ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

VISUAL

Climate Protesters Throw Soup At The Mona Lisa

"'What’s the most important thing?' they shouted. 'Art, or right to a healthy and sustainable food?' They added: 'Our farming system is sick. Our farmers are dying at work.'" - The Guardian (UK)

Why Did The Santa Barbara Museum Of Art Suddenly Cancel A Show And Let A Curator Go?

The show was focused on the legacy of Michael Fried's 1965 show Three American Painters. The new show, Three American Painters: Then and Now, was conceived and organized by SBMA’s former Deputy Director and Chief Curator Eik Kahng." Now show, and curator, are gone. - Hyperallergic

Art, Oligarchs And Fraud

We think of oligarchy as a foreign concept, but the truth is that American oligarchs abound, and many of them collect art. It’s a time-honored strategy. - Mother Jones

Major Museums Remove Native Artifacts In Response To New Federal Rules

The American Museum of Natural History will close two major halls exhibiting Native American objects, its leaders said on Friday, in a dramatic response to new federal regulations that require museums to obtain consent from tribes before displaying or performing research on cultural items. - The New York Times

Victoria & Albert And British Museums To Loan Looted Asante Gold And Silver To Ghana

"Under the (three-year) deal, 17 objects from the V&A and 15 from the British Museum will go on show later this year at the Manhyia Palace Museum in Kumasi, the capital of Asante region. Many of the items have not been seen in Ghana for 150 years." - The Guardian

Missing For A Century, Klimt Portrait Has Been Rediscovered

"Portrait of Fräulein Lieser belonged to a Jewish family in Austria and was last seen in public in 1925. Its fate after that is unclear but the family of the current owners have had it since the 1960s. (One) auction house estimates the painting's value at more than $54 million." - BBC

Are Those Immersive Van Gogh Shows Just A Money Grab?

Leading digital artists have claimed that some of the most popular commercial immersive experiences, particularly those based on the work of deceased artists, such as Van Gogh and Dalí, are a money grab that provide little reward to visitors beyond Instagrammable moments. - The Guardian

This Year’s Whitney Biennial Reflects The Chaotic Precariousness Of Now

The drastic phase of the pandemic, with its restrictions, may have receded. But the landscape left in its wake is a panorama of compounding crises — and for artists, like everyone else, a period of high uncertainty and anxiety with the U.S. election looming. - The New York Times

The Campaigners Working To Bring Looted Nepali Religious Art Back Home

"'Kathmandu valley was an open museum,' says Rohit Ranjitkar, director of the Kathmandu Valley Preservation Trust. 'There were centuries-old treasures. I think local people did not value it or there was less awareness. So many things were knowingly or unknowingly gifted or thrown out or sold by local people.'" - The Guardian

Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum Suspends Four Staffers For Misconduct During Last Year’s Insane Pokémon Show

"The workers had allegedly provided potential visitors with insider information on how to get limited tickets to the exhibition. One employee even allegedly embezzled a box of (van Gogh-style) Pokémon cards produced for the show." (Those cards were withdrawn after people literally rioted to get them.) - ARTnews

Why Was The Art Gallery Of Ontario’s First Indigenous Curator Abruptly Fired In November?

News that Wanda Nanibush, the first Canadian and Indigenous art curator at the AGO, was leaving the institution shocked the Canadian art world. The news was linked to a leaked letter accusing her of “posting inflammatory, inaccurate rants against Israel”. - The Art Newspaper

National Art Gallery Burns Down In Georgia’s Breakaway Region Of Abkhazia

More than 4,000 items were destroyed and only about 150 pieces survived in the blaze that broke out early Sunday morning. Abkhazia broke away from the Republic of Georgia during the post-Soviet civil war of 1992-93 and is propped up by Russia, which maintains thousands of troops there. - CNN

A New Generation Of Architecture Wars

Architecture has been hit by a new sobriety. Tradition, apparently, is back. The reaction against ultramodern architecture arrived slowly at first, but accelerated with the financial crash of 2008, as the world economy and many political systems became increasingly unsteady. - Aeon

Des Moines Art Center Will Dismantle Its Major Land Art Installation

"Created between 1989 and 1996, Mary Miss's Greenwood Pond: Double Site is one of the very few environmental installations in the collection of any American museum." It has since deteriorated so badly that repairing it would cost $27 million, which the museum does not have. - The New York Times

Speculating On The Whitney Museum’s Murky Handling Of The Hopper Estate

The museum simply used me to avoid the scandal that would result if the public learned that many works said to be by Hopper and thus—if authentic—willed to the museum, were making their way not to the museum but to the market. - New Criterion

Our Free Newsletter

Join our 30,000 subscribers

Latest

Don't Miss

function my_excerpt_length($length){ return 200; } add_filter('excerpt_length', 'my_excerpt_length');