A few tidbits on some stories that we've been following: ---A Save the Mount emergency campaign has been launched to try to undo the financial damage caused by wishful thinking about fundraising for the admirable (and still unfinished) restoration and library acquisition at author Edith Wharton's former mansion and gardens in Massachusetts' Berkshire Mountains. They say they … [Read more...] about Updates: Edith Wharton, Curtis Wong, NY Philharmonic in N. Korea
University Promptly Returns to Italy What Tempelsman Donated
Is this really possible? What Elisabetta Povoledo reported yesterday in the NY Times, regarding the odyssey of rare sixth-century B.C. marble sculptures previously owned by Maurice Tempelsman, former swain of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, sure sounds to me like a dubious application of the fractional gift technique, which allows collectors to spread tax deductions over several … [Read more...] about University Promptly Returns to Italy What Tempelsman Donated
Sotheby’s Addresses Concerns Over Guarantees While Reporting Bullish 2007 Results
In prepared remarks for quarterly conference calls with stock analysts, Sotheby's usually closely tracks the language of its earnings press release and then fields questions. But today, while discussing the 2007 totals, which it called "the best financial results...in its 264-year history," Sotheby's digressed from its earnings press release to tackle the elephant in the … [Read more...] about Sotheby’s Addresses Concerns Over Guarantees While Reporting Bullish 2007 Results
NY Times Roils Cultural Property Experts With Two Problematic Op-Eds—Part II
Allan Gerson (Part I is here.) Reasonable people can disagree about whether London's Royal Academy should exhibit works confiscated by the state after the Russian Revolution from private collectors Sergei Shchukin and Ivan Morozov. To me, it's a no-brainer: We want these great masterpieces to be seen by a wide public. Others, however, feel this makes the Royal Academy complicit … [Read more...] about NY Times Roils Cultural Property Experts With Two Problematic Op-Eds—Part II
New at the Met: Italian Loans Prominently Labeled
As I scurried yesterday through the empty halls of the closed-on-Monday Metropolitan Museum to get to the press preview of the extraordinary Courbet show (opening tomorrow), I was stopped short by an unusually prominent red object label: "Four Major Loans From the Republic of Italy" When the Met received three objects from Italy last month (including the Greek terracotta … [Read more...] about New at the Met: Italian Loans Prominently Labeled
NY Times Roils Cultural Property Experts With Two Problematic Op-Eds—Part I
Machu Picchu Whenever I've written Op-Ed pieces for the NY Times, the editors have always been annoyingly meticulous about double-checking to make sure that all my facts were, in fact, factual. Such caution is not only justified but essential when running strongly opinionated essays by outside contributors who have axes to grind. So how did not one but two pieces on hot-button … [Read more...] about NY Times Roils Cultural Property Experts With Two Problematic Op-Eds—Part I
Curtis Wong’s Mystery Art/Tech Project
Curtis Wong Here's an example of something I can do on a blog that's too irresponsible to do in a mainstream media piece----plug a project that I know absolutely nothing about. Arguably, I shouldn't do that on a blog either, but the pedigree of this venture, whatever it is, has rendered me reckless. Curtis Wong (above), who manages the Next Media Research group at Microsoft, is … [Read more...] about Curtis Wong’s Mystery Art/Tech Project
Edith Wharton Cliffhanger: No Mirth at the Home of “House of Mirth”
Edith Wharton's library at The Mount CultureGrrl readers may remember the above photo from my visit to Edith Wharton's Berkshire home, The Mount, where she penned her first popular success, "The House of Mirth." In my Oct. 3, 2006 Wall Street Journal article about the restoration of The Mount and its acquisition of 2,600 books from Wharton's own library, I discussed the … [Read more...] about Edith Wharton Cliffhanger: No Mirth at the Home of “House of Mirth”
Bührle Theft Musings: Law Professor’s Rationale for Return of Half the Haul
Saul Levmore (above), dean of the University of Chicago's Law School, gets down and dirty into the criminal mind on his school's blog, offering his theory about why the Bührle collection thieves might have returned two of the four stolen paintings, but retained the two most valuable works. Levmore, who experienced a "strange sense of intellectual delight" upon learning about … [Read more...] about Bührle Theft Musings: Law Professor’s Rationale for Return of Half the Haul
Brooklyn’s Murakami Show: Decision Pending on Vuitton Shop
Installation view of © MURAKAMI at The Geffen Contemporary at LA MOCA, 2007, photo by Brian Forrest, artwork ©Takashi Murakami/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. It's always interesting to see how exhibitions morph from one venue to another, and it's hard to imagine a more perfect installation of the Murakami show than the one (above) that recently closed at the Los Angeles Museum of … [Read more...] about Brooklyn’s Murakami Show: Decision Pending on Vuitton Shop
Travel Website’s Top 10 Art Museums
Sorry, LACMA, you didn't make the list. But then neither did the Museum of Modern Art, the Hermitage or the British Museum. TripAdvisor, the travel website, has compiled a list of the world's 10 most popular art museums (as travel destinations), which it compiled based on the amount of traffic on its site. The top three were the Louvre (of course), the Vatican Museums and the … [Read more...] about Travel Website’s Top 10 Art Museums
Cai-Wire Act: The Guggenheim and Its Engineers Pull Off Their Stunt UPDATED
Believe me, even though I'm pretty intrepid, I was a little worried walking into the Guggenheim's Cai Guo-Qiang press preview this morning. Hadn't I previously written about Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater, with the notoriously misconstructed cantilever that would have fallen into the water, had it not been recently shored up? Had he designed the aging Guggenheim's rotunda to … [Read more...] about Cai-Wire Act: The Guggenheim and Its Engineers Pull Off Their Stunt UPDATED
MeTube: CultureGrrl (with Cai’s help) is a Performance Artist
More from the Guggenheim's Cai Guo-Qiang retrospective spectacular later. But first, CultureGrrl's video debut: Your intrepid reporter (with the help of two Guggenheim guards) gingerly stepped into a model of a Tibetan boat to "ride the serpentine river" through Cai's "self-made retrospective"---a gallery installation called, "An Arbitrary History: River," featuring artifacts … [Read more...] about MeTube: CultureGrrl (with Cai’s help) is a Performance Artist
Fisk Changes Its Tune and Will Fund Gallery for Stieglitz Collection
I guess Fisk University agreed with my suggestion that "if it doesn't want to the collection to be removed from Nashville to [the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum] in Santa Fe," it needed to demonstrate at this week's trial in Davidson Chancery Court that it is able "to properly care for and display the [Stieglitz] collection" that was given to it by Georgia O'Keeffe. Yesterday, the … [Read more...] about Fisk Changes Its Tune and Will Fund Gallery for Stieglitz Collection
Catherine Palace’s Original Amber Room Found?
Recreating the Amber Room Now that Russian craftsmen (above) have spent 25 years laboriously reconstructing the fabled Amber Room, lost from the Catherine Palace, outside of St. Petersburg, during World War II, along comes a story in Der Spiegel, the German newsmagazine, suggesting that the original, thought likely to have been destroyed, may at last have been found. Still, the … [Read more...] about Catherine Palace’s Original Amber Room Found?