I'm a veteran cultural journalist and guest lecturer with many pieces in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Huffington Post. major art magazines. I've been a cultural contributor on New York Public Radio (WNYC and WQXR) and have provided arts commentary on NPR and public radio stations in Philadelphia and Los Angeles. I've appeared as an art-market commentator on BBC-TV … [Read more...] about LEE ROSENBAUM
Archives for June 2006
Ouroussoff Uses Bully Pulpit to Bully Riley
Will someone please pull Nicolai Ouroussoff off Terence Riley? This feud is getting tiresome. In praising the Museum of Modern Art's appointment of Barry Bergdoll as its new chief curator of architecture and design, the NY Times' architecture critic just couldn't resist using his bully pulpit to pummel Terry one more time. Saying that MoMA's architecture and design department … [Read more...] about Ouroussoff Uses Bully Pulpit to Bully Riley
BlogBack: Walker Tweaks “Art on Call”
This is a "BlogBack" first! The Walker Art Center has responded to my blog on its blog. Regarding CultureGrrl's critique of "Art on Call," the Walker's New Media Initiatives blogger, Nate Schroeder, offered these updates: We've just recently installed a nifty cellphone signal repeater in the space deepest in the galleries that previously got terrible reception---right next to … [Read more...] about BlogBack: Walker Tweaks “Art on Call”
Outtakes from the Whitney Hearing—Part II
At Tuesday's public hearing on its expansion plans, the Whitney Museum submitted these supportive comments from Hamilton Smith, who was Marcel Breuer's associate architect for the museum's 1966 building: [Renzo] Piano's design concept neither engulfs nor overshadows the original Breuer Building. Equally important, the main element of the expansion---five gallery floors set back … [Read more...] about Outtakes from the Whitney Hearing—Part II
The Getty Strikes a Deal
This just in from the J. Paul Getty Trust's press office---a joint statement announcing a tentative agreement with the Italian Ministry of Culture, forged today in Rome: The Italian government will receive from the Getty a number of very significant objects, including several masterpieces. In return, as a sign of fruitful dialogue and collaboration among the parties, Italy will … [Read more...] about The Getty Strikes a Deal
Outtakes from Yesterday’s Whitney Hearing—Part I
As I wrote in the Wall Street Journal, when I covered city approval hearings for the Museum of Modern Art's expansion project: "It is impossible to put a spade in the ground here without hitting bedrock resistance from neighbors and various advisory groups seeking to influence those who must approve the project." So it was yesterday at the Board of Standards and Appeals' … [Read more...] about Outtakes from Yesterday’s Whitney Hearing—Part I
Let Your Fingers Do the Walking at the Walker
I've been curious (if dubious) about the newfangled museum audioguides that can be accessed through one's own cell phone. On my recent visit to the always interesting and provocative Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, I finally dialed-a-painting from the museum's own version of the Yellow Pages (actually printed on a yellow page), called "Art on Call." You call the main number for … [Read more...] about Let Your Fingers Do the Walking at the Walker
Restitution Resolutions—Cashing in on Artistic Assets
Nazi victims or their heirs who have been fortunate enough to receive restitution of expropriated artworks get justifiably testy if anyone suggests that they consider anything but their own financial self-interest is determining the disposition of these works. After all, they are the rightful owners; no one else has any right to tell them what to do with privately owned art. As … [Read more...] about Restitution Resolutions—Cashing in on Artistic Assets
Coming Later Today: My Take on the Klimt
True Liberation?
In my piece Hot Pots and Potshots, published in the April 2006 "Front Page" section of Art in America magazine, I noted that "a senior Getty official, requesting anonymity, hoped these negotiations [between Italian cultural officials and the Getty, over repatriation of antiquities] would have a 'positive impact' on [former antiquities curator Marion] True's legal woes, in … [Read more...] about True Liberation?
From the Mouths of Babes
Reacting to Lee's Leon-teasing post of yesterday, my 22-year-old daughter Joyce has just one word: AGE-ISM!!! Aren't daughters a mother's worst critics?!? By the way, Neyfakh has followed up with another piece, in today's NY Sun, revealing that in 1995, when Grace Glueck had informed her editors at the NY Times of her appointment to the Clark Art Institute's board of trustees, … [Read more...] about From the Mouths of Babes
The Getty’s Secret Census of Its Antiquities Trove
I recently suggested that museums should consider undertaking detailed reviews of their antiquities holdings, to identify and publish lists of works with murky provenance. Well, it looks like the Getty took care of the first half---identify---but forgot the second half---publish. An article in yesterday's LA Times reported that the Getty Trust's "internal review" of its … [Read more...] about The Getty’s Secret Census of Its Antiquities Trove
“F-111” Flies Again
Having seen my lament that James Rosenquist's iconic "F-111" disappeared into storage after mega-MoMA's inaugural exhibition, curator Ann Temkin alerted me that the magnum opus is going back on display this week, in a space adjacent to "Artist's Choice: Herzog & de Meuron, Perception Restrained"---a show that has its press preview tomorrow and opens to the public on … [Read more...] about “F-111” Flies Again
NY Sun’s Glueck-Raker Is a Harvard Undergrad
I knew that yesterday was a slow news day at the NY Sun, but apparently they couldn't rustle up enough staff reporters either. Leon Neyfakh, who wrote today's piece on Grace Glueck's resignation from the board of the Clark Art Institute, is a Harvard undergrad lad---a summer intern at the paper. I figured that most of the Glueck-hounds were not her equals, but this is … [Read more...] about NY Sun’s Glueck-Raker Is a Harvard Undergrad
Glueck Has Legs
It must be a slow news day at the New York Sun, because their reporter, Leon Neyfakh, e-mailed me today, Fathers Day, at 1:30 p.m., asking to interview me that same afternoon about Grace Glueck's resignation from the Clark Art Institute. He said his story will run tomorrow (Monday). My family had a blissfully computerless swimming-and-barbecue celebration, and I only just now … [Read more...] about Glueck Has Legs