Sentences with phrase «on deaccessioning»

Marina Valle Noronha (Brazil) worked as a researcher across Tate Liverpool and Tate St Ives, reviewing and advising on deaccessioning.

Not exact matches

Sabrina Gschwandtner's second solo exhibition at Shoshana Wayne Gallery continues her exploration into intricate quilting motifs, expanding on her already complex imagery with the addition of deaccessioned celluloid film strips of female hands hard at work — sewing, threading, knitting and crocheting their way into our human consciousness.
Artists and curators comment on the Baltimore Museum of Art's decision to diversify its collection through recent acquisitions of works by women and artists of color and by deaccessioning repetitive works.
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
Any object considered for deaccession undergoes rigorous review by the professional staff (often drawing on the expertise of outside consultants) and the museum's acquisitions committee, which approves all accessions (additions) to and deaccessions from the collections.
The deaccessioning issue has been widely covered including by Lee Rosenbaum (Culture Grrrl), who headlined her piece on the Sotheby's sale «Denver disposals,» and here by Leanne Goebel who argues a local angle that the sale of the four was to the greater good of the 2400 remaining.
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.
(Details of the policy — such as the ban on «fractional deaccessions» except to public entities — will be released on July 1.)
The Baltimore Museum of Art announced on Friday that it will deaccession seven works by white male artists, including Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, and Franz Kline, to make room for works by contemporary female artists and artists of color, according to the Baltimore Sun.
Her research focuses on the role played by the processes of accumulation and deaccessioning in the formation and mobility of collections.
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.
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.
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.
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 Art.
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