005, promises to deliver 
                the region's first signature piece of architecture. The 
                New York Times 08/20/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access)
              WHY 
                NOT JUST CALL IT MUSIC? "Increasingly, museum- and gallery-goers 
                are being asked to both look and listen to the art on display, 
                as an emerging generation of artists explores a new territory 
                between music and art that is known, generally, as audio art. 
                So if an artist is interested in sound, why not become a musician? 
                Many audio artists like to distinguish between music and noise, 
                placing their allegiances firmly in the latter camp." The 
                Globe & Mail (Canada) 08/30/01
              McSMITHSONIAN? 
                Washington's popular Museum of Air and Space has decided to 
                allow a McDonald's to open inside the museum. Is it a smart service 
                for visitors or a corrupting commercial incursion for a federally-funded 
                institution? Washington Post 08/29/01
              HIJACKING 
                HIS NAME: Canadian artist Freeman Patterson has had his name 
                hijacked for a pornographic website. When visitors click on the 
                artist's name as expressed as a web address, they are directed 
                to a porn site. The site offers to "sell" the address 
                to anyone willing to offer more than $550. The 
                Globe & Mail (Canada) 08/29/01
              A 
                POSTHUMOUS CLASH BETWEEN ARTIST AND DEALER: The heirs of German 
                painter George Grosz are suing the estate of his former dealer, 
                claiming that because he surreptitiously bought many paintings 
                for himself, he cheated the artist of a higher open market value. 
                Heirs of the dealer say the Grosz family is just complaining about 
                the prices, 25 years after the fact. International Herald Tribune 08/30/01
            
            Wednesday 
              August 29 
            
 
              A 
                MATTER OF CONSCIENCE: Former Metropolitan Museum director 
                Thomas Hoving believes that the 12th Century cross he acquired 
                for the museum back in 1963 is "nothing less than a medieval 
                version of a swastika, used to incite the massacre of Bury St 
                Edmunds' Jews in 1190 with a dark litany of anti-semitic inscriptions 
                carved minutely along its 20 inch length. He claims it marked 
                and helped speed the birth of English anti-semitism." And 
                he thinks the Met should return it to England. The 
                Guardian (UK) 08/29/01
              COURTING 
                IN THE SOUTHWEST: Los Angeles' Southwest Museum has an important 
                collection of Native American artifacts. But the museum is poor 
                and is contemplating acquiring a wealthy partner. The suitors 
                are a movie cowboy museum or an indian casino. "But a partnership 
                with either the Autry or the Pechanga Band raises new questions. 
                Some Indian groups have criticized the Autry proposal as a none-too-subtle 
                attempt by the cowboys to take over the Indians, culturally speaking, 
                while some in the art world have expressed concern about whether 
                a casino would really be an appropriate overseer for a major collection 
                of Indian artifacts." The New 
                York Times 08/29/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access)
              BUT 
                "ARTS" WILL ALWAYS GET TOP BILLING: In some art 
                circles, "crafts" is a dirty word. At their best, crafts 
                are treated as if they were the ugly step-sisters of the arts. 
                "Like realist painting and sculpture, though, crafts never 
                fade away. They continue to be practiced out of the spotlight 
                until another generation in the arts discovers them." 
                Chicago Tribune 08/26/01
              THE 
                WORLD'S FASTEST PAINTER - REALLY: Maybe you favor Elvis on 
                velour, or waifs with enormous eyes. Can't help you there. But 
                if you like "whirling candy-colored planets in a shiny black 
                sky, surrounded by falling stars," Atom is your man. But 
                can't he paint anything else? "I could," he says, "but 
                people always want the spacey stuff." St. Louis Post-Dispatch 08/28/01
            
            Tuesday 
              August 28 
            
 
              FREE 
                = MORE KIDS: Want to get more children into museums? Drop 
                the admission charge. That's what Britain did in 1999, and the 
                number of kids visiting museums jumped 20 percent, according to 
                the latest figures. BBC 08/28/01
              ARCHITECTURE'S 
                'IT' BOY: Will the new Disney Concert Hall in LA be the crowning 
                achievement of architect Frank Gehry's career? As it rises, the 
                world seems ready to cede Gehry the title of North America's Leading 
                Architect. Not that Gehry seems anxious to accept the crown: "This 
                was designed 10 years ago, so a lot of crowning achievements have 
                happened since," he chuckles. The 
                Globe & Mail (Canada) 08/28/01 
              IT'S 
                NOT SCIENTIFIC, BUT DURHAM'S TOPS WITH BBC LISTENERS: What 
                building do English listeners to BBC4 like best in Britain? According 
                to a BBC poll, Durham Cathedral. "Other buildings also rated 
                highly by the 15, 819 people who voted included more modern structures 
                like the Eden Project, in Cornwall (22.5%), London's Tate Modern 
                (11.96%) and Stansted Airport (7.02%)." And the most-loathed 
                structure? Heathrow Airport. BBC 08/28/01
            
            Monday 
              August 27 
            
 
              REPATRIATING 
                ART: Major British museums are about to return hundreds of 
                artifacts to their original cultures. "At least 40 institutions 
                are believed to be preparing to give back all or part of their 
                collections. The biggest beneficiaries are likely to be the Australian 
                Aborigines and native Americans who have been campaigning for 
                the return of such objects for decades." The 
                Telegraph (UK) 08/27/01
              REDEFINING 
                THE BRITISH MUSEUM: The British Museum has some 4 million 
                objects that the public never sees because of lack of space. Now 
                museum officials have put together plans for an £80 million redo 
                of a 12-story post office building as a study center for objects. 
                This isn't just re-warehousing, they say - they hope the new space 
                will allow the museum's researchers to bring new context to the 
                museum's vast collection. The Guardian 
                (UK) 08/27/01
              THE 
                GEHRY THING: Is Frank Gehry not only our finest architect, 
                but our best artist as well? "The notion that he might 
                be points to the new centrality of architecture in cultural discourse, 
                a centrality that goes back to some of the early debates about 
                Post-Modernism in the 1970s." London 
                Review of Books 08/23/01
            
            Sunday 
              August 26 
            
 
              THE 
                MUSEUM CRISIS: What has happened to the idea of "museum"? 
                These days "it hardly matters what they contain, if anything. 
                They are our new theaters of conscience, memorials to suffering, 
                choreographed places of ritual genuflection, where we go to contemplate 
                our fallibility and maybe even weep a little while admiring the 
                architecture. They offer packaged units of morality, unimpeachable 
                and guiltlessly entertaining. They presume to bring us together, 
                physically and spiritually." The 
                New York Times 08/26/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access)
              BUDAPEST 
                JOINS THE MUSEUM SWEEPSTAKES: To be great these days, a great 
                city must have a great museum. Fine if you're London or Vienna. 
                But Budapest, with fewer resources, yet wanting to join the museum 
                sweepstakes, has found a way to play. "But in a fast- changing 
                country that's still learning to sort out public and private interests, 
                the new projects present an emblematic mix of noble ideals and 
                slippery realities. Playing by the rules is hard to do, especially 
                where the rules are up for grabs." The 
                New York Times 08/26/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access)
              THE 
                ART OF RANSOM: Are the people who stole the Chagall painting 
                from New York's Jewish Museum and "holding it for ransom" 
                until peace is achieved in the Middle East for real? Or is the 
                note itself "a kind of quirky, postmodern performance in 
                the manner of Brechtian political theater, which, by unmasking 
                illusion and artifice, provokes its audience to radical action." 
                Baltimore Sun 08/26/01 
              PRIVATE 
                PASSIONS: Swiss collector Gustav Rau accumulated the second 
                largest private art collection in the world. When a Swiss court 
                declared him incompetent and tried to take control of the collection, 
                he fought back, and now the art is on tour. Financial 
                Times 08/25/01
              MET 
                SETTLES PAINTING CLAIM: The Metropolitan Museum has settled 
                a claim over a Monet painting in the museum's collection. A man 
                had claimed it had been stolen during the Soviet occupation of 
                Berlin in 1945. Washington Post (AP) 
                08/25/01
              TELLING 
                NEW YORK'S STORY: Should New York City have a museum that 
                ties together strands of the city's history? "We've got curators 
                of ball gowns and curators of paintings. But we don't have a curator 
                of New York City." The New York Times 
                08/25/01 (one-time registration 
                required for access) 
            
            Friday 
              August 24 
            
 
              KEEPING 
                ART AT HOME: The French government has passed a law providing 
                for the government to buy art it considers national treasures 
                to prevent it from leaving the country. "If a work of art 
                is deemed of cultural importance and denied an export licence, 
                within the following 30 months, the government can make an offer 
                to purchase it on behalf of a public institution. Their offer 
                will be set at international market value." The 
                Art Newspaper 08/24/01 
              EVERYONE'S 
                AN ARTIST: An American scientist has developed a software 
                program that can transform anyoine's photo or drawin into the 
                art of a master. "The program can analyse a digital photograph 
                and transform it into the style of any chosen artist. The software 
                was inspired when he began wondering whether a computer could 
                analyse an artist's style and then apply it to pictures." 
                The Independent (UK) 08/24/01
              NAME 
                VALUE: Typically, the value of an artist's work increases 
                when he dies. But Australian Aboriginal artist Turkey Tolson's 
                work presents a challenge to Christie's, which wants to auction 
                it. "In Aboriginal custom, particularly in the Central Desert, 
                where Tolson lived, a dead person's name should not be mentioned 
                or his or her image shown to his relatives, clan and wider tribe." 
                How to sell it then? Sydney Morning 
                Herald 08/24/01
              SOTHEBY'S 
                CHICAGO TO CLOSE:  Sotheby's announces it's closing its auction 
                house in Chicago. how much will it affect affect Chicago? "What 
                does it say, if anything, about the state of Chicago's art and 
                antiques market, or the future of fine art auctions in general? 
                'Running a regional house is a tough thing. The margins are slim, 
                there's a lot of overhead and there's a lot to managing property'." 
                Chicago Tribune 08/24/01
            
            Thursday 
              August 23 
            
 
              SUING 
                RICHARD SERRA: Owners of a Richard Serra sculpture are suing 
                the artist to recover the piece. In 1989 the owners showed Serra 
                the piece they had bought, and he told them it was broken and 
                needed repairing, which he offered to do in return for a 50 percent 
                share of the resale. The owners say though Serra took back the 
                work, they have been unable to get it returned despite numerous 
                tries. New York Post 08/22/01
              GUGGENHEIM 
                DELAYS VEGAS OPENING:  The opening of the Guggenheim and Hermitage 
                Museum outposts has been delayed three weeks to Oct. 7. "There 
                is no single reason for the date change," Thomas Krens, Guggenheim 
                Foundation director, said in a prepared statement. "Rather, after 
                arduous and careful analysis of the construction and installation 
                paths, and after consultation with all of the construction managers 
                and museum professionals working on this project, we had come 
                to the conclusion that there was a real possibility that we might 
                not be ready if we maintained the Sept. 16 opening date." 
                Las Vegas Sun 08/23/01
              
                - GOING 
                  DOWNCULTURE: Hilton Kramer's not in favor of the modern 
                  brand of museums - the Tates, Guggenheims etc. They are trashing 
                  the traditional idea of the museum. Tate Modern, he complains, 
                  is "a culture mall still pretending to be an art museum 
                  but resembling—in spirit, in layout, and in noise levels and 
                  general pandemonium—a cross between an airport arrivals terminal 
                  and Times Square on a bad night." And the Guggenheim? Well... 
                  New York Observer 08/22/01
CRUSHING 
                DECISIONS: The temples at Angkor, in Cambodia, are archeological 
                and architectural treasures. They also are slowly being crushed 
                by the jungle, which has closed in on them over the past five 
                centuries. Restoration poses a dilemma: "If the trees are 
                left in place, portions of the half-ruined structures will eventually 
                collapse. If the trees are removed, the structures may also collapse." 
                International Herald Tribune 08/23/01
              WALLS 
                THAT DIVIDE: The Viet Nam Veterans Memorial is in the center 
                of a new controversy. A group of veterans plans "to add a 
                structure nearby to educate visitors, not about the war but about 
                the memorial itself. Critics, not least among them the National 
                Park Service, are appalled." MSNBC 
                08/23/01
            
            Wednesday 
              August 22 
            
 
              WORLD 
                HERITAGE IDEAS: The United Nations lists some 700 cultural 
                treasures around the world as heritage sites. "But why limit 
                UNESCO's validating embrace to the realm of the physical? What 
                about manifestations of human genius that may be ubiquitous but 
                also happen to be intangible?" Like pizza, perhaps? The 
                Atlantic 09/01
              WHAT'S 
                WRONG WITH PAINTING:  "Every few years, some art critic 
                takes pleasure in making people furious with the declaration that 
                painting is dead. But what does it mean for painting to die? I 
                think it's impossible to declare any form of art to be dead, inasmuch 
                as anything is allowed these days, but why is it that painting 
                isn't, in the most general sense, good anymore?" The 
                Stranger 08/23/01 
              BOTTOM FISHING: 
                A Venetian island, submerged and ignored for 650 years, is being 
                uncovered. But it isn't the island itself that's most interesting 
                right now, it's a couple of ships that were grounded on it. Venetian 
                galleys have been well-documented in histories, but none has ever 
                before been salvaged in recognizable condition. 
                Discover 08/21/01
              PRICEY CALENDAR 
                ART: Western (Western USA, that is) art appears to be riding 
                tall in the saddle these days. A watercolor by Charles Russell, 
                estimated at around $750,000, was auctioned for $2.4 million. 
                The picture, A Disputed Trail, is widely known, having 
                been used as calendar art for ninety years. The 
                Art Newspaper 08/22/01
              CLEVELAND 
                CURATOR LEAVES: Diane De Grazia is leaving the job of chief 
                curator of the Cleveland Museum of Art. "An expert on 17th-century 
                European paintings and drawings, De Grazia came to Cleveland from 
                the National Gallery of Art in Washington. The 
                Plain Dealer (Cleveland) 08/22/01
              BEAUTY 
                MAY BE IN THE CHILDHOOD OF THE OBSERVER: Pawtucket, Rhode 
                Island, sent a gift to its twin town in England. The English did 
                not like it at all. In fact, they seem rather insulted by the 
                seven-foot statue. The seven-foot plastic statue of Mr. Potato 
                Head. ABC 08/20/01
            
            Tuesday 
              August 21 
            
 
              LOAN 
                OF PARTHENON MARBLES? The British Museum is discussing temporarily 
                loaning the Parthenon Marbles to Greece for the 2004 Olympics. 
                "Greece said it was willing to discuss a compromise under 
                which it would get the 2,300-year-old artefacts - or if necessary 
                only some of them - on temporary loan. In return, Britain would 
                borrow masterpieces of classical antiquity never seen here before." 
                The Guardian (UK) 08/20/01
              
                - Previously: BRITISH 
                  GOVERNMENT TURNS DOWN GREEK MARBLES DEAL: The British government 
                  has turned down a Greek request to return the Parthenon Marbles 
                  in time for the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. Greece had offered 
                  to loan hundreds of newly discovered antiquities to Britain 
                  in return for the return of the marbles. BBC 
                  08/20/01
IT'S 
                A MONEY THING: Why did David Ross leave as director of San 
                Francisco's SFMOMA? It was money. Ross saw some opportunities 
                for himself to make some money. The museum's board thought Ross's 
                being the head of a website that sells art was a conflict. And, 
                as the economic downturn was affecting the museum, Ross was thought 
                not to be the person to get the museum through it. "David is an 
                entrepreneur - he comes up with 15 ideas an hour - and it's hard 
                for nonprofits to deal with that. Now he has come to a point where 
                there is an opportunity to go to a for-profit and benefit financially 
                from his ideas. We understand. When you tell someone like David 
                to stop, you destroy him." San Francisco 
                Chronicle 08/21/01
              CHAGALL 
                FOR PEACE: The Jewish Museum in New York has received an offer 
                to return a 1914 Chagall painting stolen from the museum earlier 
                this year. Actually, it's more of a ransom note; the gist of the 
                one-page typewritten message says: " 'You get the painting 
                back when peace has been achieved between Israel and Palestine.' 
                The letter was signed by a previously unknown group, the International 
                Committee for Art and Peace." CNN.com 
                08/20/01
              OPENING 
                UP FRANCE: The French art market is about to open up. "Nearly 
                450 years of protectionism for the country's 458 auction houses 
                will disappear in a deluge of art sales in the next few months 
                dominated by the world's big two and the third-placed pursuer, 
                Phillips." The Guardian (UK) 
                08/20/01
              PRESERVING 
                ALBANIA: Albania has some important archaeological treasures, 
                but most of them have not been cared for. Now there is a tourist 
                boom, and "the swell of visitors brings an opportunity and 
                a threat. The opportunity is to create, on an undeveloped stretch 
                of coast just north of Greece, a new tourism industry that can 
                bring prosperity to one of Europe's poorest nations. The threat 
                is that local greed, weak planning controls and powerful foreign 
                investors will combine to create the common Mediterranean mess 
                of badly built hotels, noise and pollution." The 
                Economist 08/16/01
              GIULIANI 
                VS ARTISTS: New York mayor Rudy Giuliani intends to appeal 
                last week's court ruling that allows artists to display their 
                work on city streets. But is this a fight worth continuing? "Once 
                the city decides that an area is open to vending, it cannot arbitrarily 
                pick and choose whom it allows in." The 
                New York Times 08/21/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access)
              BANNING 
                BILL: A Bay Area artist created a sculture of Bill Clinton 
                and a certain intern, entered a local fair, and won. He also won 
                a prize at the California State Fair, but the sculture has been 
                banned from display. :No fewer than five representatives of the 
                Fair ruled Loose Lips unfit for exhibition, particularly 
                because of 'the location of Monica Lewinsky to the overall position 
                of the president.' In this, the sculptor was simply striving for 
                verisimilitude, giving the work educational value." National 
                Review 08/20/01
            
            Monday 
              August 20 
            
 
              BRITISH 
                GOVERNMENT TURNS DOWN GREEK MARBLES DEAL: The British government 
                has turned down a Greek request to return the Parthenon Marbles 
                in time for the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. Greece had offered 
                to loan hundreds of newly discovered antiquities to Britain in 
                return for the return of the marbles. BBC 
                08/20/01
              LEADERSHIP 
                DISPUTE: Trustees of the British Museum are rejecting the 
                government's first choice to be the museum's next director. "Her 
                failure to win the endorsement of the trustees may owe something 
                to suspicions that she might be too eager to carry out the wishes 
                of the museum's paymasters in government. The museum's grant from 
                the taxpayer is £34.88 million for 2001, slightly more than half 
                its total income." Sunday Times 
                (UK) 08/19/01
              SO 
                THIS IS WINNING? Earlier this year 200 employees of the National 
                Gallery of Canada went on strike for nine weeks. But though workers 
                have been back at work since mid July, they still haven't received 
                the promised retroactive pay, signing bonuses and salary increases 
                they were promised to end the strike. Ottawa 
                Citizen 08/19/01
              THE 
                GREAT ART SCAMMER: Michel Cohen was such a successful player 
                in the art markets that he could borrow $100 million to buy paintings, 
                with few questions asked. But he also couldn't resist trying to 
                double his money in the stock market, and when the market crashed, 
                he vanished with a lot of other people's money. National 
                Post (Telegraph) (Canada) 08/20/01
              SIGNS 
                OF A DOWNTURN? The downturn in the US economy is impacting 
                museums. "Attendance has dropped significantly at the Orange 
                County Museum of Art during the past two years. And after years 
                of surplus, the museum is expecting to just break even with a 
                lower budget for fiscal year 2000-01. In Laguna Beach, the Laguna 
                Art Museum is trying to get a handle on a large deficit that reached 
                $169,301 in fiscal year 1999-2000." Orange 
                County Register 08/19/01 
              LONGEST 
                PAINTING: A group of Thai artists is setting out to make the 
                longest painting in the world - 1 1/2 kilometers long. "The 
                project is in protest against a decision by the Thai authorities 
                to allow construction of a shopping centre on a site the artists 
                want earmarked for a museum of modern art." BBC 
                08/19/01
            
            Sunday 
              August 19 
            
 
              ROSS 
                QUITS SFMOMA: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art director 
                David Ross has abruptly quit the museum, effective immediately. 
                "A statement from the museum said that Ross' 'priorities 
                diverge from those of the museum'." The move has surprised the 
                San Francisco artworld. SFGate 08/17/01 
                
              
                - SFMOMA 
                  BOARD SAYS: Economic downturn squeezes museum. "Our focus 
                  in the museum is on internal management, and David Ross is focused 
                  on external matters, which he is a genius at. What is good for 
                  the museum is not necessarily in his best interests. And we 
                  thought it was mutually beneficial if we parted." The 
                  New York Times 08/18/01 (one-time 
                  registration required for access)
LA'S 
                NEW LOOK: Los Angeles doesn't have a tradition of great public 
                buildings. But in the past few years, "Los Angeles' civic 
                landscape has undergone a startling transformation. As the $1-billion 
                Getty Center was opening its doors in 1997 in Brentwood, construction 
                was starting up on Frank Gehry's Walt Disney Concert Hall and 
                José Rafael Moneo's Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels - all 
                major works by world-renowned architects. More important, a sense 
                of civic flowering has spread beyond a few powerful downtown institutions." 
                Los Angeles Times 08/19/01
              GOVERNMENT 
                KEEPS HITLERS: After World War II, the American government 
                seized some watercolor paintings by Hitler. For the past 18 years 
                the heirs to a Hitler friend who had owned the paintings, had 
                been petitioning to get them back. This week a court ruled that 
                the government had the right to keep the watercolors "because 
                it was never the government's intent to return them to their owner. 
                Because they were the work of Hitler, the Army seized the four 
                rather ordinary landscapes as potentially provocative." The 
                New York Times 08/18/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access) 
              AUCTION 
                SCANDAL - UH UH, WASN'T ME: Alfred Taubman, Sotheby's former 
                chairman, is defending himself against charges he was a central 
                figure in the auction house's collusion to fix prices. At a preliminary 
                hearing last week his attorneys argued that "price-fixing 
                discussions had been engineered by subordinates at the two auction 
                houses without his involvement." The 
                New York Times 08/18/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access) 
              REAL 
                FAKES: The dispute between Paris' Rodin Museum and the Royal 
                Ontario Museum in Canada over whether an exhibition of Rodin scultures 
                is "real" or not has heated up. The Rodin's principal 
                curator, "France's legal guardian of Rodin's legacy, urged 
                Canadians to stay home and avert their eyes from the allegedly 
                sham works about to go on view." But when you're casting 
                sculptures, what is real and what is fake? National 
                Post (Canada) 08/18/01 
              LOOKING 
                FOR KHAN: An archaeological team looking for Genghis Khan's 
                grave in Mongolia reported this week that they have found "a 
                walled burial ground 200 miles northeast of the Mongolian capital 
                that may contain the 13th-century conqueror's remains along with 
                priceless artifacts." Discovery 
                08/17/01
            
            Friday 
              August 17 
            
 
              CYBER-AMERICA: 
                The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History displays 
                less than 5 percent of its 3 million objects. "Some of its 
                exhibits have bare-bones labeling with no referrals to in-depth 
                materials." Now the museum is hoping that a new website will 
                make access to images and information about objects in the museum's 
                collection easier. The site is a modest start - only 450 objects 
                are up on the site so far. Washington 
                Post 08/16/01
              DISPUTED 
                RODINS: Paris' Rodin Museum and a museum in Ontario Canada 
                are disputing the authenticity of a collection of sculptures the 
                Canadian museum intends to put on display. "Which Rodins 
                are authentic and which are reproductions is a thorny and complex 
                debate, with roots in the way the artist created such renowned 
                sculptures as The Thinker and The Kiss." National 
                Post 08/16/01
            
            Thursday 
              August 16 
            
 
              CRITICAL 
                HISTORY: Looking back at a century of American art criticism 
                can be revealing. "Examples of high intelligence, shrewd 
                judgment and excellent prose command respect as well as envy. 
                They may even serve as models to emulate. But the all-too-frequent 
                instances of parochial taste, hidebound prejudice, political log-rolling 
                and moldy prose leave one in no doubt as to why criticism is not 
                a universally beloved enterprise." New 
                York Observer 08/15/01 
              VINTAGE 
                FRAUD: A series of vintage photographs supposedly signed by 
                photographer Lewis Hine are likely fakes. The photos appear to 
                have been printed on paper not available until the 1950s. Hine 
                died in the 1940s. Vintage prints have escalated in price in the 
                past few years, making them quite valuable. The FBI is investigating 
                for fraud. The New York Times 08/16/01 
                (one-time registration required for access) 
              THAT 
                OLD SEXPOT, MAGGIE THATCHER: "The 'erotic and iconic' 
                qualities of Margaret Thatcher, the former British prime minister, 
                are to be examined in a major art show planned for London next 
                year." The exhibition will be called There Is No Alternative. 
                Thirty artists who grew up during her terms as Prime Minister 
                have been invited to take part. National 
                Post (Canada) 08/15/01
            
            Wednesday 
              August 15 
            
 
              THE 
                ODDS ON ART IN VEGAS: The Guggenheim and Hermitage museums 
                are opening branch galleries in Las Vegas. Certainly, no one else 
                has ever opened a major art museum in Las Vegas. The art world 
                is intrigued and aghast. Can [Guggenheim uber-director Thomas] 
                Krens compete with gambling, exploding volcanos and topless showgirls? 
                And has Krens driven a stake into the traditional notion that 
                art and entertainment are mutually exclusive? Krens likes the 
                odds, calculating the Vegas operation will take in $15 million 
                a year. The Age (Nelbourne) 08/15/01
              CASTLING: 
                Many of Hungary’s baroque castles were converted to schools and 
                hospitals during the Communist period and then abandoned in the 
                early 1990s, now there are plans to restore and modernise them." 
                The Art Newspaper 08/14/01 
              FAMOUS DOG 
                NEEDS GOOD HOME. COST, $943,000: The Museum of Fine Arts in 
                Houston bought "The Molossian Hound," a rare Roman statue, 
                from its British owner. But the British government has delayed 
                the deal, to give the British museum a chance to meet the sale 
                price and keep the marble mastiff where he is. USAToday 08/14/01
              ANYWAY, THEY 
                AGREE ON THE TITLE: The Prado bought "The Raising of 
                Lazarus" at Sotheby's for $1.8 million. Sotheby's insists 
                the painting is by seventeenth-century artist Jusepe de Ribera. 
                The ex-director of the gallery says "it is not by Ribera 
                and has no business to be in the Prado.” The painting is being 
                kept in storage while the experts duke it out. The Art Newspaper 08/14/01
            
            Tuesday 
              August 14 
            
 
              WALL 
                ME IN: Since he visited the Berlin Wall in 1971, architect 
                Rem Koolhaas has been fascinated with walls. They're not just 
                divisions, they have philosophical dimensions that define ideas. 
                Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 08/14/01
              YES 
                ON NUDE BARBIES: A US judge rules that a Utah artist can use 
                Barbie dolls as parody in his work. “The ruling doesn’t mean it’s 
                open season (to exploit products by) Mattel, it means there is 
                a certain amount of breathing room for artists who want to use 
                a commercial symbol that has tremendous cultural meaning, for 
                purposes of artistic expression.” MSNBC 
                (Reuters) 08/13/01
              ART 
                ONLINE: "In Canada, where the art market is small and 
                dominated by a handful of established auction houses, the industry 
                is very nearly a closed sphere, where collectors and dealers do 
                business based on ties forged years, sometimes decades, earlier." 
                But a six-year-old company, by putting its entire catalogues online, 
                has quietly become the second largest art seller in the country. 
                National Post (Canada) 08/14/01
              MILLION 
                POINTS OF LIGHT: Artist James Downey wants to recruit millions 
                of laser-pointer owners to shine their devices at a spot on the 
                moon and light it up. One problem? A scientist says the physics 
                of the project don't work out. MSNBC 
                (Space.com) 08/14/01
              DEFENDING 
                THE NATIONAL: The director of the National Museum of Australia 
                is defending the museum from charges of accusations of "fabricated 
                exhibitions, too much razzle-dazzle, and excessive use of oral 
                history and audio-visuals." Canberra 
                Times 08/14/01
              SLAVERY 
                MUSEUM: The city of Charleston South Carolina contemplates 
                building a museum about slavery. "It would be one of the 
                most daring steps yet taken to bring the story of slavery to large 
                numbers of people in the South, where there are still many monuments 
                to Confederate heroes and where generations of politicians embraced 
                the view that slave life was not all that bad." The 
                New York Times 08/14/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access)
              DIFFICULT 
                CONCEPT: Provocative artist Tracey Emin speaks out about her 
                controversial conceptual art: "If people say it's a joke or a 
                confidence trick I'd say they're not very interested in art." 
                BBC 08/14/01
            
            Monday 
              August 13 
            
 
              UNHAPPY 
                NEIGHBORS: The Metropolitan Museum is undergoing a 200,000 
                square-foot expansion, but the museum's Upper East Side neighbors 
                are rallying in protest. "For months now, the Met has doggedly 
                defended its plan, arguing that the expansion is vital to its 
                survival as a world-class cultural institution. But nearby residents 
                have come to view the Met as the Sherman tank of Upper East Side 
                institutions: hulking, unwieldy and seemingly invincible." 
                New York Observer 08/08/01 
              WHY 
                THE FRENCH LAG: Why have French artists lagged behind internationally? 
                "French artists are very little present on the world stage, 
                particularly at the great contemporary art fairs and sales – Basel 
                and New York, for example." The 
                Art Newspaper 08/10/01
              MUSEUMS 
                IN INDIA: "Arguably, the very idea of the museum remains 
                alien to millions of people in India in the absence of an identifiable 
                museum culture. Indeed, if Indian museums, for the most part, 
                have virulently resisted being decolonised, this phenomenon needs 
                to be linked to the absence of any sustained attempt to re-imagine 
                their postcolonial condition." ARTIndia 
                08/01 
              LEONARDO 
                TOUR: To celebrate Queen Elizabeth's 50 years on the throne 
                next year, the queen is sending her collection of priceless Leonardo 
                drawings on a tour of the country. BBC 
                09/13/01
            
            Sunday 
              August 12 
            
 
              CAN'T 
                RESTRICT ART: A US federal judge has ruled that New York mayor 
                Rudy Giuliani's administration can't force street artists to get 
                permits to show their work on city streets. City attorneys say 
                they will appeal. The 
                New York Times 08/11/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access)
              NUMBERS 
                GAME: To hear some museum directors talk these days, you'd 
                think the most important part of their job was to get as many 
                people possible through their front doors. "So museums have 
                reached admirable attendance numbers. Now the question is, at 
                what cost? How do museums balance education and entertainment, 
                all the while keeping track of their admissions?" 
                Chicago Tribune 08/12/01
              FRANCE 
                ON THE RISE: Reforms in French auction law should propel the 
                country to the top of the auction world. "It [France] sits 
                on a hoard of works of art that, unlike Britain's, has notbeen 
                bled dry. It retains a vast constituency of passionate collectors 
                in every field, at every financial level, who represent a force 
                as essential to the successful outcome of an auction as a supportive 
                public is to a football team's victory." International 
                Herald Tribune 08/11/01
              LACK 
                OF VISION: Visual art is the poor relation at the Edinburgh 
                Festival. "The contents of the official programme are enough 
                to show that the planners are interested only in opera, concerts 
                and plays. The exhibitions aren't mentioned even in passing. According 
                to the man at the top, festival director Brian McMaster, the visual 
                arts are more than capable of looking after themselves." 
                Sunday Times (UK) 08/12/01
              MORE 
                CURATORS (OR ELSE): Glasgow's museums have been given an ultimatum 
                by the National Heritage Lottery Fund - hire 21 more curators 
                and fire some of those overpaid janitors and security guards or 
                you won't get this year's £8 million grant. Sunday 
                Times (UK) 08/12/01
              INSIDE, 
                OUTSIDE: Shouldn't a museum reflect (even just a little bit) 
                the experience awaiting inside? The Texas State History Museum 
                has plenty of colorful stories to tell inside. But on the outside, 
                its new building is as sober as the Federal Reserve. Dallas 
                Morning News 08/12/01
              TEAMWORK 
                OR COMPETITION? Baltimore has two large museums - the Walters 
                and the Baltimore Museum of Art. But the city is shrinking - fewer 
                people, less resources. So there's a proposal to combine operations 
                of both in an attempt to give them both greater prominence. But 
                is the city better served by the "genteel rivalry that traditionally 
                has existed between the two museums?" Baltimore 
                Sun 08/12/01
              HERITAGE 
                SELLING: "Today's Aboriginal art has little to do with 
                the ethnological image of atavistic tribal culture. Besides representing 
                the creation myth of the Australian natives, the so-called 'Dreamings,' 
                it has begun to rewrite colonial and postcolonial history." 
                Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 08/12/01
            
            Friday 
              August 10 
            
 
              SELLING 
                GERMAN TREASURES: The sale of a rare map, made in 1507, to 
                the American Library of Congress for $10 million, violated German 
                laws on the export of national treasures. The map "was the 
                first to map the continent of America, erroneously naming it after 
                the Florentine explorer Amerigo Vespucci," and the German 
                government okayed the sale as a "token of friendship." 
                But what does this say about the state of German culture? Frankfurter 
                Allgemeine Zeitung 08/10/01
              IN-COUNTRY: 
                The English government has placed an export ban on seven works 
                of art and is lookignfor buyers for the works within the UK. The 
                Art Newspaper 08/08/01
              LAS 
                VEGAS - CITY OF CULTURE? “The Venetian Guggenheim and Hermitage 
                represent a quantum leap forward in the development of Las Vegas 
                as a place that has redefined the meaning of entertainment.” The 
                Economist 08/09/01
              MAKING 
                IT IN ART: "Over the last couple of decades schools and 
                other institutions have recognized the art student's need for 
                more practical guidance. So they have designed programs to help 
                young artists figure out how to achieve and sustain rewarding 
                careers as professionals in a market- driven art world." 
                The New York Times 08/10/01  
                (one-time registration required for access)
              WHAT 
                ROLE MUSEUMS? The wave of new museums featuring splashy architecture 
                misunderstands the environment in which art wants to be. "Museums 
                should not be built. They should be places which already exist, 
                established by proclamation, chosen by acclamation." 
                The Art Newspaper 08/08/01
            
            Thursday 
              August 9 
            
 
              PHOTOGRAPHED 
                NAZI LOOT: Dresden's Deutsche Fotothek has recently discovered 
                a photography archive of 1,000 glas negatives thought to document 
                artwork bought for Hitler's personal museum. The trove had been 
                held by the Stasi, the former East Germany's secret police, and 
                the photos could shed significant light on missing artwork looted 
                by the Nazis. Frankfurter Allgemeine 
                Zeitung 08/09/01
              SPANISH 
                THIEVES MAKE A MAJOR HAUL: More than 20 important works of 
                art have been reported stolen from a home in Madrid. The works 
                include "The Donkey's Fall" and "The Swing" 
                by Goya, "Eragny Landscape" by Pisarro, and "St. 
                Anthony's Temptations" by Brueghel. BBC 09/09/01
            
            Wednesday 
              August 8 
            
 
              ART 
                FOR HIRE: Should artists be paid by the hour? An Australian 
                group "comprising economists, researchers and gallery representatives, 
                have proposed a per hour, sliding scale of earnings, dependent 
                on the artist's seniority. Top dogs of the art world who are commissioned 
                to place work in public foyers should receive $125 per hour, they 
                say, while emerging artists should be paid at a rate of $30 per 
                hour." Sydney Morning Herald 
                08/08/01
              BUILDING 
                BIND: Critics might be raving about the new Gehry-designed 
                Disney concert hall in Los Angeles, but the workers building it 
                hate it. "Forget about that construction site standard, the 
                blueprint. Forget about anything that covers a trifling two dimensions 
                - the way construction documents do in more standard buildings. 
                In Frank Gehry's world, everything is 3-D, and the construction 
                workers are swept along - or left behind." Los 
                Angeles Times 08/07/01
              BUY 
                BRAZILIAN: Brazil is awash in art - and pretty good art at 
                that. But Europe and the US know little about it. "For once 
                this is no bad thing: the artists have such an eager market at 
                home they have little need for us tourists." 
                The Times (UK) 08/08/01
              ANYBODY SEEN A MONET AROUND 
                HERE? KLEE? HOW ABOUT DEGAS? During their reign in the Philippines, 
                the Marcoses accumulated a great deal of art. But the Presidential 
                Commission on Good Government, though it did track down a once-missing 
                Picasso, still is unable to find some "20 paintings with 
                an estimated value of around $1 million each," including 
                work by Degas, Klee, and Monet. inq7.net Philippines) 08/07/01
              UNIQUELY HATEFUL 
                ART: The centerpiece of the medieval art collection at the 
                Metropolitan Museum of Art is an ivory cross, the Bury St. Edmunds 
                Cross. The ever-irrepressible Thomas Hoving, former director of 
                the Met and the man who acquired the cross, calls it an anti-Semitic 
                work, "as if Hitler and Michelangelo collaborated." 
                The Met's curator of medieval art disagrees. U.S. News 08/13/01
              WHO 
                NEEDS CLOTHES WHEN YOU CAN FLY? The granite mural on the floor 
                at Los Angeles International Airport is "meant to depict 
                early man's desire to fly," according to the artist. Perhaps 
                to emphasize the idea of freedom, the men in the mural, leaping 
                skyward, are nude. Complaints were made. The City Cultural Affairs 
                Commission says it will not reconsider its original approval of 
                the work. Freedom Forum 08/07/01
            
            Tuesday August 7 
            
             
              A 
                "FOR-PROFIT" PRADO? The Spanish parliament is considering 
                whether to turn over control of the Prado - one of the world's 
                great museums - to a commercial company, following the recommendation 
                of an American consulting group. "Virtually every curator in the 
                Prado has signed a letter objecting to the Boston Consulting Group's 
                report, the basis of the proposed law."  
                The Art Newspaper 08/06/01
              PRETTY 
                EXPENSIVE FOR A NEWFIE JOKE: A furor has erupted over the 
                planned construction of "The Rooms," a new CAN$47 million 
                arts and culture complex in St. John's, Newfoundland. The Rooms, 
                which is to be modelled partly after aspects of local homegrown 
                architecture, is being built on top of some rather significant 
                old ruins, and some local authorities are outraged. Supporters 
                claim the complex will be Newfoundland's answer to the Sydney 
                Opera House. Opponents call it "a Newfie joke in glass, steel 
                and concrete." The Globe & Mail 
                (Toronto) 08/07/01
              ART 
                SEIZURE: The French government has seized the archives of 
                the Giacometti Foundation (the collection is worth £90 million). 
                The seizure is the latest move in a legal dispute between the 
                government and Giacometti heirs about whether the foundation was 
                set up for the purpose of avoiding taxes. 
                The Art Newspaper 08/06/01
            
            Monday 
              August 6 
            
 
              PAYING 
                TO PLAY: The Smithsonian has been flailing about from one 
                controversy to the next this year. Among other things, the institution 
                is trying to sort out overlapping donations from two of its biggest 
                donors. And for a project that has been heavily criticized both 
                in and outside the museum. The New 
                York Times 08/06/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access) 
              OUR 
                KINDA TOWN: The Guggenheim and Hermitage museums are set to 
                open in Las Vegas next month. The $30 million project will consist 
                of two separate museums - the 63,700-square-foot Guggenheim Las 
                Vegas, and the 7,660-square-foot Hermitage Guggenheim Museum, 
                featuring works from both the Hermitage and the Guggenheim. "Today 
                the profile of a typical Las Vegas visitor increasingly approximates 
                the profile of the visitors upon which every major museum in the 
                world - including the Hermitage and the Guggenheim - depends, 
                and to which they communicate." Las 
                Vegas Sun 08/05/01 
              MUSSELS 
                ANYONE? "Until recently, the architectural mainstream 
                was determined by the dictates of absolute stringency. The colder 
                and stricter, the barer, purer and finer, the better." Now, 
                thanks to new computer design techniques, new shapes based on 
                biological objects are popping up all over. Frankfurter 
                Allgemeine Zeitung 08/05/01 
              OFF-PEAK 
                VIEWING: Overcrowding of popular museums has done much to 
                spoil the museum experience. So more and more British museums 
                are extending their hours late into the evenings to smooth out 
                the crowds. The Guadian (UK) 08/04/01 
                
            
            Sunday 
              August 5 
            
 
              EDINBURGH 
                KICKS OFF: The Edinburgh Fringe Festival just happens to be 
                the biggest arts festival in the world, but it prides itself on 
                quality, not quantity. The massive celebration has set a record 
                for ticket sales this year, and "acts booked for the official 
                festival include the New York City Ballet, the Boston Symphony 
                Orchestra, Baryshnikov and the White Oak Dance Project, and the 
                Vienna Burgtheater." BBC 08/05/01
              PILING 
                ON THE TATE: As Britain's Tate Modern continues to search 
                for someone to take on the increasingly thankless task of "recommending" 
                new works for its collection, critics of the museum's reliance 
                on "conceptual" arts are becoming louder. "Allegations 
                of cronyism and insider dealing abound. At stake is nothing less 
                than the future of art in 21st-century Britain, and the war has 
                become most focused in the power struggle between figurative and 
                conceptual art." The Herald (Glasgow) 
                08/04/01  
              MUSEUM 
                MERGER TALK IN BALTIMORE: "A group of Baltimore cultural 
                leaders is urging administrators and board members of the city's 
                two nationally significant fine art museums to explore the long, 
                largely unmapped road toward a merger. The idea is neither new 
                nor universally welcomed. But it is gathering force at a time 
                when the city has reduced its financial support of arts institutions 
                and is fueled by a growing desire in art circles for Baltimore 
                to hold its own as a cultural destination against cities such 
                as Philadelphia and Washington." Baltimore 
                Sun 08/04/01
              ADAMS 
                EXHIBIT OPENS IN SF: "The first comprehensive exhibition 
                of Ansel Adams' work since his death in 1984 reinforces his status 
                as America's foremost nature photographer and secures a place 
                for his work on museum walls." Detroit 
                News (AP) 08/05/01
              
                - WHAT 
                  IF ADAMS HAD GONE DIGITAL? With the advent of digital technology, 
                  the art of photography is likely to change forever. Many famous 
                  photographers of the pre-digital era would likely have had little 
                  use for the new technology, but Ansel Adams, who was so eager 
                  to control every aspect of his work, would likely have embraced 
                  the form. San Francisco Chronicle 
                  08/05/01
CAPTURING 
                A SOLDIER'S GROWTH: Photographer Rineke Dijkstra has always 
                been fascinated by the changes people go through as their lives 
                progress, and her photos reflect the uncertainties of such change: 
                "frankly expressive, roughly life-size, head-on views of 
                people at points of change in their lives or moments when they 
                are vulnerable or not quite composed before the camera." 
                Her newest project finds her following a new recruit to the French 
                Foreign Legion. Arizona Republic (NYT 
                News Service) 08/05/01  
            
            Friday 
              August 3 
            
 
              RODIN 
                DISPUTE: A show of 60 casts of Rodin sculptures set to open 
                later this year at the Royal Ontario Museum is under attack by 
                the director of Paris's Rodin Museum; he says some of the casts 
                weren't made while the artist was alive. CBC 
                08/02/01
              BILL 
                GATES' ART SPREE: Billionaire Bill Gates has been active in 
                the art markets in the past year - $10 million for a William Merrit 
                Chase here, $20 million for a Childe Hassam there... "They 
                [Gates and his wife, Melinda] have given a shot in the arm to 
                American art," says one informed source. "Gates's collection 
                has grown to include more than a dozen top–quality works, all 
                by American artists." ARTNews 
                07/01 
              LOOKING 
                FOR THE ART IN PUBLIC ART: The town of Hammond Indiana wants 
                to be a center of public art. As a first step, the city has painted 
                a 17-foot-tall reproduction of a Salvador Dali on a wall above 
                downtown. "It is the type of painting that brings notice, and 
                it is the kind of work that has people talking and scratching 
                their heads about it by its mere presence. Our goal is to invite 
                patrons of the arts and other interested parties to make this 
                location a Midwest mecca for public art - be it sculptures, murals, 
                fountains or reproductions such as this one."  Ottawa 
                Citizen (AP) 08/03/01
            
            Thursday 
              August 2 
            
 
              PRESERVING ANCIENT 
                MONUMENTS IN FRANCE: The French government has comitted Ffr 
                600 million ($86 million) for restoration and preservation of 
                sites in the South of France. "These include the arena and 
                amphitheatre at Arles, the amphitheatre at Vaison-la-Romaine and 
                the amphitheatre and triumphal arch in Orange. Most of the sites 
                attract a large number of visitors and have suffered as a result, 
                to the point where they are forced to be partially closed to prevent 
                further damage. " The Art Newspaper 08/01/01
              BURIED 
                HISTORY: An important work by David Alfaro Siqueiros, the 
                Mexican muralist, made during an exile of several months in Argentina 
                in 1933, has been stored buried in five rusty barrels outside 
                Buenos Aries since a judge ordered it there in the early 1990s. 
                Historians worried the fresco may be damaged, want to unbury it, 
                but a decade-old legal battle stands in the way. The 
                New York Times 08/02/01 (one-time 
                registration required for access)
              CURATORS UNDER ATTACK: 
                Is the traditional curator a dying breed? If not dead, then certainly 
                under attack: "The most penetrating attack is one that some curators 
                themselves are abetting. Instead of insisting on carte blanche 
                to research the past and present it to the public, they are beginning 
                to welcome to the table members of the communities whose stories 
                are being told. In the best cases, this can result in more authentic 
                and revealing exhibitions; in the worst, blandness, incoherence, 
                or self-congratulation." The 
                American Prospect 08/13/01
              EVEN THE QUEEN 
                SUFFERS FOR THE SAKE OF HER ART: It's hot in England this 
                summer. While commoners are buying air conditioning at a record 
                pace, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother will have to grin and bear 
                it. “In certain rooms there are delicate artefacts and collectibles 
                which need to be kept in controlled environments to preserve them. 
                Consequently, it is generally thought that air-conditioning is 
                not suitable.” The Times (UK) 
                08/01/01
              US EMBASSIES 
                WILL DISPLAY DONATED ART: "Donations of American art 
                - 245 items worth about $15 million - will be made available for 
                display in U.S. embassies around the world. Most items are late 
                20th century works by artists who include Andy Warhol, Andrew 
                Wyeth, Frank Stella and their contemporaries. A few go back to 
                earlier in the century - pictures by John Sloan and George Bellows 
                - while one is a portrait done by John Singleton Copley in 1782." 
                Nando Times 08/01/01
              SOMEWHERE 
                BETWEEN OEDIPUS AND FATHER KNOWS BEST: Thirty 
                years ago a US sailor took a chunk of marble from an amphitheatre 
                in Athens; now his son has returned it to the Greek Embassy. A 
                simple case of returning an artifact to its original site, you 
                may say. But if you remember those ancient Greeks, the relationships 
                of fathers and sons was anything but simple.... Washington Post 08/01/01
            
            Wednesday 
              August 1 
            
 
              WILL 
                PURGE FOR FOOD: The secret sale of an important old map - 
                the first to chart the existence of the New World - to America 
                by German officials entrusted to protect Germany's national treasures, 
                is an indication of how broke Germany has become. It is "a 
                scandal of the first order." Frankfurter 
                Allgemeine Zeitung 07/31/01
              CANADIAN 
                EXHIBIT DEFENDED: "A Canadian exhibit featuring the work 
                of Auguste Rodin is authentic, says the man behind the project, 
                even though a Paris museum devoted to the famous sculptor has 
                suggested the display is a fraud." Ottawa 
                Citizen (CP) 08/01/01
              THE 
                RETURN OF MODERNISM? The free-thinking purveyors of Modernist 
                architecture enjoyed a brief period of wild popularity in the 
                mid-twentieth century, but their work was soon overtaken by a 
                return to traditionalism as the Cold War imposed a more sober 
                mindset on the world. But now, the work of the Modernists is regaining 
                the respect it originally had, and more Modernist structures are 
                being built than ever before. But some worry that the trendiness 
                of the movement has caused its principles to be forgotten. Nando 
                Times (CSM News Service) 07/31/01
              GETTING 
                ON THE FRONT PAGE: The recent record-setting auction of a 
                sketch by Leonardo made front-page headlines all over the world. 
                But the stories didn't seem to be much about anything to do with 
                art. "Good art is difficult, slippery stuff, hard to get 
                a handle on for even the most expert. That's why we love an occasion 
                when we can substitute talk about something we're all at home 
                with -- like buying and selling, or an artist's life and times, 
                for that matter -- for real art talk. We believe that important 
                art is the kind of thing we ought to read about in our high-class 
                morning papers. But it can only make the news when it gets pulled 
                out of the bog of aesthetics, into the good, crisp world of business, 
                politics, sex or scandal." The 
                Globe & Mail (Toronto) 08/01/01