Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Repatriation Problem Is Getting Bigger – ARTnews.com

Despite ongoing arrangements for its return, a stone relic looted from a Nepalese shrine in the 1980s is still on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The eleventh-century artifact featuring the Buddhist and Hindu god Vishnu was donated nearly thirty years ago from the personal collection of Steven Kossak, a former curator in the museum’s Asian art department whose dealings are now being scrutinized by academics, activists, and museum officials.

“This is the third thing that the Met is returning that was donated by the Kossaks,” Erin Thompson, an associate professor of art crime at John Jay College of Criminal Justice told ARTnewsreferring to the wooden strut and stone statue that were returned last year.

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Man in a suit bends over a sarcophagus in a box.

Deity sculptures are considered living gods in Nepal. The Vishnu relic is a highly symbolic rendition of the god surrounded by a pearl-and-flame aureole with his consort Lakshmi on one side and the eagle Garuda on the other. Standing on a raised platform with lotus decorations, Vishnu is depicted in his four-armed form with raised hands holding weapons: a discus and a club.

Thompson, who had advised on earlier Nepalese repatriation efforts, had visited the Met two weeks ago to take a closer look.

“The museum not only has donations from the family, but it has at least eight loans from them,” she said, adding that the Vishnu relic currently sits in a gallery near an exhibition including other Asian artifacts donated by the Kossaks through their Kronos Collection . “Once you know that someone is acquiring artifacts without looking too closely as a source, the first thing you should do is look deeper.”

In recent years, government officials, both in the US and abroad, have increased scrutiny on the provenance of objects in the Met’s collection, echoing public calls for the repatriation of looted objects. Dozens of allegedly looted artifacts totaling tens of millions of dollars have been seized from the Met by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and returned to countries including Greece, Italy, Egypt, and Nigeria. Last September, the DA’s office executed its sixth warrant of 2022 to seize artifacts from the museum.

In October, Nepalese officials traveled to New York for a private meeting with Met officials, apparently to discuss the Vishnu relic: a photo of the meeting reviewed by ARTnews showed Asian art department chairman Maxwell K. Hearn passed a printed image of the relic to other officials. The institution said it has returned three religious icons to Nepal over the last two years with John Guy, the museum’s curator of South and Southeast Asian Art, traveling to the country last summer to open dialogue with culture officials in the country. Although the Vishnu relic will be returning to Nepal, officials have not settled on an exact date for repatriation.

The Met’s repatriation policy requires countries making an official claim on an object to prove that it was looted, stolen, or otherwise illegally exported.

A museum spokesman said the institution is “committed to the responsible acquisition of archaeological art and to apply rigorous provenance standards both to new acquisitions and the study of works long in its collection in an ongoing effort to learn as much as possible about ownership history.”

The spokesman added that the museum is currently under discussion with the Nepalese government about selecting objects in its collection, adding that the institution “looks forward to a constructive resolution and ongoing and open dialogue.”

Long-Standing Donations Suddenly Look Questionable

A stone relic depicts three ancient figures on a bas-relief.

An eleventh century Nepalese relic depicting the Buddhist and Hindu god Vishnu donated by Steven Kossak on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Courtesy of Erin Thompson

Born into wealth, Steven Kossak started collecting Asian artifacts in the 1970s, building a trove of Indian paintings, Buddhist sculptures, and Hindu icons. In 1986, he joined the Met Museum as a research assistant and quickly ascended the ranks to a full curatorial position, sometimes using his own money to acquire artworks for the museum.

“When the Met couldn’t afford it, I bought it,” he told the Wall StreetJournal in 2016. Then he would often donate or loan the artworks to his employer.

Though Kossak left the museum in 2006, his influence has continued. In 2016, for example, he made a promised gift of some 100 paintings from India’s Rajput Courts that he said had an estimated value between $15 million to $20 million. The paintings were celebrated in an exhibition that year with an accompanying publication that he helped the author.

Thompson has worried that the curator’s expertise and financial power might have incentivized the museum to accept relics without independent research on provenance. Other repatriation advocates have expressed concern about Kossak’s relationship with colleague Martin Lerner, who led the Asian art department’s collecting efforts until 2003 when he left the institution.

Two men shaking hands.

Douglas Latchford (right) shaking hands with Sok An, the former deputy prime minister of Cambodia, in 2009.

Tang Chhin Sothy/AFP via Getty Images

Last year, the New York Times documented the business relationship between Lerner and Douglas Latchford, an antiquities collector who was dictated in 2019 by New York officials for illegally trafficking artifacts from Cambodia. Even though Latchford died in 2020, his problems have become an ongoing issue for the Met. In August, the Times it was reported that Cambodian officials said that 13 artifacts donated to the museum by Latchford were looted.

Kossak did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

An Increasingly Challenging Museum Environment

The repeated seizures and repatriations came as the institution is still recovering from the economic consequences of the pandemic, which has estimated to create a $150 million shortfall. The museum has responded to these pressures by providing museum employees scripts to use if pressed by visitors about looted objects.

What should a doctor say when asked if there are stolen artworks in the collection?

The three-page handout obtained by ARTnews reads: “The Met works rigorously to avoid any stolen property entering the collection, and has always followed the laws in place at the time of acquisition. The Museum is also continuously researching the history of works in the collection — often in collaboration with colleagues in countries around the world — and has a long track record of acting on new information as appropriate.”

Some officials have also decided that the antiquities market is too dicey, according to one insider source. A Met spokesman confirmed that the ancient Near Eastern art department has stopped collecting from the auction market because of its reputation for illicit trafficking.

NEW YORK - JUNE 06: People sketch and observe Greek statues in the antiquities section of the Metropolitan Museum of Art June 6, 2008 in New York City.  Responding to incidents in which some major museums have had to return ancient artifacts obtained under questionable circumstances, America's art museum directors have adopted stronger guidelines for how their institutions should collect antiquities, including honoring a 1970 UN declaration aimed at keeping relics in their homeland.  (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

People sketch and observe Greek statues in the antiquities section of the Metropolitan Museum of Art June 6, 2008 in New York City.

Getty Images

In interviews, four current and former employees speaking anonymously to discuss internal deliberations said that most departments were genuinely interested in proactively researching artifacts for repatriation. But the size of the Met’s collection, which spans more than two million objects, presents a challenge.

Many scholars and activists have taken it upon themselves to conduct the research. Volunteers with the Nepal Heritage Recovery Campaign, a nonprofit located in the Himalayan country, have a growing network of researchers dedicated to finding relics within museum collections and linking them to shrines through archival photographs. Within the last few years, their work has sparked returns from institutions like the Dallas Museum of Art and the Rubin Museum. Their work has also played a role in the Met Museum’s returns, including the Vishnu sculpture.

Disappearing Online Records Cause Concern

An 11th-century statue of the deity Shiva, known as the Uma Maheshwor idol, that was returned to Nepal from New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, is pictured in its delivery crate at the Department of Archeology in Kathmandu on April 4, 2018. A pair of rare idols stolen from Nepal three decades ago were returned to the country April 4 by New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art.  The two statues -- one of the Buddha and the other of the Hindu god Shiva and his wife Parvati -- were stolen from Nepal in the 1980s when rampant looting saw many important artifacts whisked out of the country and into the hands of private collectors.  / AFP PHOTO / Gopen RAI (Photo credit should read GOPEN RAI/AFP via Getty Images)

An 11th-century statue of the deity Shiva, known as the Uma Maheshwor idol, that was returned to Nepal from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, in 2018 is pictured in its delivery crate at the Department of Archeology in Kathmandu.

AFP via Getty Images

As the momentum for repatriation grows, so has the recognition that institutions have a surfeit of problems when navigating the return process and acknowledging faults. The industry has strict ethics rules for deaccessing artworks, including a provision requiring museums to preserve all records.

Yet in several cases when artifacts have been repatriated, the Met Museum has deleted posts from their online collection. The speed of these erasures has surprised some ethics experts, who described the disappearing posts as undermining transparency and telling community attempts to recoup their cultural heritage. In the Vishnu icon’s case, the webpage was removed even before the physical object left the museum gallery.

“It’s expected that you keep those records because it’s part of the provenance,” said Sally M. Yerkovich, who is leading revisions of the International Council of Museums’ ethics code, a project expected to complete in 2025. “The best practice is to disclose as much information as you have and as much as you feel comfortable sharing.”

Although returning looted artifacts can sometimes be embarrassing for museums, repatriation experts say that cultural organizations have a responsibility to keep the public informed about those decisions. Deleting web entries for repatriated artworks can obscure the historical record.

“We are public institutions that talk about holding our collections in the public trust,” Victoria Reed, a provenance curator at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, told ARTnews. “If we have a responsibility to move something from public view, we have a responsibility to explain to our audience why.”

The Museum of Fine Arts keeps its online records, updating them with information about repatriations and why it happened. For example, a post for a terracotta sculpture that was repatriated in April 2022 includes a brief timeline on deliberations with the Malian government that was started in 2013 and resulted in the object’s return.

Officials at the Met Museum have stood by their practice of deleting online entries, saying that its policies are made alongside curators, conservators, archivists, and legal counsel; however a spokesman said employees are now looking into the possibility of keeping repatriated artworks online, as other museums like the Boston MFA have.

That would be the least the museum could do, said Alisha Sijapati, director of the Nepalese Heritage Recovery Campaign. “Why delete it?” she asked in an interview. “It looks like they don’t want to take responsibility for what happened.”

America Marquee SVG – Crafting in the Rain

Do you live in the USA and like to keep the 4th of July or “Americana” decor up all summer long? Then you’ll love the America Marquee SVG I designed for the new SVG group I have joined.

I live across the state border from Portland, OR and this is a pretty famous sign in the city.

It’s definitely fun to see it lit up at night, and it was the inspiration for my America Marquee design!

Use this form to get the free America SVG delivered to your email.

You can resize it to fit any kind of project you want to make.

If you’re going to cut out the vinyl in single pieces to go on a tall porch board like I have pictured, you’ll want to use a Silhouette, or a Cricut “3” machine that can cut vinyl without a mat.

You could also cut the design from stencil vinyl and paint on the design.

For more fun red, white, and blue designs to use for the rest of your summer, visit each link below

To get the most out of the designs you download from Crafting in the Rain, here are some useful posts.

USEFUL TOOLS AND SUPPLIES

Facing Financial Woes, Simon Lee Gallery Has Gone Into Court-Ordered Administration

After more than 20 years in business, Simon Lee Gallery in London has gone into joint administration with the business advisory firm BDO LPP. The news follows recent reports that the gallery was almost dissolved over a tax dispute that was claimed was resolved.

A canary in the coal mine was artist Sonia Boyce’s decision last month to part ways with the gallery after only two years of representation. Along with Christopher Wool, she has been one of the gallery’s star artists after winning the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale last year.

The gallery had not responded to a request for comment by press time, but has posted a notice online and, per the art Newspaper, on its door in London’s Mayfair announcing the joint administrators as Matthew Tait, Christine Francis and Danny Dartnall of BDO. Their appointment on July 11 came just one day before the gallery was due to have its second insolvency hearing this year. After becoming subject to a Companies House notice to be dissolved the business had its first hearing in April but last month, Simon Lee told the Art Newspaper that the matter had been resolved.

Administration is a legal procedure that occurs when a business cannot pay its debts and is therefore insolvent. It generally aims at various measures such as restructuring, selling off assets and reducing costs in the hope that the business may be able to keep operating.

“The joint administrators are working swiftly to review the available options for the company with a view to achieving the best outcome for creditors as a whole,” Tait told the art Newspaper, adding that in the immediate term, the focus was to “safeguard the company’s assets,” including works held on consignment. “We appreciate that represented artists, and more generally creditors, will have concerns and we are in the process of collating and confirming relevant information,” he said.

Simon Lee Gallery was founded in 2002, and over the past two decades has become one of London’s most prestigious for contemporary art. In 2012, it opened a second space in Hong Kong and a third in New York in 2017, although this location was closed in 2020. It is not known whether the gallery will cease operations, or whether it plans to remain open during the administration process.

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Two Rare Rembrandt Paintings, the Artist’s Last Known Portraits in Private Hands, Commanded $14 Million at Christie’s London

Christie’s managed to pull in £11.2 million ($14.3 million) for a pair of Rembrandt portraits, on July 6 during “Classic Week” in London, which were billed as the last of the master artist’s portrait works in private hands. The final price with premium was well above the high £8 million estimate ($10.3 million).

It has been almost 200 years since the works were previously sold at Christie’s, and the auction house called them a “landmark rediscovery.”

The sitters were identified as Jan Willemsz. van der Pluym (c. 1565–1644), a wealthy plumber from Leiden, and his wife, Jaapgen Carels (1565–1640), and are signed and dated 1635. The intimate paintings depict two of Rembrandt’s relatives and have a virtually unbroken line of provenance. The authenticity was supported by the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, which undertook an extensive scholarly investigation and scientific analysis.

The eight-inch-high portraits were rediscovered earlier this year by Henry Pettifer, Christie’s international deputy chairman of Old Master Paintings, in an otherwise routine valuation. In a statement, Pettifer called the find “one of the most exciting discoveries we have made in the Old Masters field in recent years.”

The year that the portraits were painted, the couple purchased a garden next to one owned by Rembrandt’s mother. Later on, their son married the daughter of the artist’s uncle.

Two paintings by Rembrandt Van Rijn:
Portrait of Jan Willemsz. van der Pluym (1635) [L] and
Portrait of Jaapgen Carels (1635) [R]. Courtesy of Christie’s.

Before the last week’s sale, the paintings went on an international tour and were exhibited at Christie’s Rockefeller Center headquarters in New York, followed by displays in Amsterdam and then London.

Christie’s holds the record for the most expensive Rembrandt ever sold at auction—Portrait of a man with arms akimbo (1658), which sold for £20.2 million ($33.3 million) in London in December 2009, according to the Artnet Price Database.

The second highest price was also set at Christie’s London nine years earlier, in 2000, when Portrait of a lady in black costume and a cap and collar (1632), sold for £19.8 million ($28.8 million).

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Frieze Expands Its American Footprint, Buying Up the Armory Show and Expo Chicago

The international art fair Frieze is set to expand its footprint in the US. On Thursday, the fair announced that it would acquire the Armory Show in New York and Expo Chicago. According to the press statement, the two fairs will continue operations with their existing names and teams, but further details about the nature of the deals were not disclosed.

It is a brave move for the London-based Frieze, which has already been running Frieze New York and Frieze Los Angeles, to acquire two of the longest-running art fairs in the US The acquisitions raise eyebrows over the future of London in the post -Brexit era, given that some art market players are already shifting their focus away from the UK capital.

Frieze said in a statement that it has acquired the Armory Show, which takes place annually in September, and inked a deal to buy Expo Chicago, which usually takes place in mid-April. “These acquisitions mark a transformational moment in Frieze’s growth and allow us to extend the depth and breath of our presence in the US—the world’s leading art market,” said Frieze CEO Simon Fox in a statement.

“New York and Chicago each have their own distinct ecosystem of artists, galleries, museums, and collectors,” he added. “By expanding our presence in both cities, we will build on the strong track record we have established in the US at Frieze New York and Frieze Los Angeles.” The fair stated that it plans to continue operating Frieze New York.

Following the acquisitions, Nicole Berry, executive director of the Armory Show, which was founded in 1994, and Tony Karman, founder, president and director of Expo Chicago, founded in 2012, will be working alongside the international team of Freeze directors across all existing fairs under the new structure.

Berry said that joining Frieze would allow the nearly three-decade-old Armory Show to grow even further in the long run. “Joining Frieze enables us to leverage a respected brand, deep industry knowledge, expanded resources, and a larger network, which will further enhance the experience for our exhibitors and visitors alike,” she said in a statement. Karman said joining Frieze will help to strengthen Expo Chicago’s impact.

The move may have been a surprise to many but Thomas Stauffer, art advisor and co-founder of the Zurich-based Gerber & Stauffer Fine Arts, pointed out that the acquisitions were a strategic move to assert Frieze’s dominance in North America that made very good sense, especially after Hollywood agency Endeavor acquired a 70 percent stake in the company that owns the Frieze entity, including the fairs and publications, in 2016.

“For other fair organizers, it will be very difficult to compete in the US With four major fairs in the US organized by Frieze alone, the pressure on Art Basel Miami Beach will most definitely be increasing,” Stauffer told Artnet News.

“The US is the world’s most important art market today and the acquisitions of the two fairs by Frieze is a clear statement. The Frieze management believes in a strong future of the American art market.”

International art fair operators have been making big moves in recent years in a bid for global domination: Frieze ventured into Asia in 2022 with an inaugural edition of Frieze Seoul, which will be returning for a second edition in September. That same year, Art Basel launched Paris+. Both new initiatives met with positive responses.

Art Basel’s parent company, Swiss fair giant MCH, canceled the long-running Masterpiece London this year, which it had acquired piece-by-piece between 2017 and 2022, citing the lack of European exhibitors returning to the fair due to increased costs and paperwork involved post-Brexit.

The June slot was taken over by a new local fair Treasure House Fair founded by the original founders of Masterpiece, but the show conceived in just four months was operating on a much smaller scale and presence of EU-based galleries were scarce.

Stauffer did not expect more American fairs will be taken over by European fair organizers as there aren’t many fairs left that are significant for companies like European fairs like Art Basel. “For the European market, we could see in the next 12 to 18 months on the mid and small scale level of art fairs, acquisitions, or mergers,” he noted.

But with five major fairs in the US including those under the Frieze umbrella and Art Basel Miami Beach, Stauffer predicted that North America-based collectors might feel that they don’t need to travel to Europe for fairs anymore. “The European art fair organizers have to work extra hard in order not to lose their collectors from the US,” he noted.

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An Alleged Arson Attack Has Destroyed Michelangelo Pistoletto’s ‘Venus Of The Rags’ Installation in Naples

An alleged arson attack destroyed a giant installation of the Venus of the Rags sculpture in Naples, Italy, by the famed contemporary artist Michelangelo Pistoletto on Wednesday.

The installation was first created in 1967 and several versions of it are on display in museums around the world but the new, massive version of it had just been inaugurated two weeks ago in Naples’ Piazza del Municipio in the center of the city.

The work juxtaposes a statue of the Roman goddess Venus with a pile of rags and is meant to provide commentary on consumerism and the degradation of society.

“Deep dismay at what happened to the Venus Of The Rags,” said Naples Major Gaetano Manfredi in a statement translated from Italian.

“Now, however, is the time for a response from the city: I have already heard from Pistoletto, the work will be redone. Violence and vandalism will not stop art, regeneration and culture in Naples.”

Pistoletto shared a video message to his Twitter on Wednesday in which he also addressed the destruction of his work.

“My first reaction was a strong control of emotion because reason must always win for me,” Pistoletto said in Italian.

Piercamillo Falasca, vice secretary of the Piu Europa political party, said in a statement he was returning home on his scooter and stopped admiring the sculpture as he often did – just hours before it was burned.

“Naples is doing a huge job to find itself. The city is more lively and attractive than ever, but it still has within itself that evil plant of incivility that we must all, all, work to eradicate. Solidarity with the mayor Gaetano Manfredi and the artist Michelangelo Pistoletto,” Falasca said in Italian.

Manfredi told reporters that the work would be recreated and Falasca said crowdfunding efforts to raise money for the new work had already begun.

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Fang Lijun Takes Us Inside His Beijing Studio, Where the Artist Listens to History Audiobooks While Painting His Now-Iconic Laughing Faces

Famed Chinese artist Fang Lijun has been in the same studio for 30 years, moving into his Beijing studio in 1993. Over the decades that followed, Fang catapulted to a rare level of global fame, first coming to prominence in the 1990s as part of the Cynical Realism movement in the 1990s. His now-iconic paintings of bald-headed men laughing and contorting their faces were Pop-infused commentaries on a stupid belief that associated baldness with equity and iniquity, as well as other superstitions.

While these striking paintings are most closely associated with Fang, the artist’s practice is widely varied and continues to evolve. Earlier this summer, a curation of the artist’s ceramic sculptures, drawings, and prints was on view at London’s Eskenazi Limited, in Fang’s first-ever solo presentation in the UK Now, the artist is preparing for a solo exhibition at Oxford’s Ashmolean Museum, which will open this October. These exhibitions have called for full days in Fang’s Beijing studio as well as trips out to a secondary ceramics studio in China’s historic Jingdezhen region.

But even with a jam-packed calendar, Fang still likes to cut loose when he can, meeting up with his friends in the evenings, and, whenever possible, heading out on the open road—these trips the artist considers another essential aspect of his practice.

Recently we spoke with Fang, who invited us to take a peek into his studio.

Fang Lijun's studio.  Courtesy of the artist.

Fang Lijun’s studio. Courtesy of the artist.

Tell us about your studio. Where is it, how did you find it, what kind of space is it, etc.?
I work mainly in my studio in Songzhuang, Beijing, where I’ve been since 1993. Thousands of artists now live and work in this area. Of course, back then, when I relocated to here, there were no artists here.

I also have a second studio in Jingdezhen focused on creating ceramic works. Jingdezhen has a long tradition of ceramic production, with kiln fires burning there uninterrupted for over a thousand years. And there are excellent services for producing ceramics—including porcelain clay, glaze, tools, technicians, and so on. It is a paradise for ceramic-related creations.

Do you have studio assistants or other team members working with you?
Yes, teamwork is essential in the creation of ceramics and prints.

Fan Lijun's work bench.  Courtesy of the artist.

Fan Lijun’s studio. Courtesy of the artist.

How many hours do you usually spend in the studio, what time of day do you feel most productive, and what activities fill the majority of that time?
I enjoy working. That’s why I have my living area together with the studio. So, except for the time I am going out, I am in the studio all day long. I write and create ink paintings, oil paintings, printmaking, ceramics…each work stage alternates on a schedule. I find shifting between different types of work is the best rest.

Ceramic paintings by Fang Lijun.  Courtesy of the artist.

Ceramic paintings by Fang Lijun. Courtesy of the artist.

What’s the first thing you do when you walk into your studio (after turning on the lights)?
Usually, I drink tea and practice Chinese calligraphy.

What is a studio task on your agenda this week that you are most looking forward to?
Right now, I am working on the implementation of some details of my upcoming solo exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford.

Fang Lijun's studio.  Courtesy of the artist.

Fang Lijun’s studio. Courtesy of the artist.

What tools or art supplies do you enjoy working with the most, and why? Please send us a snap of it.
I am open to all kinds of tools or art supplies. I don’t set limits to it. Among these are my trolley of ink painting supplies, self-made brushes, and an aadjustable electronic workbench.

The artist's self-made brushes.  Courtesy of the artist.

The artist’s self-made brushes. Courtesy of the artist.

What kind of atmosphere do you prefer when you work? Is there anything you like to listen to/watch/read/look at etc. while in the studio for inspiration or as ambient culture?
I have two ways of working, one working inside my studio, and the other is working during my travels. I love going on road trips, researching, visiting friends, and having gourmet food—it becomes part of my practice. When I work, I mostly listen to history audiobooks. The artist is discussing the common concerns of human beings in his or her unique art language. For me, the creator and the viewer are not in opposition to each other.

Fang Lijun's studio.  Courtesy of the artist.

Fang Lijun’s studio. Courtesy of the artist.

What do you think an artwork should do? How do you know when a work is clicking? What feeling do you look for?
When dealing with artists’ creations, society mostly demands that the artworks have to look good and be pleasing to the eye. This is what we would normally expect from an artist. We would normally assume that the artist’s job is to serve the eye, to create something that brings visual pleasure. I believe visual pleasure is of course, very important, it is harmful if we always see things that are uncomfortable. Besides, art creation contains other needs, for example, about humanity, about life, and about the psychological aspects.

First, pain is the most important vital sign—if you can’t feel pain it’s hard to call it life. Second, pain is a reaction to love and care. None of us feels pain for something we don’t care about or have no connection with. In fact, to create art from pain is full-fledged love. Therefore, I think that besides serving visual pleasure, art is more important to serve humanity and human emotions.

Fang Lijun's studio.  Courtesy of the artist.

Fang Lijun’s collection of photographs Courtesy of the artist.

What images or objects do you look at while you work?
I like to take pictures while hanging out and drinking with my friends.

What is the fanciest item in your studio? The most humble?
I only keep materials—my tools and art supplies—in my studio.

Fan Lijun's tools.  Courtesy of the artist.

Fan Lijun’s tools. Courtesy of the artist.

How does your studio environment influence the way you work?
The layout of the studio is arranged around my recent work and will only affect my work in partial, detailed aspects. Once there is a significant adjustment in the work content, the studio will make a corresponding adjustment.

Describe the space in three adjectives.
Practical, convenient, and casual.

What do you like to do after wrapping up a day in the studio?
I go meet up with friends.

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Glasgow’s Burrell Collection Scoops the UK Museum of the Year Award + Other Stories

Art Industry News is a daily digest of the most consequential developments coming out of the art world and art market. Here’s what you need to know on this Thursday, July 13.

NEED-TO-READ

Milan Kundera Has Died at 94 – The Czech writer is best known for his 1984 book The Unbearable Lightness of Being, an exploration into the lives of a group of artists and intellectuals during the 1968 Prague Spring. Kundera’s criticism of the Soviet Union led to his books being banned in then-Czechoslovakia and he moved to France in 1975, eventually becoming a naturalized citizen. (New York Times)

Layoffs at the Auction Houses – Sotheby’s has laid off several employees over the past few months, including senior staffers Jamie Durkin and Molly C. Berry. The auction house also significantly reduced the team behind its Metaverse platform and NFT sales to just three people, including Michael Bouhanna and Davis Brown. Phillips has also sharpened its focus on the West Coast to Los Angeles, getting rid of two senior-level positions in San Francisco and Seattle. (ARTnews)

Museum of the YearAs Art Fund’s Museum of the Year, the Burrell Collection in Glasgow has scooped a whopping £120,000 ($155,000) prize in recognition of its major new renovation and rehang, which opened to the public last year. Each year, the Art Fund Museum of the Year champions an excellent cultural institution in the UK (Press Release)

France’s Culture Minister Plans Museum of Notre DameIt has been widely speculated that the new museum might take over the Hôtel-Dieu, a former hospital building located on the cathedral’s forecourt. The planning and construction will be overseen by Charles Personnaz, director of France’s National Heritage Institute. (Le Figaro)

MOVERS & SHAKERS

William Kentridge Joins Booker Prize Jury – The South African artist has been chosen as one of the judges for this year’s International Booker Prize, one of the most prestigious annual awards recognizing novels translated into English and published in the UK or Ireland. The announcement highlighted how Kentridge’s work was centered around the art of storytelling, which he translated into a wide variety of media including animation, drawing and sculpture. (Press releases)

Pantheon Nets €200,000 Since Institute Entrance Fee – In the first week since the ancient Pantheon in Italy began charging tourists €5 ($5.57), the country’s culture minister announced that some 51,275 visitors brought in a total of nearly €200,000 ($22,281); the historic site remains free for Rome residents. Despite the influx of cash, some fear that the tickets may become a commodity traded by black market sellers, as what happened at the Colosseum. (The Art Newspaper)

Käthe Kollwitz Is Coming to MoMA – Early next year, the first New York City-based retrospective and the largest United States-based exhibition of the celebrated German artist will be mounted at the Museum of Modern Art. The trailblazing feminist artist depicted scenes of anguished working class families in the early 20’sth century, drawing attention to social justice issues of the time. (Press releases)

San Francisco-Based Kehinde Wiley Show to Tour US – the the acclaimed exhibition “Kehinde Wiley: An Archeology of Silence,” which is currently on view at the de Young Museum in San Francisco, will set off on a nationwide tour over the next two years. After its California run in October 2023, the show will go to the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston from November 19, 2023–June 19, 2024; the Pérez Art Museum Miami, July 26, 2024-January 12, 2025; and the Minneapolis Institute of Art, February 22-June 22, 2025. (TAN)

FOR ARTS SAKE

Chiharu Shiota Blood InstallationThe main hall of the Kunstraum Dornbirn in Austria has been taken over by a vast, suspended labyrinth of hoses filled with a flowing red liquid and hung on red threads. With this strangely gory yet clinical work, the Japanese artist foregrounds the inner workings of the cardiovascular system that gives us life but remains out of sight. (Press releases)

Chiharu Shiota, Who am I tomorrow? (2023) at Kunstraum Dornbirn in Dornbirn, Austria. Photo: Günter Richard Wett, © the artist, Bildrecht Vienna 2023.

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The United States Has Officially Rejoined UNESCO After Trump’s 2019 Withdrawal + Other Stories

Art Industry News is a daily digest of the most consequential developments coming out of the art world and art market. Here’s what you need to know on this Wednesday, July 12.

NEED-TO-READ

Belarusian Artist and Political Prisoner Dies in Custody – Ales Pushkin died on Tuesday, July 11, after being transferred from a prison facility to a hospital. The reasons around the 57-year-old artist’s dissident hospitalization in intensive care and death are unclear, and he had no prior health issues, according to human rights groups and his wife. The acclaimed artist staged anti-government and anti-Lukashenko performances and was very active in the protests that swept the country in 2020 and 2021. He was arrested and jailed in March 2021 for a painting he made depicting depicting an anti-Soviet Belarusian activist and poet Yevgeniy Zhihar. (The Moscow Times)

Repercussions Intensify Amid Artist Activist Protests – Around this time last year, climate activists stepped up the frequency of their vandalist attacks on museums in the hope of raising awareness about the climate crisis. Since then, institutions have had to step up security and put objects behind protective glass for fear of damages. Museums are, in some cases, pressing charges against the activists. (New York Times)

The US Rejoins UNESCO – On Sunday, July 9, the Secretary of State of the United States of America signed the United States’ Document of Acceptance to the UNESCO Constitution. The return of the nation to UNESCO comes after former president Donald Trump had withdrawn during his tenure. “This is a historic moment,” said UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay. “If we want to meet the challenges of our century, there can only be a collective response.” (Press releases)

OpenSea Impersonator Indicted by DOJ – Soufiane Oulaya faces fraud charges related to an alleged scheme to impersonate the NFT sales platform OpenSea. The US Department of Justice alleges that Oulaya created a copycat website in September 2021 and paid for ads so that his fraudulent site would pop up first in searches. One unnamed individual lost approximately $450,000 worth of Ethereum and NFTs after they logged in. (ARTnews)

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Museum to Open in US’s First Bank – The Philadelphia-based First Bank of the United States, built in 1797 to house Alexander Hamilton’s new banking system will get a new life as a museum dedicated to the history of the American economy. The Independence National Historic Park building has not been publicly accessible for 50 years, but hopes to reopen by 2026 to coincide with the 250th Anniversary of the United States. (WHYY)

Wales to Disperse Contemporary Art Collection Across Country – The Welsh Government has announced a new plan to disperse objects from the permanent contemporary collection to galleries across the country, in order to help engage the community. An “anchor gallery” will be constructed for house works, and a digital platform with some 25,000 digitized images has been created. (Museums Association)

Front International Triennial Names Curator – New York-based artist Asad Raza and curator Magdalena Moskalewicz will helm the next edition of the Cleveland-based triennial in 2025. Raza’s work was recently on view at the Portikus in Frankfurt, and participated in the 2022 edition of FRONT, as well as the 2017 edition of the Whitney Biennial. (ARTnews)

FOR ART’S SAKE

Damien Hirst Adorns Tiffany’s Façade in Tokyo – A new flagship in Ginza has a massive facade of cherry blossoms by the English artist. The design begins at street level with a convenient Tiffany’s blue backdrop before bursting with pinks as the eye moves upwards. It was made with 292 aluminum honeycomb and glass panels. (Designboom)

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He Overpaid, Bid Against Himself, and Hid a Monet in His Basement. Here’s What We Still Need to Learn From Visionary Art Dealer Joseph Duveen

Every week, Artnet News brings you The Gray Market. The column decodes important stories from the previous week—and offers unparalleled insight into the inner workings of the art industry in the process.

This week, the past isn’t through with us…

The Duveen Agenda

Few things help put the present-day art market in perspective more keenly than studying key figures from the art market’s past. After reading SN Behrman’s biography of the bravura early 20th century art dealer Joseph Duveen over the past few weeks, I’m struck by the ways that a few of Duveen’s signature strategies show what has changed and what has stayed eerily similar about the trade in the 84 years since his death. The split is instructive. It shows that while some key aspects of any era’s art sales are grounded in mutable market conditions, much of it comes down to human psychology, which is all but guaranteed to endure not just from decade to decade but from century to century.

Who was Joseph Duveen? The question enlivened not only Behrman’s 1951 book (which is titled simply duveen) but several others written to chronicle his life and career in the family business of selling increasingly fine things to increasingly fine people. In just two generations, the Duveen patriarchs progressed from dealing Delft tiles and furniture to window shoppers at an overstuffed storefront in the British port city of Hull, to brokering the sales of the most prized artworks on the planet to British royalty and the American robber- barons whose names still adorn some of the most august cultural institutions in the US

Although Duveen’s father, Joseph Joel Duveen, and his uncle, Henry Duveen, deserve real credit for the rise of the family business, neither of them have ever so much dabbled in selling paintings. It was their son and nephew who pushed the Duveens headlong into the market for fine artworks. After his father and uncle died, Joseph took control of the family business and supercharged it into immortality, becoming the primary (if not the exclusive) dealer to the steel magnate Henry Clay Frick, Arabella Huntington (who, in an unorthodox turn, married both the railroad tycoon Collis P. Huntington and, after his death, his nephew and successor, Henry E. Huntington, founder of the Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens), and the banker and industrialist Andrew W. Mellon, to name just a few.

Recounting how Duveen did this is where the real fun begins. He created an international network of informants by doling out cash and kind words to the butlers, valets, housekeepers, ship crewmen, and other support staff to as many of the world’s wealthiest individuals as he could manage. He accused rivals of selling forgeries that he knew to be genuine purely because of the damage it would do to their client relations, even if it meant Duveen himself would be dragged into court with a losing case. He sometimes bought works that he believed were beneath his collectors (including then-contemporary pieces by the likes of Monet) for the express purpose of burying them in his gallery’s basement, minimizing the odds that his clients would ever see and potentially thrill to anything else than his Old Masters.

A 1929 courtroom illustration from the slander lawsuit brought against Joseph Duveen by Mrs.  Andree Lardoux Hahn, whose sale of a purported Leonardo da Vinci painting to the Kansas City Art Museum was canceled after Duveen cast doubt on its authenticity.  Image credit: Bettman via Getty Images.

A 1929 courtroom illustration from the slander lawsuit brought against Joseph Duveen by Mrs. Andree Lardoux Hahn, whose sale of a purported Leonardo da Vinci painting to the Kansas City Art Museum was canceled after Duveen cast doubt on its authenticity. Image credit: Bettman via Getty Images.

In fact, one of Duveen’s signatures was to channel this last tactic into an even more audacious form. It’s nothing short of a monopoly mindset. Here’s Behrman on this point:

Professor CM Bowra of Oxford has said that Duveen was “the most symbolic figure of the twenties.” Certainly Duveen was a man of his time. It was a time of monopoly, and Duveen out-monopolized the monopolists who were among his biggest clients. In some people, the impulse to own everything appears to be congenital. Beyond the first victory, the horizons widen; they have to control not only the main stream but its tributaries. The impulse becomes a drive that demands the extermination not only of rivals but of potential rivals—a refusal to allow them to live, or even to be born. This temperament is not confined to businessmen. Some artists, scholars, and professional philosophers have it, and even, frozen in the dictates of ideology, some humanitarians; once you’ve palmed the truth, it becomes logical to destroy those who don’t share it… Duveen’s career was dominated by this monopolistic drive.

First off, what a paragraph! More importantly, though, it’s important to understand how Duveen acted on this impulse. Strategically, tactically, and financially, he would go to extraordinary lengths to instill in his clients that they could only get the very best works through him, and only when he determined they were ready for them. He did this most often by buying everything he considered to be of real quality before anyone else could manage to do it. Hyper-aware thanks to his web of informants, he bought works privately that his competitors didn’t even know were on the market. He bought pieces at auction, winning bidding war after bidding war. He bought entire collections in bulk even when he was only interested in a small subset of the inventory.

Duveen worked for and against himself on this front by doing one thing over and over throughout his career: paying the highest prices he possibly could. Although Duveen had been generating sales and raising hell in equally notable proportions within the family business since several years earlier, Behrman contends that Duveen’s true introduction to art dealing came in 1901, when he bought his first painting, John Hoppner’s Lady Louisa Mannersfor what was then the highest price ever paid for an artwork at a British auction: $70,250. He broke through that ceiling again and again over the next 38 years, and he did so entirely by design.

Most telling of all, Duveen was known to bid things up even when he was only competing against himself. Early in the book, Behrman recounts how he once asked a minor noble to name her price for a particular artwork, then balked at how low the number was when she complied. He only agreed to buy the work for a multiple of her price.

This might sound like idiocy. In reality, it was cunning. Among Duveen’s many hall of fame quotes about art dealing, none is more memorable to me than “When you pay high for the priceless, you’re getting it cheap.” This would scan as self-aggrandizing if not for the fact that he managed to get the richest people on the planet to believe it. Here’s Behrman again:

How did it come about that great money man of that era gradually came to accept Duveen’s simple, unworldly view that art was more important than money? One theory is that Duveen had inculcated into them that art was priceless and that when you pay for the infinite with the finite, you are indeed getting it for a bargain. Perhaps it was for this reason that they felt better when they paid a lot. It gave them the assurance of acquiring genuineness, rarity, uniqueness.

Behrman follows this assertion with another art market anecdote from the Gilded Age, this time concerning second-generation American Joseph Widener, the heir to a trolley fortune and one of the eventual founding benefactors of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC:

A lesser dealer had a Rossellino bust for which he had paid $22,000. Joseph E. Widener went in to look at it. The dealer needed money and offered it for $25,000, thinking to tempt Widener into a quick purchase. The moderateness of the price was fatal. “Find me a better one,” Widener said. Duveen would have asked a quarter of a million, and got it.

It’s possible that no one in art-dealing history has weaponized high prices as deftly as Duveen. It wasn’t just that he found a way to finance such knee-buckling deals for individual artworks and entire collections; it was that he marketed his spending so that everyone with at least a passing interest would associate his name with the most valuable artwork on earth. Duveen even regularly tantalized the American press into publishing not only what his most recent major acquisition abroad was but how much it had cost him to get it––a fact that I can’t wait to mention to the next living dealer who scolds me for being gauche enough to ask about prices at an art fair.

Your columnist's copy of SN Behrman's <i data-lazy-src=

It’s between Duveen’s hunger for monopoly and his genius for price psychology that we can triangulate the present-day art market. Although the trade is still a niche one in 2023, its scale looks galactic compared to the early 20th century.

Duveen’s central insight at the time was that almost no one with means in the US was using those means to buy great artwork, a market inefficiency memorialized in his quip, “Europe has a great deal of art, and America has a great deal of money .” Implied in this matter-of-fact statement is that there was almost no one else who had recognized the potential value of correcting the mismatch. (I say “almost” because the only rival mentioned multiple times in Behrman’s book is Knoedler & Co., and in Behrman’s telling, Duveen was nearly undefeated against them.) Even the most respected observer of the 21st century art trade has to admit that we’re well past a point where a single dealer could corner the market on a budding national superpower.

Duveen’s ambitions were also aided by the fact that there was only one genre and region of artwork considered worth paying top dollar for: European Old Masters. In comparison, it sounds like a utopia of choice to have five global mega-galleries and dozens of slightly lesser blue-chip dealers promoting an international array of living artists and estates with equal fervor, to say nothing of the auction houses and reaching private sellers deeper into the past for more high-end opportunities.

That said, Duveen’s insight about the mesmeric quality of a sky-high price on wealthy buyers is evergreen, at least when it comes to artwork and other subjective luxuries. Just as people tend to think cheap wine tastes markedly better if they’re told it’s more expensive, they also tend to think that artwork looks better (and has more meaning) if they know it is extremely costly. Despite all the scholarships and connoisseurship available, at some level we’re all just making arguments to back up our innate preferences within categories where there are no verifiable measures of quality. In this land of intuition and guesswork, price is still a signal that nearly everyone responds in the same way. We can’t help it. It’s just the way our lizard brains are wired. And it won’t be any different in 2201 than it was in 1901, when Duveen set his first auction record.

This doesn’t mean that every rising art dealer can or should slap a million-dollar price tag on every piece in their inventory. It doesn’t even mean that they can or should pay high for the pricelesseven if, like Duveen, a combination of favorable circumstance and wily maneuvering has put them in a position to secure the financing. But it is a reminder that, for a certain class of buyers looking for either incredible luxury or a taste of transcendence, it’s wrong to say that price means nothing. In fact, it means everything.

That’s all for this week. ‘Til next time, remember: we’re always juggling what’s changing and what’s staying the same. But the only chance to do it well is to be honest with ourselves about which is which.

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