Sentences with phrase «deaccessioning in»

Marina Noronha (Brazil) is a curator and researcher with a focus on the role played by the processes of deaccessioning in the formation and mobility of collections.
Her research focuses on the role played by the processes of accumulation and deaccessioning in the formation and mobility of collections.
Given the AAMD's awkward past experience in imposing sanctions on New York's National Academy of Design for its deaccessions in 2008, the question of how the association should treat scofflaws was much debated.

Not exact matches

Indeed, the bill is so poorly worded, some of them said, that it could be interpreted as abolishing basic property rights where museums are concerned and mandating the deaccession of such substantial portions of» their collections that they would be forced to abdicate their fiduciary responsibility — and thus be in violation of other laws.
Jones completed a private residency program in Northern California in summer of 2016, during which he produced new work for the exhibition from books deaccessioned by the Department of African American Studies at the University of California, Berkeley.
The museum at one point had 19th - century art in the collection, but a decision was taken around the late «70s to create a dividing line of around 1900 and deaccession the works pre-dating that.
Plus: La Salle University's president defends decision to deaccession MoMA receives major gift of Latin American art Taft Museum of Art receives $ 5m gift Scottish museums receive # 700,000 in development funding and Stephen Reily appointed director of Louisville's Speed Art Museum
The Hood Museum of Art strives to be a capable steward of the works in its care, protecting each object for the enjoyment of future generations, understanding the origin of each work in the museum's collection, and, when appropriate, deaccessioning objects that do not effectively serve the museum's teaching mission.
(1 m 73.04 cm × 109.86 cm × 54.93 cm) Medium: Coal Credit Line: Dallas Museum of Art, gift of the artist, gift of Sperone Westwater, and DMA / amfAR Benefit Auction Fund Object Number: DEACC.2012.51 Deaccession Criteria: Work is in poor condition and can not be treated successfully / Exchanged for a different sculpture by the same artist
Baltimore Museum of Art to diversify contemporary collection The Baltimore Museum of Art has announced plans to deaccession seven works by post-war artists already represented in its collection, including Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg and Franz Kline, with the aim of diversifying its contemporary holdings.
images: Charles Demuth, Buildings, 1930 — 1931, tempera and plumbago on composition board, Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas Art Association Purchase Fund, Deaccession Funds / City of Dallas (by exchange) in honor of Dr. Steven A. Nash, 1988.21; «Skyscraper» Cocktail Shaker and Lid, c. 1928 — 1931, William Waldo Dodge, Jr. (Designer), Silver, Dallas Museum of Art, The Patsy Lacy Griffith Collection, gift of Patsy Lacy Griffith by exchange, 2008.48.1.A - B; Charles Sheeler, Suspended Power, 1939, oil on canvas, Dallas Museum of Art, gift of Edmund J. Kahn, 1985.143
For Priebe, who often uses books that have been deaccessioned from libraries as materials in her work, books become fodder for immersive installations populated by towers of tomes and swirling streams of pages that appear to defy the laws of physics.
The gallery had planned to deaccession the work in order to acquire a painting by Jean - Louis David painting that was at risk of leaving the country, but decided against the controversial move at the last moment.
He told Deutsche Welle that he likes to deaccession works regularly in order to purchase new pieces, and that the law would make this more difficult and reduce the value of the work in question.
In each case, the artists of deaccessioned works are represented in PAFA's collection by more important examples and / or ones that relate better to core works in the permanent collectioIn each case, the artists of deaccessioned works are represented in PAFA's collection by more important examples and / or ones that relate better to core works in the permanent collectioin PAFA's collection by more important examples and / or ones that relate better to core works in the permanent collectioin the permanent collection.
James C. Biddle, Chair of PAFA's Collections Committee, remarked: «PAFA's staff and Board have made an extremely thoughtful and responsible decision in deaccessioning these paintings.
Roberta Smith, in The New York Times, singled out the slippery reasoning that could let Brandeis sell art, but not formally deaccession it.
Despite the long history of deaccessioning, when New York's National Academy Museum sold two Hudson River School paintings to pay operating costs in 2008, the AAMD invoked its rule and levied sanctions that prevented the Academy from borrowing works from other museums for two years, followed by a five - year probation period.
(It was sold at this very fair in 2012, after being deaccessioned from Fisk University.)
A portrait of Rubens» 12 - year - old daughter Clara Serena, which was recently deaccessioned by the Met, is going to be housed at the Rubenshuis in Antwerp.
One plan, sure to spark interest in the art community — though it's also meant to foster a more general understanding of collections policy — will urge members to post «in a timely manner» lists of deaccessioned art.
Deaccessioned twice and the subject of multiple interpretations, a provocative Eakins sporting picture takes its place in a new collection and a new show.
The seven works marked for deaccession will be sold at auction or in private sales.
«Many of the greatest works in our collection are the result of deaccessioning,» Mr. Lowry added, citing as examples Gerhard Richter's Baader - Meinhof series, Andy Warhol's Campbell's soup cans, van Gogh's «Postman Joseph Roulin» and Picasso's «Demoiselles d'Avignon,» all of which were bought with funds raised by selling other artworks.
«Museums usually deaccession works in areas of the collection in which they have great depth,» she said.
All the major museums in this country deaccession annually as a matter of routine.»
In a statement about feminism and labor, she weaves quilts from 16 mm feminist documentary film reels that were deaccessioned from the Fashion Institute of Technology.
The Cantor Arts Center has deaccessioned two 19th - century American paintings from its collection: Charles Christian Nahl's Saturday Night in the Mines, 1856, and Crossing the Plains, 1856.
The object coming in to replace the deaccessioned work needs to go through a heavy screening process by the Curatorial Committee, the Committee on Collection, and then ratified by the Board of Trustees in order to be approved.
To add to that, the object being exchanged needs to be deaccessioned, or removed in an official capacity.
Another artist collected and now deaccessioned by Sender, Tony Lewis (b. 1986) had a boffo debut in the Sotheby's day sale when one of his large, spare graphite - on - paper text works from 2012 overshoot an $ 8,000 to $ 12,000 estimate to take in $ 93,750.
It seemed like the worst of the deaccessioning debates had passed when this bizarre example from the Clyfford Still museum came up recently in The Art Newspaper.
Your deaccessioning of certain pieces in the Dia collection, including some well - loved Cy Twomblys, garnered some controversy.
A committee of trustees formed in 1974 to establish guidelines for what could be accessioned into or deaccessioned from the permanent collection.
McGrath, a Calgary - based artist, began the work during a 2014 residency with the Calgary Allied Arts Foundation, when she explored correlations between the extinction of the dodo and its deaccession from the Oxford University Museum of Natural History in 1775.
Last month the German state - owned bank Portigon AG of North Rhine - Westphalia, the rebranded successor of the WestLB which folded in 2012 during the financial crisis, decided to deaccession its entire art collection.
Only one work shone out of the blur — Florine Stettheimer's masterpiece, Asbury Park South from 1920 (a painting scandalously deaccessioned by Fisk University in 2012) in a group exhibition organized by Jeffrey Deitch that orbited and created a lot of visual noise around it in a manner both consistent with Stettheimer's aesthetic of excess and disruptive of the ability to properly view her painting.
The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) announced today that its Board of Trustees has approved plans to deaccession seven works from its contemporary collection, following an extensive analysis of the museum's holdings in this area.
As the clock ticks down to the first set of sales of work from the Berkshire Museum's collection at Sotheby's in New York, a group opposing the deaccessioning called Save the Art — Save the Museum, which has so far raised $ 15,000 for legal challenges and publicity efforts, is organizing public events to further its cause.
In the group's sites is the museum's plan to deaccession some 40 works, including two Norman Rockwells, to raise money for its endowment and shift its mission toward science and technology - driven exhibitions.
In 1904, Bryant's daughter Julia gave Kindred Spirits to the New York Public Library in Manhattan, where it hung on public view for more than a century before being deaccessioned and acquired by the Crystal Bridges Museum of American ArIn 1904, Bryant's daughter Julia gave Kindred Spirits to the New York Public Library in Manhattan, where it hung on public view for more than a century before being deaccessioned and acquired by the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Arin Manhattan, where it hung on public view for more than a century before being deaccessioned and acquired by the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.
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