Sentences with phrase «when deaccessioning»

Not exact matches

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.
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.
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.
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.
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