Why do I bother trying to do serious journalism, anyway?This post, in which I reported my discovery of a 2004 obit for one Robin Gunningham of Bristol (the same name and town of the person identified as, possibly, the elusive guerilla artist, Banksy) is, at this writing, Number One on the Google hit parade that appears when you search, "Robin Gunningham." (The implication of my … [Read more...] about The Banksy/Robin Gunningham Search: CultureGrrl Is Number One on Google
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Michael Conforti Q&A About AAMD and Antiquities
Michael Conforti, Director of Clark Art Institute and President of AAMDWhen we sat down for a chat at the new Stone Hill Center last month, Michael Conforti, director of the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA, must have thought he was talking with Rosenbaum, not CultureGrrl. He asserts that he never reads blogs (although he's been known to read posts … [Read more...] about Michael Conforti Q&A About AAMD and Antiquities
Punch List for the Clark’s Ando: Window Shades and Concrete
Many new buildings have "punch lists"---things that didn't get done quite right the first time and need to be fixed or replaced. At the new Tadao Ando-designed Stone Hill Center built by the Williamstown Art Conservation Center and the Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA, the problems involve the window shades and the building material that Ando is most famous … [Read more...] about Punch List for the Clark’s Ando: Window Shades and Concrete
Follow-Ups: Guggenheim, Lascaux, Vuitton, Qatar, Shelby White, Acropolis Museum
Because I've been posting less, I've dropped the ball on a number of recent developments on stories that we've been following. Here's a quick catch-up rundown:---Jacques Steinberg of the NY Times reports that "construction workers have begun dismantling the scaffolding that has encased the Guggenheim Museum on the Upper East Side of Manhattan for nearly three years." I recently … [Read more...] about Follow-Ups: Guggenheim, Lascaux, Vuitton, Qatar, Shelby White, Acropolis Museum
Coptic Antics: The Story Behind the Brooklyn Fakes
Not Coptic: Limestone Relief of a Paralytic Carrying a Bed on His Back, Brooklyn MuseumFor those of you who have heard my WNYC commentary, Fake Art at the Brooklyn Museum, here's more:Edna Russman, Brooklyn's curator of Egyptian art, told me last week that the problem pieces that will be displayed as part of the museum's Coptic sculpture show, Feb. 13-May 10, were known to have … [Read more...] about Coptic Antics: The Story Behind the Brooklyn Fakes
Freedom of Information: More Legal Action on the David Franklin Fracas
Richard Dearden, Freedom of Information FighterThe Ottawa Citizen newpaper wants to know what issues are involved in the David Franklin/National Gallery of Canada court battle and it's initiating its own court battle to find out. Federal Court Deputy Judge Orville Frenette on Wednesday had ordered the permanent sealing of the file pertaining to Franklin's application for "a … [Read more...] about Freedom of Information: More Legal Action on the David Franklin Fracas
My Coptic Art Fakes Commentary: Monday on WNYC, Today on CultureGrrl
My New York Public Radio segment on the Brooklyn Museum's Coptic art fakes was bumped to Monday by an story on Iran (fair enough) but it's up on their website today and I've got permission to post it on CultureGrrl. For those of you who still want to hear it on the radio, I'm told that it will air at 7:30 a.m. But these things can change (and probably will).At any rate, you can … [Read more...] about My Coptic Art Fakes Commentary: Monday on WNYC, Today on CultureGrrl
My Commentary on Brooklyn’s Coptic Fakes: Tomorrow on New York Public Radio
I will never call WNYC's studios "shabby" again. Today I visited New York Public Radio's shiny new headquarters, to tape a segment (which, if all goes according to plan, will be aired tomorrow on Morning Edition) about the upcoming Brooklyn Museum exhibition of Coptic stone sculptures, real and fake. I'm no longer caged in a glass booth, but I can't see host Soterios Johnson, … [Read more...] about My Commentary on Brooklyn’s Coptic Fakes: Tomorrow on New York Public Radio
David Franklin Goes to Court Against National Gallery of Canada UPDATED TWICE
David Franklin, on leave and in court When David Franklin suddenly went "on leave" July 2 from his post as deputy director of the National Gallery of Canada, the museum's director of public affairs, Joanne Charette, told me: The man has a right to his privacy....Eventually, there will be further explanation. Now there is: Yesterday he went to court against both the museum … [Read more...] about David Franklin Goes to Court Against National Gallery of Canada UPDATED TWICE
LA MOCA’s Vuitton-Murakami Morass (and Brooklyn’s non-response)
Three limited-edition "Monogramouflage" canvases in the Vuitton boutique at the Brooklyn Museum's recent Murakami showI've always thought that ceding a museum's nonprofit space to a for-profit Louis Vuitton boutique (as occurred at the Takashi Murakami retrospective at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art and the Brooklyn Museum) was a bad idea and an even worse … [Read more...] about LA MOCA’s Vuitton-Murakami Morass (and Brooklyn’s non-response)
Department of Bad Exhibition Titles: “Younger Than Jesus” at the New Museum
Lisa Phillips annoucing the New Museum Triennial yesterdayMemo to Lisa Phillips: Please change this title while there's still time! While you're at it, consider changing the exhibition concept as well.At a press breakfast yesterday, Lisa Phillips (above), director of the New Museum, New York, proudly announced next spring's planned opening of a triennial exhibition devoted to … [Read more...] about Department of Bad Exhibition Titles: “Younger Than Jesus” at the New Museum
Fisk Appeal of Stieglitz Collection Decision “Could Take Years”
Fisk President Hazel O'Leary at a June 27 event to celebrate the university's raising over $8.3 million in the past fiscal yearWhatever happened to Fisk University's Apr. 3 appeal of Davidson County Chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle's decision rejecting the school's plan to sell a half-share of its celebrated Stieglitz Collection to Alice Walton for $30 million?According to Colby … [Read more...] about Fisk Appeal of Stieglitz Collection Decision “Could Take Years”
“Banksy” Died Four Years Ago? Robin Gunningham’s Death Notice
I don't claim to know who Banksy is. Maybe he really is Robin Gunningham from Bristol; or maybe London's Mail on Sunday, the newspaper that claimed on Saturday to have possibly identified the elusive guerilla graffitist, is the victim of a hoax.All I know is that when I Googled the name of the Bristol bloke, I went straight to the high-numbered (less clicked-upon) pages and … [Read more...] about “Banksy” Died Four Years Ago? Robin Gunningham’s Death Notice
BlogBack: Berkeley Architecture Professor on Ando at the Clark
A portion of the famed rock garden at Ryoanji temple, KyotoDana Buntrock, associate professor of architecture, University of California, Berkeley, responds to Clash of Perfectionists: Ando and Conforti at the Clark: Loved the discussion. Comes down to one question: people or purity? Pure concrete, clean control of movement, etc. Both Ando and the director seem to have … [Read more...] about BlogBack: Berkeley Architecture Professor on Ando at the Clark
Market Nexus: Frick Appoints Sotheby’s Vice Chairman to Its Board
George Wachter, Sotheby's old masters specialistThe Frick Collection, New York, has just taken the unorthodox step of appointing to its board an auction-house official, George Wachter (above), vice chairman of Sotheby's North and South America and co-chairman of old master paintings---the mainstay of the Frick's holdings.Many museums refrain from appointing art dealers or … [Read more...] about Market Nexus: Frick Appoints Sotheby’s Vice Chairman to Its Board
