Attorney Donn Zaretsky has posted on his Art Law Blog his letter to MASS MoCA regarding its dispute with his client, Christoph Büchel, over the artist's aborted mega-installation. Zaretsky writes: The essential point to understand is that the Visual Artists Rights Act is there to prevent the exhibition of works of art that have been distorted or modified---and the museum is … [Read more...] about Büchel’s Attorney Attacks MASS MoCA
Archives for May 2007
Three Degrees of Separation: Maier Museum, Wilmerding, Walton, Crystal Bridges
There's been a persistent rumor in Lynchburg, VA, that Wal-Mart heiress Alice Walton, who is acquiring American art for her planned Crystal Bridges museum, recently visited the campus of Randolph-Macon Woman's College to view holdings of the Maier Museum, which the financially strapped college may be putting on the market. It turns out that the college's collection has long … [Read more...] about Three Degrees of Separation: Maier Museum, Wilmerding, Walton, Crystal Bridges
More on the Itinerant William Griswold
Preparing to pack his bags to leave Minneapolis for the Morgan, William Griswold assured me that he's not a museum-hopper: This is my retirement job. The Morgan is in my blood and in my heart. Then, in the next breath, the 46-year-old acknowledged that he had "had every intention to stay here [in Minneapolis] a long time" and added, "I know there are bigger jobs" than his new … [Read more...] about More on the Itinerant William Griswold
Princeton Loses Wilmerding But Gets His Pop Art Collection
Photo by D. Applewhite Thanks to the Art History Newsletter, I just learned that John Wilmerding (above) this summer is leaving Princeton, where he is professor of American art. At his May 4 retirement dinner, he revealed that he is also giving Princeton nearly 50 works from his Pop art collection, now on display (to Aug. 12) at the university's art museum (which had previously … [Read more...] about Princeton Loses Wilmerding But Gets His Pop Art Collection
What, Gone So Soon? Griswold Jilts Minneapolis for the Morgan
Griddle Griswold in a Minneapolis Moment As fast as you can flip a flapjack, William Griswold (above, at Opening Day for his expanded museum) is leaving the Minneapolis Institute of Arts [via], where he became director less than two years ago, to take charge at the Morgan Library & Museum in New York. "I'll be there at the beginning of next year," he told me by e-mail … [Read more...] about What, Gone So Soon? Griswold Jilts Minneapolis for the Morgan
Memo to Detroit Detractors: All We Are Saying Is Give Keyes a Chance
Architectural Rendering of the New Detroit Institute of Arts Believe me, I'm as much against "dumbing down" museum installations as the next cultural snob. I rant about this regularly. So when I attended a press lunch last September in New York, presided over by director Graham W.J. Beal, describing plans for the expanded and renovated Detroit Institute of Arts (closing May 27 … [Read more...] about Memo to Detroit Detractors: All We Are Saying Is Give Keyes a Chance
The Smithsonian’s “Inconvenient Truth”: A Lukewarm Show on Global Warming
Yet another Congressional investigation of the Smithsonian---this by the House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming. Brett Zongker of the Associated Press reports: The inquiry comes a day after The Associated Press reported that Robert Sullivan, a former associate director at the National Museum of Natural History, said Smithsonian officials softened … [Read more...] about The Smithsonian’s “Inconvenient Truth”: A Lukewarm Show on Global Warming
Attention Alice Walton: Philadelphia Museum Eakins Likely to Be in Play
Philadelphia Museum's Perelman Building "Hello, SalaryGrrl!" Anne d'Harnoncourt cheerfully greeted me at the Philadelphia Museum's New York press lunch yesterday. (No word on whether she's gotten her pay raise yet.) I took the occasion of sitting next to the director to ask if her museum was indeed going to deaccession a work or works by Eakins to help pay for "The Gross … [Read more...] about Attention Alice Walton: Philadelphia Museum Eakins Likely to Be in Play
Big Mess at MASS MoCA
MASS MoCA has a distinguished track record for collaborating amicably and productively with artists creating highly ambitious projects to full its gargantuan main installation space. Those pieces, including Tim Hawkinson's "Uberorgan" and Cai Guo-Qiang's "Inopportune," sometimes have an ongoing life at major institutions, after their fabrication and display in North Adams, … [Read more...] about Big Mess at MASS MoCA
Bad News for Smithsonian American Art Museum; Good News for Colby College
The recent news about the Smithsonian American Art Museum has not been good, and it's got nothing to do with criticism from Ned Rifkin or the report from the ad hoc committee of experts that Rifkin, the Smithsonian's undersecretary for art, had appointed to review the Smithsonian's art institutions. As Joi Preciphs reported yesterday in Bloomberg, SAAM got the Lunder … [Read more...] about Bad News for Smithsonian American Art Museum; Good News for Colby College
Everyone’s a Blogger: The Getty Launches Exhibition Blog
Quite a few museums are already in the blogosphere (such as those listed in my blogroll in the righthand column), but the J. Paul Getty Museum is trying a new twist: exhibition blogs tied specifically to its temporary shows. First up: Looking at Animals, billed as "a discussion about animals in art and the imagination." It's pegged to the current Oudry's Painted Menagerie of … [Read more...] about Everyone’s a Blogger: The Getty Launches Exhibition Blog
Latest Albright-Knox Windfalls: Should Auction Houses Just Say No?
The financial success of the Albright-Knox Gallery's collections-management failure continues to grow: Hammer total for the 24 works from the Buffalo museum's Thursday and Friday disposals at Sotheby's was $5.98 million ($6.84 million, with buyer's premium). On June 7, it sells antiquities, including its much admired Bronze Figure of Artemis and the Stag, estimated at $5-7 … [Read more...] about Latest Albright-Knox Windfalls: Should Auction Houses Just Say No?
Art Disposals Recommended in Report on Randolph-Macon College’s Shaky Finances
A recently completed financial review of Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Lynchburg, VA, a copy of which was obtained today by CultureGrrl, provides more background on the threat posed by the college's shaky finances to the integrity of the American art collection of its Maier Museum. The museum's holdings include pictures by Bellows, Cassatt, Hopper, Lawrence, O'Keeffe and … [Read more...] about Art Disposals Recommended in Report on Randolph-Macon College’s Shaky Finances
Thrill to the Warhol and Rothko Bidding, Now on Your Computer Screen
Sorry you didn't get to see the auction action on the Warhol car crash and the Rockefeller Rothko? Now, thanks to online video clips, you can: Warhol's "Green Car Crash", selling at Christie's. Rothko's "White Center (Yellow, Pink and Lavender on Rose)" at Sotheby's. Production values and entertainment value are much higher in the former, which was produced by Christie's … [Read more...] about Thrill to the Warhol and Rothko Bidding, Now on Your Computer Screen
Albright-Knox Gallery’s Auction Coups
We may need to pause to catch our breath, but the auction market never stops. The Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo, scored unexpectedly large windfalls for its deaccessioned masterpieces at yesterday's African, Oceanic and Pre-Columbian art sale at Sotheby's: Its bronze Benin Head of an Oba fetched $4.74 million against an estimate of $1-1.5 million and its Aztec Stone Figure of … [Read more...] about Albright-Knox Gallery’s Auction Coups