Richard Armstrong, director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Foundation today announced in Helsinki the launch of the design competition for the Guggenheim Helsinki, which will need final approval from both the City of Helsinki and the State of Finland after the two-stage competition concludes. The winner of the competition is expected to be announced next … [Read more...] about Guggenheim Helsinki Design Competition Launched; Armstrong Walks Off TV Interview
Chagrin Over Pellegrin: NY Observer and Chris Crosman on “National Academy Eight” (with video)
The NY Observer's "Gallerist" and I approached the story of the National Academy Eight---staffers abruptly fired on Thursday---from different angles in stories that we published yesterday. (Theirs came first.) Taken together, our pieces piece together the complicated, troubling situation there, still unfolding. (I suspect that the NY Times will eventually move this ball down … [Read more...] about Chagrin Over Pellegrin: NY Observer and Chris Crosman on “National Academy Eight” (with video)
News Flash: Financially Challenged National Academy Restructures and “Streamlines” Its Staff
UPDATE: More on this here. We interrupt the upbeat program of the annual meeting of the Association of Art Museum Directors to bring you some downbeat news from the National Academy in New York. As you may remember, that financially challenged institution had incurred AAMD's wrath for its 2008 stealth deaccessions of important paintings by Frederic Edwin Church and Sanford … [Read more...] about News Flash: Financially Challenged National Academy Restructures and “Streamlines” Its Staff
Rotter Chatter: How Sotheby’s, with Reconstituted Board, May Recharge Contemporary Art Sales
If you follow my tweets @CultureGrrl, you already know that I attended yesterday's annual meeting at Sotheby's, which elevated activist investor Daniel Loeb from a thorn in Sotheby's side to its newly elected board member (joined on the board by his two hand-picked candidates---Harry Wilson, an expert in corporate restructurings and turnarounds and Olivier Reza, president of … [Read more...] about Rotter Chatter: How Sotheby’s, with Reconstituted Board, May Recharge Contemporary Art Sales
Caravaggio Viaggio: My Public Radio Chat on Museums’ Art Rentals with Tim Rub and Steve Litt (with audio)
One of the first things I did last week while Lost Around Los Angeles was grant a phone interview to David Barnett, senior arts reporter and producer for ideastream, the Cleveland-based public broadcasting outlet. He wanted my views on a topic that I've frequently fulminated about---some museums' exploitation of their collections as cash cows by renting them for high fees to … [Read more...] about Caravaggio Viaggio: My Public Radio Chat on Museums’ Art Rentals with Tim Rub and Steve Litt (with audio)
Lost Around Los Angeles: My West Coast Twitter Report
I've just burrowed into my blog-cave after a week away in not-so-sunny California on a vacation that ended with a friend's wedding celebration. Although I didn't blog, I did (as promised) tweet some art-related musings @CultureGrrl. With my usual nose for news, I stumbled upon an interesting occurence (described below) while on an "unofficial" visit to the Los Angeles County … [Read more...] about Lost Around Los Angeles: My West Coast Twitter Report
Is It William Griswold? Cleveland Museum to Announce New Director Tomorrow UPDATED
UPDATE: It is, indeed, Griswold, who will start his new gig this fall. Here's the Cleveland Museum's official announcement. We'll find out tomorrow if I'm right, but what I've learned from a good (if not quite airtight) source is that the Cleveland Museum of Art is poised to name its new director tomorrow morning, and that he's none other than William Griswold, the … [Read more...] about Is It William Griswold? Cleveland Museum to Announce New Director Tomorrow UPDATED
Pulling the Rug Out from Under the Corcoran and Disregarding William Corcoran’s Deed
Only by reverse-engineering the deal signed on Thursday by the Corcoran Gallery and college, the National Gallery of Art and George Washington University does the Corcoran's auction of its Clark "Sickle-Leaf" carpet, almost a year ago, start to make sense. Why would the financially floundering Corcoran have sold one of its great treasure for the stated purpose---to bankroll … [Read more...] about Pulling the Rug Out from Under the Corcoran and Disregarding William Corcoran’s Deed
Not a Done Deal: Court Approval Still Needed for Just-Signed Corcoran Agreement
Exactly an hour after the details were published in the Washington Post, this press release from the National Gallery of Art (NGA) hit my inbox, regarding the belated signing of the final agreements (originally slated for Apr. 7) for the planned merger by the Corcoran Gallery of Art and Corcoran College of Art + Design with the National Gallery of Art and George Washington … [Read more...] about Not a Done Deal: Court Approval Still Needed for Just-Signed Corcoran Agreement
Contemporary Sales: Aside from Sender’s “Ahead of the Curve,” Sotheby’s Remains Behind the Curve
With Sotheby's continuing to lag far behind arch-rival Christie's in the high-profile, high-stakes contemporary art field, I couldn't help but wonder if all the recent turmoil that has embroiled it---including the unceremonious departure of contemporary art head Tobias Meyer and culminating in the costly surrender to activist investor Dan Loeb's unwanted advances---may have … [Read more...] about Contemporary Sales: Aside from Sender’s “Ahead of the Curve,” Sotheby’s Remains Behind the Curve
Raising the Bar: Christie’s Landmark $744.94-Million Contemporary Sale
In the mercenary world of art auctions, there are two new numbers to beat: $744.94 million, the highest total every achieved at any art auction; $11.9 million, the highest amount paid at auction for any woman artist. (Females are even more undervalued in the artworld than in the corporate world, it would seem.) Who was that record-breaking artist? Read on! Here's my Twitter … [Read more...] about Raising the Bar: Christie’s Landmark $744.94-Million Contemporary Sale
When “a deal in Palermo isn’t a deal in Palermo”: Getty Trust’s Lawyer on Sicily’s Slippery Promises
Yet another delay in the resolution of the never-ending legal battle over "Victorious Youth" (aka the Getty Bronze) occurred last week in Italy's highest court, the Court of Cassation, which had been expected to rule May 8 on whether Italian law required the return of the statue from the J. Paul Getty Museum. As reported by Mike Boehm of the LA Times, a ruling on the case, … [Read more...] about When “a deal in Palermo isn’t a deal in Palermo”: Getty Trust’s Lawyer on Sicily’s Slippery Promises
Metropolitan Museum’s “Charles James” in New Wintour Center: My Twitter Report on Fashion, Tech and the First Lady
If you can manage to focus on the dresses, the Metropolitan Museum's Charles James: Beyond Fashion, opening today (to Aug. 10), is a delicious visual feast. For me it triggered nostalgic thoughts of my own mother's '50s wardrobe. Not that she flounced around our fifth-floor Bronx walkup looking like Babe Paley. But I could perceive how James's flatteringly cut inventions in … [Read more...] about Metropolitan Museum’s “Charles James” in New Wintour Center: My Twitter Report on Fashion, Tech and the First Lady
Impressionist/Modern Fizzle: Painful Sale Caps Sotheby’s Difficult Week UPDATED
"Do we want to bid?...Any more?...Any advance?...Last chance!...Passed." Variations on that doleful chant occurred again and again during tonight's sale at Sotheby's of Impressionist and modern art. This pulling-of-teeth made an already painful week at Sotheby's even worse. Aside from the dogged competition over Picasso's colorful, action-packed depiction of the seaside … [Read more...] about Impressionist/Modern Fizzle: Painful Sale Caps Sotheby’s Difficult Week UPDATED
Form 10-Q: More on Sotheby’s Loeb-Related Costs, Auction Guarantees, Possible Move
In ending his war on Sotheby's management, Third Point's Daniel Loeb got even more than three board seats and key committee appointments that he had sought (reported by me here). He also extracted a written commitment from Sotheby's to reimburse Third Point for "up to $10 million" in "out-of-pocket, documented expenses," incurred in connection with the battle. That amount, … [Read more...] about Form 10-Q: More on Sotheby’s Loeb-Related Costs, Auction Guarantees, Possible Move