Arts Celebrations Like Russian State Library, with the First Inventory the Edinburgh- Festival and Exhibitions Like in 20 Years Being- Checked
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
which established a fund for U.S. artists at Lost: Many manuscripts are missing from the NEWS & NOTES visual and performing arts celebrations like Russian State Library, with the first inventory the Edinburgh- Festival and exhibitions like in 20 years being- checked. 258 missing., the Venice Biennale, is no more. The private manuscripts are stolen or misplaced. &onNews sector must now be relied upon for continued Christie's & Sotheby's in May sold a rare support for the Venice Biennale and other lo& Footnotes in academic writing have Vincent Van Gogh cafe scene at $10.3 mil- events."The Government's budget in this area gone the way of all texts. Footnotes have cer- lion at Christie's. Sotheby's sold Claude cannot be sustained at cold war levels,"said tainly declined in the book publishing indus- Monet's "Les Meules, Giverny, Effet du Joseph Durn, director of the U.S.I.A. try. Footnotes started in the 17th century, the Matin", an early work, to a Japanese dealer longest of which ran for 165 pages in 1840. for $7.15 million. Asian bidders are back. : Archeologists have uncovered three clay tablets inscribed more than 3,200 years MUSEUM NEWS & WUND LOST ago that may have been part of the royal ar- Tbe Metropolitan Museum of Art in New Founl: Washington art collector and historian chives of the largest city-state in the ancient York City has been given 13 works of 20th Thurlow Evans Tibbs Jr. is donating the best region of Canaan. The tablets date to 1550 - century art by such masters as Picasso, of his collection of 19th and 20th century art- 1200 B.C. They were found in Northern Is- Modigliani, Braque. Modigliani, Soutine and works by African Americans to the Corcoran rael, during a dig. They are matchbox-sized Leger by Klaus G. Perls and his wife, Amelia. Gallery of Art. The gift of 30 pieces is val- tablets inscribed in Akkadian cuneiform Worth over $60 million, the giIt is a result of ued at between $1 million and $2 million and script. the Perles closing their Madison Ave. gallery includes Tibbs' extensive archives and re- after more than 60 years in business. search library. It will be known as the Evans- Fomd: The British Library has found what it Tibbs Collection of African-American Art. believes to be Buddhism's equivalent of the The GeWy Museurn has bought a Dead Sea Scrolls, written on strips of birch Founl: The huge collection of manuscripts Cezanne painting, Still Life with Apples, as bark dating from as early as the second cen- well as a $60-million cache of 300 Greek, and memorabilia (called junk) which was tury. The manuscripts on 60 separate frag- part of the Saroyan Foundation's gift to the Roman and Etruscan antiquities amassed by ments of various sizes include some of New York-based arts patrons Lawrence and UC Berkeley's Bancroft Library and the city Buddha's poems, sermons and treatises. of Fresno, California, has been transferred to Barbara Fleischman,. Fleischman is a partner Written in the fourth or fifth century BC, in Kemedy Galleries in New York City. Stanford University's Special Collections. 600 years after Buddha's death, they are still Since the Bancroft onlv took 10% of William The Getty has also acquired one of the fin- considered a valuable insight into the early est privately owned illuminated manuscripts Saroyan's accumulation of stuff, including his foundations of the faith. Bought for a five- manuscri~tsand archives, the Foundation has by an artist from the 14th century, the so- figure sum from a dealer, they had been called Boucicaut Master, who illustrated The wanted ti place the rest of the collection and stored, rolled into bundles, and had to be un- has finally settled in Stanford. It includes Fates of Illustrious Men and Women by Gio- furled with extreme care. vanni Boccaccio. The Getty Boccaccio was everything from jars of pebbles to trunks of owned by an aristocratic Scottish family for broken clocks, from phone books filled with Lcst md Powad: After thieves posing as dated drawings to envelopes of clippings nearly 300 years and was auctioned in New researchers stole nine rare manuscripts from a York in 1932. In 1980, it was auctioned from his famous walrus mustache. Benedictine monastery library near Barcelona from the library of a New York collector, last July, the monks this year helped police Lost 8 Paand. A lost watercolor of a blue reaching what was then a world-record price lay a trap to capture the group after the prime for an illuminated manuscript. At 16 inches chrysanthemum by Dutch artist Piet Mon- suspects came back unexpectedly this month drian has been discovered in the painter's by 12 inches, the book is considered unusu- led by a man who said he was a rabbi. At the ally large. birthplace in the town of Amersfoort, the Montserrat monastery, three supposedly aca- The Gutty Canter which will open to the pub- Mondriaanhuis Museum announced. Art his- demic researchers came, and afterwards, the lic in the fall of 1997 will start movlng in torian Corie van Adrichem said the delicately monastery reported the theft of nine Hebrew some of the branches of the Getty Trust, such executed pastel, which varies greatly from the and Arabic manuscripts. The "rabbi" returned as the Getty Conservation Institute, and then abstract blocks of primary colors for which this September with four companions and the Getty Center for Education m the Arts, Mondrian became famous, was one of several asked to see more rare manuscripts, while the the Getty Grant program and the trust's ad- watercolors Mondrian painted in the monks called the police, who raced to the ministrative staff, all by the end of this sum- mid-1920s and sold for about $30 each to scene and caught them red-handed with five mer. The Museum, Art History Information cover his living expenses. It is now worth of the manuscripts they had come to see. Program and the Cente for the History of Art about $60,000. They face charges of theft and a three-year and Humanities will make their moves after sentence. Founl: German archeologists in Wiesbaden the first of the year. The American Mwumof Natural displayed a newly discovered statue of a Fmd: Soviet war photographs, long unher- Hirtory in New York will be the exclusive Celtic prince, calling it one of the most im- alded, are turning up at Howard Schickler venue for Leonardo's Coder Lezcester: A portant archeological finds in Europe in dec- gallery in New York City and at Robert Koch Masterpiece of Science, an exhibition of a ades. The 6-foot, 500-pound sandstone gallery in San Francisco. statue, in near-perfect condition is believed to 72-page manuscript by Leonardo da Vinci, now owned by Microsoft chief Bill Gates. be 2,500 years old. loa: The famous Whaling Wall by artist The exhibition is set for 26 October through Robert Wyland was covered over with white 3 1 December. Lost: Arts America, the division of the Bu- paint by painters hired by a hotel operator A new Mmmnm of Contea~poruyM reau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of who wants to expand his operation and con- will open in S4nk& Porlugd, about 10 the U.S.I.A., which organized international sidered the 130-foot-high mural depicting miles west of Lisbon, founded by a Portu- tours of art exhibitions, performing arts two whales-a mother and calf--an eyesore in guese financier and contemporary art collec- groups and writers, will be closed by 1 Octo- Long Beach, California-which had become a tor, Jose Berardo, with over 350 postwar ber for lack of funds. The 24 member staff cultural symbol in that city for the past 15 works, including Agnes Martin, Frank Stella, was stunned when it heard that the agency Y-. Andy Warhol and Tom Wesselmann. Housed Akeqj Groups Merge Birliic, the magazine for Collectors of Books, Manuscripts, and Ephemera came out in in an old 1800's casino, which was aban- ne~~~j~~d ~~~~~bl~of hat A~~~- cloned, the new museurn will be part private, ties and the b&cancouncil for the Jufy-August looking like a trade or collectors' part public. have agreed to merge, effective 1 July. The magazine. assembly, located in Washington, DC, is an A new bW~~~ltiQnaPY~sa,m oZ PI advocate and a source of information, and f@rbcH Fi'fra, the great reviewing ma&- will be situated in Tacoma, Washing- professional training for 3,800 arts councils nism for zines, is changing their .frequency to -ton, inspired in part by Tacoma native Dale ,d agencies the US, me council, in two issues a year-but big ones. Subscription Chilhuly, a leader of the studio ghs move- Manhattan, promote public policies favor- rates will be changing-upward, of course- ment who was named a national living treas- able to the m, in large by having the but you get more for your money--and then ure by the governors of the 50 states. The business ledeIs on its board out as Seth Friedman tells us he has just done an architect is Arthur Erickson and the new di- advocates, Anthology called The Factsheet Fwe Zzm rector is Swanne E. Greening. Reader (Crown) to be published in spring NWmnSY HOlUIN WC 1997. Intrmational of The Genhwin Hotel at 7 E. 27th St. in Man- Opened in March '' BOcaRatony F1a The ex- hattan has a lobby bedecked with Pop Art, CENSORSWlP 'pace, Phase '7 be moved after has room for 400 guests, 200 of them in four- A New Hampshire high school student's art- Phase I' is completed in late 19971 where the person dormitory rooms, is new competition work has been censored after complaints Cartoon Hall of Fame will be expanded to the the Chelsea, its crosstown rival.