Some of the recent discussions included
- Photo Formats
- Digital vs 35 mm
- Appraisers and Online Presence
- USPAP rules for 2010
- Journal of Advanced Appraisal Studies
and much more.
Click HERE to join the LnkedIn group.
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A West Hollywood art dealer pleaded guilty today to selling a fake Pablo Picasso drawing of a woman in a blue hat for $2 million, according to the U.S. Attorney in Los Angeles.
An anonymous buyer of the fake drawing grew suspicious about the work's authenticity two years ago and reached out to a Picasso expert, who later contacted the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Ms. Khan told the FBI she had acquired the drawing of a prim woman wearing an indigo-plumed hat from an acquaintance, according to her plea agreement. She later confessed to the FBI that she had asked the restorer to lie about copying the work. (The original work belongs to a private collector, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Ranee Katzenstein.)
Ms. Khan, 70 years old, will appear in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles early next month to enter a guilty plea on two felony counts: making false statements to the FBI and witness tampering. As part of her plea deal, she has agreed to pay back the $2 million and give up a Willem de Kooning abstract work she bought with a portion of the sale proceeds. She faces a federal prison sentence of anywhere from 21 months to 25 years.
Ms. Kahn's attorney, James W. Spertus, said that his client has had a 45-year career as an art dealer and hopes to continue her profession after "accepting responsibility for making a false statement to the FBI."
To read the full article, click HERE.The expansion signals more than Phillips's desire for additional square footage. Since it was acquired in October 2008 by Russian retailing giant Mercury Group, the London-based auctioneer has added sales and retooled its catalogs to appeal to wealthy people who are newcomers to the art market. Its forthcoming Midtown location will put Phillips in closer proximity to its bigger rivals, Sotheby's and Christie's, as well as to a pool of current and potential buyers who don't typically troll the narrow industrial blocks on the western edge of lower Manhattan where Phillips has conducted auctions for the past seven years.
Chairman Simon de Pury said the expansion is an attempt to gain greater visibility.
"Everybody drives down Park Avenue a few times a day around there," he said. "The location is as optimal as can be."
The hyper-local strategy comes at a time when collectors from Hong Kong to the Hamptons are skipping far-flung art events and doing more of their shopping close to home. Phillips, with its two salesrooms, aims to sort its goods to suit them. The modernist Midtown venue will include the ground floor of the building, and will host the house's single-owner sales, evening auctions and jewelry sales. The company's red-brick Meatpacking District location, which overlooks the High Line promenade, will remain home to administrative offices, as well as design and photography sales. It will also continue to host its new slate of theme sales, which offer artwork grouped by topical categories like "Sex" or "Film."
"While downtown is a space where contemporary-art lovers frequent, there are still a lot of clients based uptown, so this will be a small convenience for them to have more access to us," said Mr. de Pury.
To read the full WSJ article, click HERE.Christie's said it will run credit checks on customers and check stored items against registries of stolen art, but added that it can't police everything it brings into its new warehouse.
The company will also need to convince collectors that an auction house can double as an art holder. Competitor Bob Crozier, who owns five art warehouses in the area, said the new venture could allow Christie's to gain intelligence about collectors that could lead to more lucrative consignments for auction. Longtime New York collector Zöe Dictrow said her colleagues might feel "self-conscious" about storing pieces at a site overseen by an auctioneer.
But Christie's Fine Art Storage Services, or CFASS, the subsidiary that runs Christie's storage operation, said its independent storage staff won't divulge anything about its clients or their holdings, even to Christie's auction specialists.
"We aren't sharing Rolodexes," said Joe Stasko, the subsidiary's international managing director.
The company's new storehouse on Brooklyn's western waterfront looms over a block of Imlay Street warehouses that store ginger and beer. During a recent visit, Joel Weinberg, general manager of CFASS, had pricier cargo in mind for his new headquarters. After burrowing into the building's cavernous recesses, he pointed to a dim corner and joked: "Here's where we're planning to put the Ark of the Covenant."
To read the Bloomberg article, click HERE.A day before the sale, Sotheby’s sent out an e-mail to its clients confirming that the New York auctions will proceed as planned despite “recent travel complications across Europe.”
“People didn’t want to wait till the last moment or risk missing their flights to New York,” said Andrei Chervichenko, Moscow-based collector of Faberge and former owner of Spartak soccer club. “That definitely had an impact on today’s prices. With fine art, you have to touch things, examine things before buying expensive works.”
Seven-Hour Wait
Chervichenko had to wait seven hours at the airport before boarding a plane to New York on Monday. He took advantage of the often muted bidding and bought several works from the Jones estate, including a carved elephant for $31,250 and a Faberge nephrite box with gold and jeweled lock and hinges for $15,000.
“The prices are much lower than they used to be,” he said. “It’s a great time to buy, especially the pieces that are not so obvious.”
Park West Gallery Successfully Defends Reputation In Defamation Trial
SOUTHFIELD, MI—April 22, 2010—Park West Gallery is pleased with the recent verdict determining that Park West had not defamed Fine Art Registry, but is disappointed that the jury determined that FAR had not defamed Park West Gallery. FAR’s testimony was that their false and malicious statements were only their opinions and hyperbole, and they pled a defense based on the first amendment.
Park West was seeking damages from the web-based art tagging and art sales site for its nearly three year cybersmear campaign against the gallery. The campaign, which began in 2007 and continues to this day, includes hundreds of internet postings, numerous press releases and nearly 100 videos, all containing false information.
“Although not the central issue of this defamation case, this trial gave us the opportunity to reaffirm the authenticity of Park West’s artwork, which was defended compellingly by our witnesses,” said Mr. Young. The court accepted without reservation the qualifications of the three expert witnesses presented by Park West: Bernard Ewell, American Society of Appraisers and Daniel David, publisher and copyright holder of the Divine Comedy by Salvador Dali as well as retired FBI Art Crime Team agent Robert Wittman, who formed the FBI art crime team and presented expert testimony on art fraud as well as practices and procedures within the art industry.
During the trial, FAR attempted to present three experts on authenticity of art and signatures. None of the three had previously been accepted as experts in any court of law. Two of them—Nicholas Descharnes and Roy Saper—were totally rejected by the court as experts and were determined to have no expertise in the authenticity of graphic art or signatures. The third, Frank Hunter, although accepted by the court subject to cross examination as an expert in graphic art, admitted at his deposition and at trial that he was not an expert on signatures. Their expert witnesses presented an uncompelling account, which the jury rejected, as FAR’s defamation claims against Park West were rejected in totality.
During the trial FAR’s attorneys and witnesses were cited twelve times for violating the court’s rulings regarding the presentation of evidence. Seven of the violations were by the attorneys themselves. On the second violation, Donald Payton, lead counsel for FAR, was told by U.S. Federal Judge Lawrence Zatkoff that he believed that the violation was intentional. On the twelfth violation, Judge Zatkoff imposed a $5000 sanction against Jonathan Schwartz, another of FAR’s attorneys. “Despite the best efforts by the court, the harm could not be undone,” said Mr. Young. “Also, we believe the jury’s award to FAR for a Lanham act violation had no basis in the evidence presented at trial. We are confident that we will prevail at an upcoming new trial, where we are again suing FAR for defamation.”
Park West will continue to aggressively defend its reputation, its brand and the art of its 1.2 million satisfied customers.
Southfield-based Park West Gallery took a $500,000 hit Wednesday in a legal brawl with a Phoenix-based Web site that said the gallery defrauded customers in art auctions aboard cruise ships.
"The verdict vindicates everything my client ever said about Park West," Farmington Hills lawyer Donald Payton said after a federal jury in Port Huron awarded $500,000 to Global Fine Arts Registry and its founder, Theresa Franks, for trademark violations involving registry Web sites.
"I'm ecstatic," Franks said. "I'm thrilled. After three years of hell, I've finally gotten a sweet, sweet, sweet victory."
Park West's lawyer, Rodger Young of Southfield, who had sought a $46-million defamation judgment against the registry, said he would ask U.S. District Judge Lawrence Zatkoff to throw out the verdict.
"Needless to say, we are going to vigorously appeal," Young said, adding that the gallery also would ask Zatkoff to find that it was defamed.
Park West sued for defamation in 2008, alleging that the registry engaged in a smear campaign by posting articles saying Park West had sold overpriced, forged and fraudulent artwork to unsuspecting customers during auctions aboard cruise ships.
The registry countersued, charging that it was Park West doing the smearing. Among other things, the registry said Park West had created Web sites with names similar to the registry's to divert readers. The registry said those Web sites made disparaging remarks about the registry.
Park West, founded in 1969, describes itself as one of the largest independently owned art galleries in the world. A large part of its business involves cruise ship art auctions.
The Fine Arts Registry, which devotes part of its Web site to exposing fraud and deception in the art world, said it began investigating Park West after reading news accounts and receiving customer complaints. It insists that its stories about Park West were true.
To read the fulla article, click HERE.For art-world insiders, the particularly juicy revelations in Tilton’s testimony are the additional names that apparently figured on this blacklist. In questioning by lawyers for Robins and Zwirner, Tilton explained that the list (or lists) was regularly updated by Dumas’ dealers — Galerie Paul Andriesse in Amsterdam, Gallery Koyanagi in Tokyo, Zeno X Gallery in Antwerp, and himself in New York — when they learned that collectors had been actively buying and reselling works.
Tilton admitted that he had recommended several names which were added to the list, including that of New York dealer Marc Jancou, American collector Richard Cooper, and, possibly, Aspen, Colorado–based collector Daniel Holtz (Tilton referred to him as “Danny Holtz”), who is currently on the board of trustees of the Aspen Art Museum. Whether these names currently reside on such a blacklist is unclear from today’s hearing. Perhaps most surprisingly, when questioned by Zwirner’s lawyers, Tilton admitted that he had gotten Zwirner’s name added to the blacklist around March 2005, when the dealer mounted a secondary-market exhibition of Dumas’ work at Zwirner & Wirth, the New York gallery that Zwirner ran jointly with Swiss dealer Iwan Wirth.
The Greylist
Tilton’s testimony and exhibits presented by lawyers on both sides appear to confirm the existence not only of a blacklist barring certain collectors who had resold Dumas works on the secondary market from buying primary market works by her, but also of a somewhat murkier “greylist” which may have come with less restrictive terms. According to Tilton, the lists were treated in the same manner, but it now appears that Dumas’ Amsterdam studio manager Jolie van Leeuwen may have maintained more than one list of collectors.
Dueling Definitions of Confidentiality
Tilton, who represented Dumas from the late 1980s until she left him for Zwirner in 2008, testified that Robins came to him in 2004 with an interest in reselling Reinhardt’s Daughter, which Robins had purchased on the secondary market. The two took it to David Zwirner, who had a ready buyer, and completed the sale, according to Tilton, who said that price and the importance of confidentiality were discussed with Zwirner at that time. Zwirner, according to Tilton, agreed to those conditions. Tilton said that at a certain point after that Robins worried about Zwirner telling someone about the sale, so Tilton “had to reconfirm [with Zwirner in a telephone conversation], and he agreed.”
Confidentiality, Tilton explained to the court, is a “key element” in such transactions, because “collectors don’t want their business known” and “don’t want it in the press.” The limits of the confidentiality of those transactions have become central to the case. While Zwirner’s legal papers have contended that any unstated confidentiality in art deals is expected to last only during the duration of the transaction, Tilton maintained that any sale “should never ever be mentioned, forever.”
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To read the full article, click HERE.As for the supposed blacklist, the lawyers added, as if addressing a purely philosophical problem, “If such a list exists, and if Robins is on it, Zwirner did not put him there and cannot take him off.”
But several dealers, art advisers and collectors specializing in contemporary art said in recent interviews that with the explosion of the art market over the last several years and a sharp rise in the number of speculative buyers entering the market, those who sell art have become much more wary of collectors’ motives — and that they keep, in addition to secret waiting lists for in-demand artists, another even more secret list of buyers suspected of wanting to flip art for a quick profit.
“This is the biggest fear for most artists for whom there is serious demand,” said Allan Schwartzman, a veteran art adviser and curator, who, like others involved in selling work, described an increasingly complex interplay between contemporary artists’ market value, collector base and long-term reputation.
“In general,” Mr. Schwartzman said, “there has been so much profiteering in recent years, even from so many people who are seen as being serious collectors.” (Of course, dealers and auction houses also earn commissions on this kind of profiteering.)
Jeffrey Deitch, the longtime dealer and art world dealmaker who is closing his SoHo gallery this summer to become director of the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, described collectors whom “we have to chase away, who are at the gallery trying to buy, in the primary market, work by desirable artists,” only to end up selling it a year and a half later at auction for a steep profit.
To read the full WSJ article, click HERE. (Many articles on the WSJ journal are only accessible for subscribers, sometimes the link might open the full article to those who do not subscribe, sometimes it might as for you to subscribe to the WSJ, not sure which will happen, hopefully the complete article and interview opens).WSJ: How will you tap the Chinese market?
Mr. Curiel: Part of my job is to make it easier for mainland Chinese buyers to come to us by having more Chinese speakers, more Chinese representatives. I want to help our Chinese clients understand that it can be a dialogue with our experts. It's a long process of education. Also, do we grow organically or do we buy an auction house and develop it? Do we do a joint venture? And how do we deal with the two centers of Beijing and Hong Kong? We had the same question in Paris when we opened there in 2000. Until then, all art sourced in Paris was sent to New York or London. But the answer was there was enough for Paris, London and New York. Same will happen here. The pie becomes bigger.
WSJ: How will the competition in China affect your business?
Mr. Curiel: It's extremely important. There are 400 auction houses in China, and maybe 20 are doing more than $50 million a year and five are doing more than $150 million a year. That's very helpful. In France, the No.3 auction house does about $80 million and No. 4 is $20 million.
WSJ: Are you concerned about a bubble in Chinese art?
Mr. Curiel: I don't think there's a bubble around Chinese art. It might come if those who made a lot of money out of real estate or selling their companies suddenly have less money. That's what I'm worried about. I think we still have a long way to go before the Chinese market slows down.
- Closing Value of Mei Moses® All Art Index for 2009: 204.3 Percentage Change from Year 2008 Closing Values of Mei Moses® All Art Index: Down 23.49%
- Latin America Index: Down 8.41%
- American Before 1950 Index: Down 12.16%
- Impressionist and Modern Index: Down 10.07%
- Old Master and 19th Century Index: Down 30.11%
- Post War and Contemporary Index: Down 29.88%
The National Gallery’s biggest blunders – such as the supposed masterpiece by Sandro Botticelli, entitled An Allegory – are to be aired in public for the first time in a summer exhibition.
Modern technology has made it much easier to assess accurately the date of a painting – with occasionally embarrassing results. Among the works on display is the gallery’s “prize fake”, according to Ashok Roy, its director of scientific research: a painting acquired by the gallery in 1845 as an important work by Hans Holbein the younger.
The attribution was soon doubted, and the resulting scandal caused the resignation of Sir Charles Lock Eastlake, keeper of the National Gallery, in 1847.
Now fresh analysis of the painting’s wood panel support have proved the doubters correct. It shows that the work was executed in the 1560s – well after Holbein’s death in 1543. It was probably painted by the Flemish artist Michiel Coxcie.
Another mistake was made when the gallery bought what it thought were two paintings by Sandro Botticelli at an 1874 auction of works collected by Alexander Barker. One of them, Venus and Mars, is now regarded as one of the Renaissance painter’s masterpieces.
But the other, An Allegory, which fetched a higher price in the auction, was soon reassessed as an inferior work, probably painted by a follower. The two works will be hung side-by-side in the exhibition, which opens on June 30.
Mr Roy said that, although new techniques meant the gallery would no longer make serious dating errors, the question of authorship was a more subjective matter. “We will still rely on historical research and connoisseurship,” he said.
One of the exhibition’s rooms will focus on “deception and deceit”: deliberate attempts to fool experts. The gallery purchased a typical Renaissance-style portrait in 1923 believing it to be a 15th-century work. Scientific analysis carried out in the 1990s revealed the presence of pigments that were not available until the 19th century, however, and that the surface had been coated with a resin to simulate the appearance of age.
“It was heralded as a unique example of a painting by an unknown artist, and so it was – but it was an artist of the 20th century,” said Mr Roy. “It was created with the intent to deceive.”
To read the full article, click HERE.In the art world, solid results boost confidence, encouraging owners of top-quality works to re-enter the market. The availability of rare or fresh-to-the-market pieces stokes bidding, which drives up prices, and a cycle is born.
Conversely, when sellers hold back, mid-range, often second-rate works tend to flood the market, drawing scant interest and tepid bidding -- if any. The result was the alarming drop-off in 2008 and 2009.
But as far back as December, Wedbush Securities upgraded Sotheby's, whose shares had been taking a beating, to outperform from neutral, citing a rebound in demand for collectible art. Sotheby's exceeded analysts' expectations with a 31 percent increase in fourth-quarter revenue.
Optimism seems well-founded with prestigious, world-renowned and hugely valuable collections hitting the block in New York in May.
"You're going to see some great prices in New York," said Philip Hoffman, founder and chief executive officer of The Fine Art Group Fund, an art investment house.
"The rare pieces are going to go through the roof and make prices that you wouldn't expect to see in the economic climate we're in," he told Reuters in a telephone interview.
To read the full ATG article, click HERE.EBay have also been presented with this information but have taken no action against a seller who apparently has an exemplary record as the vendor of more than 400 items. His 100 per cent feedback is full of glowing comments from buyers who are clearly unaware the items they purchased may have been embellished. “People who don’t know they’ve been duped leave positive comments,” said Mr Smith.
When the seller recently listed four more over-painted items, eBay buyers took matters into their own hands by setting up a new eBay account and posting a £0.01, entitled Fake Sunderland Lustre plaque information only, that appears beside the suspect items in the search lists.
EBay allowed the information listing to run, which gives pointers about identifying recent over-painting on items of lustreware. It has received many voices of support, through the ‘ask a question’ feature on the listing – and also appears to be having the desired effect. A Sunderland pink lustre wall plaque with a maritime verse c.1840 with notes stating that the “condition is outstanding” failed to make its opening bid of £25, prompting 1079edmund to withdraw two of his over-painted items. Moreover, two previously satisfied buyers have left follow-up comments about over-painting to their originally positive feedback.
To read the full article, click HERE.Top lots include a Gothic Revival mahogany bookcase (presale estimate of $5,000 to $10,000), Chinese carved-wood figures of a deity ($5,000 to $10,000) and an Austrian Renaissance-style walnut extension dining table ($2,000 to $4,000).
“He had nice taste in nice things,” Stair said.
Stair declined to say whether he set minimum prices for the items. He handled a 2008 sale of European and American furniture from Salander-O’Reilly that totaled $1.6 million, $600,000 above the presale estimate.
The former Salander home, a 9,000-square-foot, six-story townhouse on East 82nd Street, is being offered for $14.25 million. His lawyers sought $25 million when they put it on the market two years ago. The 1898 building, between Madison and Park Avenues, was once home to playwright Lillian Hellman.
Stair said that in July he expects to sell the contents of Salander’s Millbrook, New York, home, which sits on 66 bucolic acres. European sculpture and paintings recovered from Salander’s gallery may be auctioned later this year.
To read the full article, click HERE.opponents point out that of the 4,000 or so surviving drawings by Leonardo, not a single one is on vellum. But vellum is a material a copyist might well use – because sizeable sheets of monastic vellum of the correct age are easy to come by, whereas blank sheets of paper made during Leonardo’s lifetime are not. Nor does the observation that a left-handed artist drew the portrait convince the sceptics. According to Pietro C Marani, Italy’s most distinguished Leonardo scholar, who oversaw the restoration of The Last Supper : “The fact that one is looking at a drawing by a left-handed artist does not carry any weight: there exist copies of drawings by Leonardo made by imitators which present this particular characteristic – by, Francesco Melzi, for example, as Kenneth Clark and others have already written.” Likewise, a copyist could easily arrive at the sitter’s costume by studying any Milanese 15th-century portrait. Even the drawing’s obvious antiquity has drawn fire from one museum director, who asked not to be named. He believes the drawing is not even 19th century, and thinks it is “a screaming 20th-century fake”, made up out of a “compilation of obviously Leonardesque elements that is not even close to Leonardo himself”. For this well-known connoisseur of Italian painting and sculpture, the damage and repairs are suspicious, for, although apparent to the naked eye, they are not so extensive that they make the picture unappealing or unsaleable – as it would be, for example, if the repairs disfigured the face.
Although 90 of the book’s 190 pages are given over to the complex (and to the layman, barely intelligible) analysis of X-rays, scans, infra-red emission images and so forth, Kemp says that the fingerprints provide “no conclusive evidence either way” . So why bother? An obviously genuine drawing rarely requires such extended scientific analysis – much more important for assessing its status is connoisseurship, which entails detailed comparisons with universally accepted drawings by the same artist. But to make his argument, Kemp reproduces only six of a possible 600 ravishing drawings (not counting notebook jottings) by Leonardo. And the drawings chosen for comparison are uniformly weak. This reader was left feeling that Kemp is dealing from a stacked deck.
To read the full article, click HERE.But like the Egyptian treasure, the Degas finds could be said to carry a sort of curse. Instead of being hailed "as the greatest art discovery in the past 25 years," as Maibaum believes they should be, the plasters, the bronzes made from them, and he himself have been attacked or shunned by the larger art world. "That’s a lot of bronze," one anonymous critic has grumbled. "Who needs them?"
Degas bronzes, of course, have been controversial since they first appeared, five years after the artist’s death. Degas never produced any bronzes during his lifetime, sculpting instead in beeswax and plastiline clay. Of those sculptures, he allowed only one, La petite danseuse de quatorze ans, to be shown, in the sixth Impressionist Exhibition of 1881. The little dancer, made of yellow wax and clothed in a ballet costume, was mostly savaged by critics.
After the artist’s death, in 1917, about 150 of his wax and clay sculptures were found in his studio, in very poor condition. Through his dealers, Paul Durand-Ruel and Ambroise Vollard, Degas’s heirs contracted with Adrien-A. Hébrard, owner of the prestigious Hébrard foundry in Paris, to make posthumous casts of the 74 that were in the best shape. Alberto Palazzolo, Hébrard’s master founder, was entrusted with making molds from these fragile originals, which he then used to produce modèles in bronze from which casts could be produced. The plan was to create 22 casts of each figure: 20 for sale and one each for the heirs and the foundry
To read the full post, click HERE.With no current inheritance tax and the possibility that the exemption may drop to $1 million or rise to $5 million or be done away with completely, it makes the type of planning that wealthy art collectors do much more complicated. "People need to feel comfortable in a culture of giving," said Louis Grachos, director of the Albright Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New York, "and they don't feel comfortable right now. I have heard from prospective donors who've said, 'I don't know what I should do.' It's one more hurdle for museum directors."
He noted that the lack of clarity about the inheritance tax "takes away a positive incentive for giving," and that his pitch to donors at present is that they should include the museum in their bequests "even if there is no financial benefit." One of those donors, 75 year-old retired former Albright Knox board chairman Charles Balbach ("I'm in good health, thank God"), acknowledged that "there is no advantage to giving anything this year, because it costs you 100 cents on the dollar." However, he made out his will five years ago, providing a bequest to the museum and has no plans to change those provisions regardless of what Congress does or does not do. "I can't speak for other people, though."
To read the full article, click HERE.Elizabeth Cropper, a British scholar who has lived in the States for decades, is entering her 10th year as CASVA's dean. She is a petite 65-year-old and a power dresser -- crisp brown pantsuit, brown silk scarf, chunky beads. Her genteel manner is known to hide ambition and a will of iron.
"We do look for the most outstanding scholars to do the most demanding, intense work they can," Cropper says matter-of-factly. She is sitting in her corner office on the fourth floor of the gallery's East Building, with views onto the blooming trees of the Mall and the Capitol a couple of blocks off.
Cropper rattles off an impressive list of people and projects hosted by her center. She names a posse of brand-name art historians, here for six months or a year or two of distraction-free research and writing. They in turn mentor a band of younger scholars finishing their doctorates, or just moving beyond them. (CASVA doesn't do its own teaching, but it accepts and funds PhD students registered elsewhere.) And then there's the supply of visiting scholars, old and young, who show up for CASVA seminars and lectures.
Some of what gets worked on at CASVA may seem a touch obscure. Cropper touts the center's ongoing digitization of the records of the Accademia di San Luca, founded in Rome in 1593 as one of Europe's first art academies. Senior scholar Suzanne Preston Blier, a Harvard professor on research leave at CASVA, has been working on a project titled "Imaging Amazons: Dahomey Women Warriors In and Out of Africa." One of the doctoral students is bashing away at a thesis titled "Mediating the Third Culture at Tlatelolco, Mexico City." This is CASVA as a center for pure research and esoterica, on the model of an astrophysics lab.
To read the full article click HERE.These earlier assumptions were challenged 16 years ago. In 1994, the Smithsonian Institution’s Conservation Analytical Laboratory issued revised guidelines allowing for as much as 15 per cent fluctuation in relative humidity (35 per cent to 65 per cent) and fluctuations by as much as ten degrees Celsius (52 degrees Fahrenheit to 88 degrees Fahrenheit), regardless of the materials from which objects were made. As research progressed others also came to the conclusion “most museum objects can tolerate, without mechanical damage, larger fluctuations than previously thought” (David Erhardt and Marion Mecklenburg, “Relative Humidity Reconsidered” in Preventive Conservation: Practice, Theory and Research, 1994).
No one would argue that environmental fluctuations should be allowed to occur unchecked within a museum. But the question is this: given the scientific evidence that works of art made from multiple categories of media have not been shown to sustain damage from the incremental fluctuation of relative humidity to a greater extent than currently prescribed, is it time to arrive at an international consensus on loosening environmental strictures?
Some of today’s protagonists moving this discussion towards new protocols include Nicholas Serota, the director of the Tate, along with members of the scientific community, including the International Institute for Conservation (IIC). In May 2010, the IIC and the American Institute for Conservation will be co-sponsoring a roundtable session in its series “Dialogues for a New Century” to review the latest findings, and address the impasse still preventing the world’s art museums from adopting a less stringent standard (the discussion follows a September 2008 summit in London, “Climate Change and Museum Collections”).
To download the RICS survey, click HERE.The net balance of surveyors reporting a rise rather than a fall in prices continued its upward trend in the first quarter of 2010, with the All Lot price net balance increasing from +17 to +22 (the highest reading since the survey began in Q1 2008). According to surveyors, this can be attributed to a shortage of stock on the market.
Nine out of the ten sub-sectors in the survey showed a positive net balance; only the contemporary art sector recorded a negative reading of –1.
The silver and the jewellery sub sectors were the strongest performing subsectors, with net balances respectively of +57 and +41.This, in part, is due to the continued high price of gold and silver.
In terms of price ranges, the lower end of the market continued to outperform the higher end. Indeed, in the £1-£1,000 and £1,000-£5,000 categories, the All Lot net balances were +24 and +27 respectively. This compares with the £5,000-£50,000 and the £50,000+ categories, which both recorded All Lot net balances of +18.
Looking forward, surveyors expect that demand will comfortably outstrip supply over the next twelve months. The expected demand net balance was +48 compared to the expected supply net balance of +29.
To read the full Washington Post article, click HERE.Changes in temperature and humidity beyond an acceptable range can have profound effects on works of art. Canvas can expand and contract at a different rate than the paint on the canvas, which can lead to cracking and other damage.
Abruptly closing a well-received show before the end of its scheduled run is almost unheard of. Curators and conservators began de-installing the art Wednesday, Guiter said.
In recent years, the Corcoran has experienced some bumps along the road toward reestablishing itself as an arts destination for residents and out-of-town visitors. It has struggled with fundraising, not unlike many of the region's arts groups during the recession, and the "Turner to Cézanne" show was viewed as a true coup. It was scheduled during a relatively slow time for visitors, ending just after the spring break rush. "It was doing well," Guiter said. "We were definitely disappointed to close it."
The work by the Corcoran's general contractor, the Christman Co., and subcontractor Siemens AG before the exhibition's opening in January was part of an overall roof and skylight restoration, which the company listed as a $16 million project. Attempts to reach representatives of the GSA were unsuccessful, and members of the Corcoran board did not respond to requests for a reaction.
Speaking of the Spring 2010 Hong Kong Sale Series, Patti Wong, Sotheby's Chairman in Asia, said: “The phenomenal results achieved in Sotheby's Hong Kong Sale Series just concluded have established the highest total – just short of HK$2 billion – ever for a sale series for the company in Hong Kong. We also achieved record totals in the following collecting categories: Chinese Paintings, Jewels and Jadeite, Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art and Watches. The rarity and quality of the offerings which our unrivalled team of experts assembled across a range of categories attracted established collectors and numerous new buyers from across Asia and especially China. Their participation provoked fierce bidding which resulted in our setting many records for individual artists and objects, especially Imperial wares. This emphasizes the growing importance of Hong Kong as one of the most vibrant auction centers in the world as well Sotheby's dominance in Asia.”
Kevin Ching, CEO of Sotheby's Asia, said: "What made this sale series groundbreaking in many ways was the growing involvement and participation by Mainland Chinese, who are attracted not only by the extremely high quality of artworks on offer in a variety of categories, but also by the appeal of Sotheby's historic and global brand. These results confirm the success of our strategy of focusing on service to our clients and on expertise which sources the best from around the world in a range of categories. With our worldwide teams of experts, with our integrity and the transparency we can offer as the only publicly owned international auction house operating in Asia, Sotheby's can provide invaluable access to the world of fine art for the world's wealthy who want to compete as collectors."
LOS ANGELES — A woman who sold $20 million in phony artwork she claimed was by Picasso, Dali and Chagall to thousands of people through a semiweekly televised auction has been sentenced to seven years in federal prison, prosecutors said Tuesday.
Kristine Eubanks, 52, of La Canada Flintridge pleaded guilty in 2007 to conspiracy and tax evasion and was sentenced Monday.
She and her husband, Gerald Sullivan, conducted an art auction show twice a week on DirecTV and The Dish Network from 2002 to 2006.
The couple ran Fine Art Treasures Gallery, which sold fake and forged lithographs, prints and paintings purportedly found at estate liquidations around the world to more than 10,000 victims, U.S. attorney's spokesman Thom Mrozek said.
They bought the paintings from suppliers and sometimes signed the forgeries and prints with the artists' names, prosecutors said.
Eubanks forged "certificates of authenticity" for some pieces and provided fake appraisals for jewelry pieces, Mrozek said.
Also, the couple drove up sale prices by having fake bids announced on-air, he said.
U.S. District Judge Gary Feess said their scheme was "audacious in its scope" and blatantly illegal.
Sullivan will be sentenced in May after earlier pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and interstate transportation of stolen property. He faces a maximum sentence of six years in federal prison.
To read the full Fortune article on LinkedIn, click HERE.If you're serious about managing your career, the only social site that really matters is LinkedIn. In today's job market an invitation to "join my professional network" has become more obligatory -- and more useful -- than swapping business cards and churning out résumés.
Make the most of your LinkedIn profile
More than 60 million members have logged on to create profiles, upload their employment histories, and build connections with people they know. Visitors to the site have jumped 31% from last year to 17.6 million in February. They include your customers. Your colleagues. Your competitors. Your boss. And being on LinkedIn puts you in the company of people with impressive credentials: The average member is a college-educated 43-year-old making $107,000. More than a quarter are senior executives. Every Fortune 500 company is represented. That's why recruiters rely on the site to find even the highest-caliber executives: Oracle (ORCL, Fortune 500) found CFO Jeff Epstein via LinkedIn in 2008.
The reason LinkedIn works so well for professional matchmaking is that most of its members already have jobs. A cadre of happily employed people use it to research clients before sales calls, ask their connections for advice, and read up on where former colleagues are landing gigs.
To read the Crain's article, click HERE.“Because libel and defamation generally carry a tough burden of proof, the fact that it is in trial now and that it survived a motion to dismiss before trial is significant,” said Robert Sedler, professor of constitutional law at Wayne State University.
Zatkoff denied a pretrial motion by the defense Feb. 26.
“So it's win-win for Park West at this point,” Sedler said, “because if it can prevail in this case, it suggests the facts that allowed it to win also present a strong defense against fraud. And if it loses, that may be due to the First Amendment and case law in this field. It might not shed as much light on other cases ... though I'm sure the attorneys will look into that.”
Fred Gibson, president of Clinton Township-based The F.L. Gibson Group P.C., who practices defamation and libel law, agreed that a win for Park West would give the company momentum and suggest a strong defense in the other cases. He added that losing on defamation can have a reverse effect and make a business reconsider how aggressively it defends other lawsuits.
“I'd be concerned (if the defamation case failed),” Gibson said. “If the cases all arise from the same basic allegations about a business's practices, they'd go hand in hand. All sides are going to pay very close attention to this outcome.”