Fisk University President Hazel O'LearyFisk University just won't give up trying to do that $30-million deal with Alice Walton to monetize its Stieglitz Collection, which was given to it by artist Georgia O'Keeffe.Back in court everyone goes later today (Wednesday), including representatives from the office of Tennessee Attorney General Robert Cooper, who has not publicly taken … [Read more...] about The Case Continues: Fisk Back in Court Today to Argue for Walton Deal
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Auctioneers’ Nightmare: Sotheby’s Combined November/December Sales Down 54% From Previous Year’s
Tobias Meyer, Sotheby's head of contemporary artA video recently posted on Sotheby's website, Contemporary Art Market: A Candid Look from the Inside, features a cast of five---the auction house's contemporary art team---looking chastened as they candidly discuss the disastrous November sales but try to calm market jitters by assuring sellers that "despite a worsening economic … [Read more...] about Auctioneers’ Nightmare: Sotheby’s Combined November/December Sales Down 54% From Previous Year’s
Help Wanted (and desperately needed) at National Academy: Development Assistant
I know this blog has got to stop being "all National Academy, all the time." But first, I feel compelled to relay this timely job posting:Date posted: 12/18/2008Application deadline: 1/15/2009 The National Academy Museum and School of Fine Arts seeks a development assistant to join the National Academy's development team.Development team? I thought director Carmine Branagan had … [Read more...] about Help Wanted (and desperately needed) at National Academy: Development Assistant
NPR’s Report on the National Academy Sales
Graham W.J. Beal, director, Detroit Institute of ArtsJim Zarroli, a business and economics reporter for National Public Radio (he's their Madoff man), did a segment today on museums' financial difficulties, with an emphasis on the National Academy situation. You can both listen to the audio and read the summary text for "Museums Exhibit Signs Of Economic Distress," here.The … [Read more...] about NPR’s Report on the National Academy Sales
BlogBacks: Readers Speak Out on National Academy Deaccessions
The National AcademyI've been getting many thoughtful responses to my revelations about the sales of art by the National Academy, the subsequent fallout, and my analysis of lessons to be learned from this sorry episode.Here are four reactions from CultureGrrl readers:Michael Botwinick, director of the Hudson River Museum, writes: You have broken an incredibly important story. … [Read more...] about BlogBacks: Readers Speak Out on National Academy Deaccessions
Budget Fudgit: Being the Getty Means Never Having to Say You Ran a Deficit
And now, after a whole month of National Academy deaccessions, LA MOCA rescue plans, and reckless New Year's frivolity...we finally return to our regular programming:You may remember that a couple of weeks ago, when we perused the Getty Trust's 2008 financials, we discovered that, unlike the statements for prior years, this year's account omitted both the amount of the deficit … [Read more...] about Budget Fudgit: Being the Getty Means Never Having to Say You Ran a Deficit
Laura Iris Blau: An Emerging Artist I’ve Known from (literally) Day One
Laura Iris Blau, "The Female Eunuch"Feeling growing revulsion against the excesses associated with the economic bubble that has burst, some collectors are looking at the work of emerging artists in a new way---not as a speculative opportunity for making a killing by getting in early on the next new thing, but as a way to acquire affordable works of quality, for rewards that are … [Read more...] about Laura Iris Blau: An Emerging Artist I’ve Known from (literally) Day One
Artworld Luminaries’ 2009 Resolutions
Here's my more-naughty-than-nice list of what some artworld boldface names have vowed to do in the New Year. Few have fulfilled their 2008 Resolutions, but hope springs eternal.Tom Campbell: As the Met's new director, I will institute casual Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, but I will designate Fridays as "Dress Like Philippe Day." I will also aspire to implement … [Read more...] about Artworld Luminaries’ 2009 Resolutions
The Year in CultureGrrl: 2008
A Toast to My ReadersIt's that time of year again, art-lings, when we ring out the old stories and ring in the new. (The CultureGrrl Countdowns for 2006 and 2007 are here and here.) I'd first like to take this opportunity to thank you for your encouragement---in your intelligent written responses to what I've written, in your very tasty news tips, and in this blog's steadily … [Read more...] about The Year in CultureGrrl: 2008
Neil MacGregor of British Museum is London Times’ “Briton of the Year”
Neil MacGregorCan you imagine a U.S. newspaper's ever naming a museum director as its American of the Year?Culture must be king in Great Britain.The London Times has just designated the British Museum's director, Neil MacGregor, as its "Briton of the Year." Barack Obama was the Times' Person of the Year. This is the first time that the Times has bestowed such honors.Rachel … [Read more...] about Neil MacGregor of British Museum is London Times’ “Briton of the Year”
National Academy Lessons: The Fallacy of Deaccession-or-Die UPDATED
TOP: The important Frederic Church painting sold by the National Academy, "Scene on the Magdalene," 1854 BOTTOM: The lesser Church retained by the Academy, "Scene Among the Andes," 1854 At the end of my Q&A (posted yesterday) with the National Academy's embattled director, Carmine Branagan, she summed up her institution's rationale for selling two important … [Read more...] about National Academy Lessons: The Fallacy of Deaccession-or-Die UPDATED
Sir Michael Levey, Former Director of London’s National Gallery, Dies
Rubens, "Samson and Delilah," ca. 1609-10, National Gallery, LondonPurchased in 1980 under Sir Michael Levey's directorshipSir Michael Levey, respected director of the National Gallery, London, from 1973-1987, died yesterday at 81. In his appreciation for tomorrow's Guardian newspaper, Terence Mullaly writes: It was while he was at the National that Levey brought in … [Read more...] about Sir Michael Levey, Former Director of London’s National Gallery, Dies
National Gallery of Canada’s New Director to Hopes to Dispel Curatorial Turmoil
Marc MayerI've been quite late getting around to mentioning the Dec. 9 appointment of Marc Mayer, director of Montreal's Museum of Contemporary Art (and before that, deputy director of the Brooklyn Museum), as the new director of the conflict-ravaged National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, where Mayer hopes to restore peace and harmony after assuming his post on Jan. 19. (Since the … [Read more...] about National Gallery of Canada’s New Director to Hopes to Dispel Curatorial Turmoil
My Q&A with Carmine Branagan, Director of the National Academy
Too important to sell from the Suydam Collection:John Frederick Kensett, "The Bash Bish," 1855, National Academy Museum Below are key excerpts from my conversation on Dec. 4 with Carmine Branagan, then interim director (now director) of the National Academy, in which she patiently and candidly addressed my questions on the National Academy's secret deaccessions of … [Read more...] about My Q&A with Carmine Branagan, Director of the National Academy
Deaccessions 101: Jori Finkel’s NY Times Survey of National Academy, Fisk, Maier, Albright-Knox, etc.
Jori FinkelWhile you're waiting for my promised "deaccession-or-die" opinion piece (a companion post to yesterday's screed against AAMD's harsh punishment of the National Academy), today's required reading is Whose Rules Are These, Anyway? from tomorrow's NY Times "Arts & Leisure" section (online today). The estimable Jori Lee Finkel (who should use her middle name) hits … [Read more...] about Deaccessions 101: Jori Finkel’s NY Times Survey of National Academy, Fisk, Maier, Albright-Knox, etc.
