Saturday, February 26, 2011

Titian gets vandalized, but its Okay.


The Minneapolis Institute of Arts maintains its sense of humor after a billboard, advertising its notable Titian exhibition, was vandalized.  The bare-chested beauty portrayed on the billboard was given a spraypainted red top to keep her warm in the cold winter weather, with the word, "Brrr!" accompanying the spraypainted adjustment. 
Rather than taking it down however, the museum decided to leave the billboard up, stating that there was some truth to the new display. "It is cold!" states the Minneapolis Institute of Arts head of PR, Anne-Marie Wagener, "it has that whole sort of funny element." 
Kudos to the Minneapolis Institute of Arts for exercising a sense of levity and some flexibility.

The Art Newspaper

Saturday, February 12, 2011

The Met goes virtual



The Metropolitan Museum of Art has plans to turn their prestigious art museum more "technology-friendly". The museum has taken on the daunting task of wiring its huge facility for Wi-Fi, so that visitors can access the app that correlates to the artwork on display.  In the future, a more advanced program will be available to visitors with smart phones or tablet computers, so that they can quickly view text, narrations, and images of the artwork. This more entertaining approach to museum experiences will hopefully draw a broader audience and help "demystify the museum". 


Read The Met's Plans for Virtual Expansion for more information. 

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Google Art Project


Now you can tour internationally renown museums from your desktop at home. Google's new Art Project uses their "Street View"technology to allow viewers to digitally walk through museums such as the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, the MoMA in New York, the Palace of Versailles in France, and the National Gallery in London.  With advanced zoom capabilities and easily-accessed information on each of the paintings, these virtual tours are almost better than the real thing!


Thursday, January 13, 2011

Ongoing Search for Art Forger, Museums Beware



A man by the name of Mark A. Landis has been traveling around the country, most prolifically throughout Louisiana, attempting to donate his forged paintings to various museums. Unlike most forgers however, he does not seem to be in it for the money. Landis rather seems to do it for a kind of satisfaction at seeing his works accepted as authentic. He takes nothing in return for them other than an occasional lunch or a few items from the gift shop and turns down tax write-off forms. It’s unclear whether he has broken any laws so far. Nonetheless, his activities have still ended up costing museums. They have had to pay for analysis of the works, for research to figure out if more of his fakes are hiding in their collections and for legal advice.  Mark Tullos Jr., Museum Director at the Paul and Lulu Hilliard University Art Museum in Louisiana, states that Landis is “very well read and knows a lot about art history, and so he can be very convincing.”

Landis’ whereabouts at the moment are still unknown as museums and their lawyers attempt to locate him.  He was last seen in November trying to donate a French Academic drawing to the Ackland Art Museum at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, but has since disappeared.  The above image is a photo of Landis from the Louisiana State University.

So museums, keep a sharp eye out for the elusive Mark Landis.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Jeff Koons Sues SF Gallery for Copying Balloon Animals


The Park Life art gallery and store in San Francisco recently received a "cease and desist" letter from Jeff Koons regarding their sale of resin balloon animal bookends.  Koons claims the bookends rip-off his stainless steel, multi-million dollar balloon animal sculptures, and demands that they be pulled from the shelf immediately.
Jamie Alexander, co-owner of Park Life, has pulled the bookends but is outraged by Koons' claim over the image of balloon animals.  She states, "This man can't own something that existed before him." Local copyright lawyer Simon Frankel agrees by saying, "The idea that Jeff Koons would have an exclusive right to make objects in the shape of a balloon dog simply because he made one is surprising and inconsistent with copyright law".


As The L Magazine puts it...
"So there you have it, Jeff Koons is now the world's only licensed balloon animal artist.  Puppies start at about $2 million. See you at the state fair."