Rock n Roll attorney named to head California’s state arts commission. Says that arts education in schools is his top priority for the $20 million agency. – San Francisco Chronicle
Tag: 03.23.00
WHITE LIKE ME
Here comes New Zealand’s Prime Minister promising her constituents a push for “quality TV.” But what is quality? One pop culture expert says that when politicians talk about quality TV, “they are usually talking about ensuring that television reflects their own middle-class values and interests.” – New Zealand Herald
SPACE WARS
While closed to the public for renovation, the National Portrait Gallery and National Museum of American Art in Washington, DC are already feuding over how to allocate space when the building they share reopens in three years. At least there’s time to duke it out. – Washington Post
COOL AND COLLECTED
The Whitney Biennial opens today and one can’t help but be struck by the cool detachment of much of the work. “It is not indifference to connecting with viewers but a prevailing sense that the artists’ responsibility is more to themselves and their work than to some theory or some agenda of activism or career ambition.” – San Francisco Chronicle
DUOPOLY BUSTER
While Sotheby’s and Christie’s have been embroiled in a complicated federal antitrust investigation, Phillips auction house – with a solid reputation in London, but usually modest sales in the U.S. – has reported that their New York business has exploded. Their spring sale of Impressionist and modern art is poised to set an all-time revenue record for the 206-year-old firm. “Phillips sees an opportunity to crack what for decades has been a virtual duopoly that controlled more than 90 percent of the worldwide auction market.” – New York Times
OUT WITH THE OLD, IN WITH THE NEW
More than 50 leading UK artists have signed on to relaunch the new Tate Britain as a home for exclusively British art. The renamed gallery “will hold the major collection of British artworks ranging from Elizabethan miniaturist Hilliard to contemporary artist David Hockney.” – BBC