Saturday, December 29, 2012
"That would amount to the largest loss the art world and its insurers have ever sustained."
The New York Times: Art Insurance Losses from Hurricane Sandy May Reach $500 Million.
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Monday, December 24, 2012
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
House of Barnes
Let me recommend Neil Rudenstine's new book to anyone interested in the whole Barnes saga. First of all, he completely demolishes the latest, desperate talking point of the anti-move crowd that the Barnes was not in terrible financial shape. "The fundamental problem," he says, is that "the endowment effectively ceased to grow after 1961" (p. 153). "Expenses continued to rise steadily at a far greater rate than the endowment, resulting in larger and larger annual deficits" (p. 154). The Foundation, "in the face of steadily rising costs," was "essentially doomed" (id.). By 1988 the endowment had fallen to about $7 million, or "about 30% less than its 1952 value," while expenses had increased by nearly 2,000% (p. 163). The financial situation was "hopeless": "more deficits were projected for the years immediately ahead"; "the reasonable expenses of running the most basic operations of the Barnes far exceeded the institution's capacity." The "longer term finances of the Foundation were irremediable" (id.).
Though it's nice to have it all in one place, that's all been said before. What's more interesting, I think, is his discussion of whether the Foundation was fulfilling its primary mission in the old location. The organization's central purpose, according to its Indenture, was to advance "education and the appreciation in the fine arts." Its primary concern was "spreading" the principles of "democracy and education" (p. 172). The Indenture provided that "plain people" (the kind who might even eat at McDonald's!) should be admitted free of charge, and aimed to benefit people from "all classes and stations of life."
On this criteria, the old Barnes, Rudenstine convincingly argues, was a failure. "We know that many people were prevented from visiting or attending courses" (p. 173). Nor is there "any evidence at all of special and consistent efforts made to admit plain people free of charge or to determine the extent to which the Foundation was actively trying to spread democratic principles" (id.). Looking at a micro level at the Barnes's education program, he finds that, "over a recent seven-year period," there were a total of 756 enrollments in all art courses combined -- about 100 a year. Since the courses typically met once a week for a four-hour session, that meant the entire gallery was closed three and half days a week ... "in order to serve about 100 students" (id.). Democracy!
Of that select group of students, the average age was 56, and the bulk came from "well-off suburban towns." Only about 14 per year came from Philadelphia. More than 40 students took the same course more than once, and more than 100 of the 756 enrollments were "repeats" (pp. 173-74). In short, "the situation seems inordinately far from the strongly stated democratic purposes in the Foundation's Indenture" (p. 174).
As Rudenstine notes, "by far the strongest" opposition to the move has come from those who are "focused on the art collection and the Foundation's setting." But -- "significant as these are" -- they "do not relate directly to Barnes' own stated purpose in creating his Foundation, or to the goals that he himself said he wanted to fulfill." The "diverse city of Philadelphia would clearly offer the promise of greater openness and accessibility in a 'democratic' milieu" (p. 174). In other words, what if the move to Philadelphia actually got us closer to Barnes's intent? What if we think of his intent as more than just that a collection of artworks remain at a particular address?
Rudenstine concludes: "[T]he art is there, installed as it was in Merion. The education programs -- improved and expanded -- are there. Special exhibitions will -- for the first time -- be possible. ... The primary purposes for which the Barnes was created will, reanimated, be at the center of the institution."
Though it's nice to have it all in one place, that's all been said before. What's more interesting, I think, is his discussion of whether the Foundation was fulfilling its primary mission in the old location. The organization's central purpose, according to its Indenture, was to advance "education and the appreciation in the fine arts." Its primary concern was "spreading" the principles of "democracy and education" (p. 172). The Indenture provided that "plain people" (the kind who might even eat at McDonald's!) should be admitted free of charge, and aimed to benefit people from "all classes and stations of life."
On this criteria, the old Barnes, Rudenstine convincingly argues, was a failure. "We know that many people were prevented from visiting or attending courses" (p. 173). Nor is there "any evidence at all of special and consistent efforts made to admit plain people free of charge or to determine the extent to which the Foundation was actively trying to spread democratic principles" (id.). Looking at a micro level at the Barnes's education program, he finds that, "over a recent seven-year period," there were a total of 756 enrollments in all art courses combined -- about 100 a year. Since the courses typically met once a week for a four-hour session, that meant the entire gallery was closed three and half days a week ... "in order to serve about 100 students" (id.). Democracy!
Of that select group of students, the average age was 56, and the bulk came from "well-off suburban towns." Only about 14 per year came from Philadelphia. More than 40 students took the same course more than once, and more than 100 of the 756 enrollments were "repeats" (pp. 173-74). In short, "the situation seems inordinately far from the strongly stated democratic purposes in the Foundation's Indenture" (p. 174).
As Rudenstine notes, "by far the strongest" opposition to the move has come from those who are "focused on the art collection and the Foundation's setting." But -- "significant as these are" -- they "do not relate directly to Barnes' own stated purpose in creating his Foundation, or to the goals that he himself said he wanted to fulfill." The "diverse city of Philadelphia would clearly offer the promise of greater openness and accessibility in a 'democratic' milieu" (p. 174). In other words, what if the move to Philadelphia actually got us closer to Barnes's intent? What if we think of his intent as more than just that a collection of artworks remain at a particular address?
Rudenstine concludes: "[T]he art is there, installed as it was in Merion. The education programs -- improved and expanded -- are there. Special exhibitions will -- for the first time -- be possible. ... The primary purposes for which the Barnes was created will, reanimated, be at the center of the institution."
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Deduction Debate
The Wall Street Journal runs two views of the charitable deduction: the Cato Institute's Daniel Mitchell argues, among other things, that "there's just no evidence that the tax break leads people to increase their giving"; Diana Aviv of Independent Sector responds that "limiting the charitable deduction would be a tremendous mistake with potentially catastrophic consequences for groups that do good."
Some reactions from the Nonprofit Law Prof Blog.
Relatedly, Yale economics professor Robert Shiller in the New York Times: Please Don't Mess With the Charitable Deduction.
Some reactions from the Nonprofit Law Prof Blog.
Relatedly, Yale economics professor Robert Shiller in the New York Times: Please Don't Mess With the Charitable Deduction.
The Fighter With The Lion Tattoo
Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento asks: Who owns the copyright to a tattoo? The occasion is a lawsuit by a tattoo artist who tattooed a lion on an MMA fighter, whose likeness (including the tattoo) now appears in a video game. Sergio seems to think the tattoo artist will prevail in a knockout. I'm not so sure, for the reasons mentioned here and here, the implied license theory in particular.
Thursday, December 13, 2012
"People want to take advantage of 2012's certainty" (UPDATED)
Wall Street Journal: Fiscal Talks Spur Charitable Giving.
UPDATE: The Nonprofit Law Prof Blog rounds up some other interesting links.
UPDATE: The Nonprofit Law Prof Blog rounds up some other interesting links.
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
"Many cases recognize that the government must have some discretion as to the choice of art it puts on the walls of its offices, even where the government is acting as an arts patron."
The First Circuit has affirmed the District Court's decision that it was not a First Amendment violation for the Governor of Maine to remove a mural from a state office. The decision is here. News story here. Background here.
Eugene Volokh: "Sounds right to me .... When the government puts up a particular item of speech (art, text, video, or what have you), not as part of an open-to-a-diversity-of-speakers public forum but instead because it likes that particular speech, it should later be free to take it down, even if only because the new administration now dislikes the speech, finds it inappropriate in this location, finds it too controversial, or what have you."
Eugene Volokh: "Sounds right to me .... When the government puts up a particular item of speech (art, text, video, or what have you), not as part of an open-to-a-diversity-of-speakers public forum but instead because it likes that particular speech, it should later be free to take it down, even if only because the new administration now dislikes the speech, finds it inappropriate in this location, finds it too controversial, or what have you."
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
How It Should Be (UPDATED)
Several readers have called my attention to this story of a Boston church that is considering "deaccessioning" a 17th century book of psalms that could be worth $20 million. The sales proceeds would be used not to acquire other psalm books (which would satisfy the Deaccession Police, were the church a member of the AAMD), but for general operating expenses.
What strikes me about the story is that this is how the debate about these things should go.
The people in favor of the sale make the case for why it's a good idea ("We want to take this old hymn book, from which we literally sang our praises to God, and convert it . . . into doing God’s ministry in the world today").
The people who oppose the sale make the opposite case ("Critics say they intend to argue that there is nothing so urgent, so dire, that requires the sale of precious assets").
Neither side gets to appeal to a conversation-stopping "ethical" principle that resolves the debate in their favor. Nobody gets to impose sanctions on anyone.
It's refreshing.
UPDATE: Apparently the debate is over; the pro-sale side won: "After a lengthy and open debate, the congregation spoke with nearly one voice: 271 members voted in favor of the sale, and only 34 opposed it." Compare and contrast to another instance where the members spoke with nearly one voice.
What strikes me about the story is that this is how the debate about these things should go.
The people in favor of the sale make the case for why it's a good idea ("We want to take this old hymn book, from which we literally sang our praises to God, and convert it . . . into doing God’s ministry in the world today").
The people who oppose the sale make the opposite case ("Critics say they intend to argue that there is nothing so urgent, so dire, that requires the sale of precious assets").
Neither side gets to appeal to a conversation-stopping "ethical" principle that resolves the debate in their favor. Nobody gets to impose sanctions on anyone.
It's refreshing.
UPDATE: Apparently the debate is over; the pro-sale side won: "After a lengthy and open debate, the congregation spoke with nearly one voice: 271 members voted in favor of the sale, and only 34 opposed it." Compare and contrast to another instance where the members spoke with nearly one voice.
DIA Lawsuit
Some Michigan residents are suing the Detriot Institute for reneging on their promise of free admission if their millage passed. The museum says the offer did not include special exhibits. The museum's pre-vote FAQ page included the following:
What benefits will the voters receive in return for their financial support for the museum?
Counties that approve the millage will receive free unlimited general admission for its residents, including students taking field trips to museum, enhanced programs for students and seniors, and bus subsidies for seniors and student visits.
What benefits will the voters receive in return for their financial support for the museum?
Counties that approve the millage will receive free unlimited general admission for its residents, including students taking field trips to museum, enhanced programs for students and seniors, and bus subsidies for seniors and student visits.
Monday, December 10, 2012
"I would not give a penny to the Met to buy another painting"
Philosopher Peter Singer says that "philanthropy for the arts or for cultural activities is, in a world like this one, morally dubious."
Wednesday, December 05, 2012
Tuesday, December 04, 2012
Friday, November 30, 2012
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
"Charitable giving reacts to tax incentives ..."
"... and in response to any limits on deductions it could even fall by about
the same amount as the increase in the tax bill, according to John List
of the University of Chicago,
who recently reviewed the literature on this subject. Other studies
have suggested an effect about half as large. Even that smaller
estimate, though, suggests that limiting deductions to $50,000 a year
could easily reduce giving by tens of billions of dollars."
That's former Obama administration official Peter Orszag on proposals to limit the charitable deduction.
That's former Obama administration official Peter Orszag on proposals to limit the charitable deduction.
"The eagle has now landed" (UPDATED)
Patricia Cohen reports that there's been a (very sensible) settlement in the Rauschenberg bald eagle case: "the I.R.S. dropped the [$41 million] tax assessment; in exchange, the family was
required to donate [the work] to a museum where it would be publicly
exhibited and claim no tax deduction."
UPDATE: The Art Market Monitor: "a reminder that real value in art history doesn’t come in market denominations."
UPDATE: The Art Market Monitor: "a reminder that real value in art history doesn’t come in market denominations."
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
"The book, unlike the film, posits no vast conspiracy involving Philadelphia sharks bent on consuming cultural fish from the defenseless ponds of Merion."
"In fact, Rudenstine argues that by moving to Philadelphia, the Barnes Foundation simply rescued itself from inevitable financial ruin."
The Philadelphia Inquirer's Stephan Salisbury previews a new book by Neil Rudenstine, president emeritus of Harvard: The House of Barnes: The Man, the Collection, the Controversy. I've already ordered my copy.
The Philadelphia Inquirer's Stephan Salisbury previews a new book by Neil Rudenstine, president emeritus of Harvard: The House of Barnes: The Man, the Collection, the Controversy. I've already ordered my copy.
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
"If Wiley gets its way in the Kirtsaeng case, every museum that hangs a foreign-made work of art on its walls would be a potential infringer."
Rozalia Jovanovic on the big first sale case in front of the Supreme Court.
Monday, November 19, 2012
Friday, November 16, 2012
Met Admission Suit
The NYT's Randy Kennedy reports that a new lawsuit contends that the Met "misleads the public into thinking that its admission
fees ... are mandatory
and not simply suggested."
Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento: "We have to say it’s not just the sign, or lack thereof, that makes one pay a 'suggested fee.' Sometimes it’s just guilt."
Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento: "We have to say it’s not just the sign, or lack thereof, that makes one pay a 'suggested fee.' Sometimes it’s just guilt."
Thursday, November 15, 2012
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
"[T]he consignment agreement gave Sotheby's the right to withdraw the print from auction 'if in its sole judgment' there were doubt as to attribution" (UPDATED)
"Given Noland's assertion of her right under VARA to prevent use of her name in connection with plaintiff's [work], ... Sotheby's was within its rights to withdraw the [work] from [auction]."
Sotheby's has prevailed on summary judgment in the lawsuit brought against it by Marc Jancou. No link available at the moment. Jancou's claims against artist Cady Noland were not at issue on the motion, and so remain intact.
UPDATE: More from ARTINFO's Rachel Corbett here.
Sotheby's has prevailed on summary judgment in the lawsuit brought against it by Marc Jancou. No link available at the moment. Jancou's claims against artist Cady Noland were not at issue on the motion, and so remain intact.
UPDATE: More from ARTINFO's Rachel Corbett here.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Proceeds from the auction will go towards "the nurturing of young photographers, artists and explorers"
The National Geographic Society is auctioning off 240 pieces from its collection of photos and original illustrations at Christie's in December. The sale is expected to bring about $3 million and the proceeds will not be used for acquisitions. Does that make them repulsive?
As I've wondered before, how is it that some nonprofits hold their assets in the public trust and others don't? How are we supposed to tell the difference?
As I've wondered before, how is it that some nonprofits hold their assets in the public trust and others don't? How are we supposed to tell the difference?
Monday, November 12, 2012
Some Clarifications Re Murakami v. Boesky
There was some press coverage last week about the lawsuit brought by Takashi Murakami against his former dealer Marianne Boesky. I'm co-counsel to Murakami on the case.
A couple of points are worth clarifying/emphasizing:
The Daily News story says "Murakami is seeking compensation to be proven at trial." That's not what the case is primarily about. It's really about the right of an artist to control the production of his own work. Murakami left Boesky more than six years ago. There's no earthly reason why she should continue to print and distribute his work on her own.
And the Post says Murakami's claim is that Boesky "lent a wallpaper design he created to the Metropolitan Museum of Art without permission." That's not right either. She has every right to lend work she owns to whomever she'd like. The issue in the case, again, is whether she has the right to print additional sheets of the wallpaper on her own.
A couple of points are worth clarifying/emphasizing:
The Daily News story says "Murakami is seeking compensation to be proven at trial." That's not what the case is primarily about. It's really about the right of an artist to control the production of his own work. Murakami left Boesky more than six years ago. There's no earthly reason why she should continue to print and distribute his work on her own.
And the Post says Murakami's claim is that Boesky "lent a wallpaper design he created to the Metropolitan Museum of Art without permission." That's not right either. She has every right to lend work she owns to whomever she'd like. The issue in the case, again, is whether she has the right to print additional sheets of the wallpaper on her own.
Friday, November 09, 2012
Just Doing Their Job
I’ve mentioned a couple of times a new collection of essays on museums that’s just been published by MuseumsEtc. The book is called A Handbook for Academic Museums: Beyond Exhibitions and Education and is part of a two-volume series (the other being A Handbook for Academic Museums: Exhibitions and Education). My essay (on Fisk-O’Keeffe) is in a chapter entitled Monetization of the Collection to Support the Parent Organization. I recently did a Q+A with Peter Dean, who also has an essay in that chapter. That was so much fun I thought I’d do it again, this time with Mark Gold, who, along with Stefanie Jandl, edited the book and also contributed an essay of his own on the legal obligations of trustees of what he calls “parent organizations” – primarily colleges and universities that contain art museums:
Q. It won't come as any surprise to regular readers of the blog that I thought your piece was terrific. If you were a museum director, I would put you in my Hall of Fame. One thing I particularly liked is how you emphasize that, to the art world, the needs of the parent organization are completely irrelevant. They don't matter at all. I've long thought that, rather than being impartial "arbiters" of the ethics of the situation, groups like the AAMD are just lobbyists for a particular point of view (namely that art is more important than any competing need the parent organization can point to). Do you think that's a fair assessment? Is the AAMD really just lobbying for their desired outcome?
A. I do think that’s a fair assessment, but it goes far beyond lobbying. As you know, the response of AAMD, AAM and others includes condemnation and punishment. I can appreciate, actually, the passion with which they take that position, although I don’t agree with it. But their apparent lack of appreciation for the fiduciary duties of trustees to do what is best for the parent organization and its broader mission, and the often vitriolic response, can cause them to look more like petulant children than collegial partners in addressing the difficult situation in which the parent organization finds itself. And, frankly, I think that harms their cause.
At the end of the day, trustees will do what is best for the organization and its mission. Indeed, the “settlement” reached in the Rose litigation does not limit in any way the ability of future trustees to monetize all or part of the unrestricted collection. The inflexibility of the position that the collection trumps all (including the survival of the museum), or that the museum trumps the competing needs of the parent organization, renders the professional associations and their rules essentially irrelevant when crunch time comes for a parent organization – or even a free-standing museum. A prudent trustee is not going to let the rules of a professional association (in some cases, such as Randolph, of which the museum is not even a member!) get in the way of doing what is best for the parent organization.
Q. I think that’s right. As I’ve noted from time to time, their position is a classic of circularity. Step 1: If you sell that work, we will sanction you. Step 2: It would not be a good thing for you to be sanctioned. Step 3: Therefore, you should not sell that work. You almost have to admire the chutzpah! But what do you think a more useful role for these organizations would look like? How could they stay more relevant?
A. I had a conversation with a museum director when I first started looking at this issue, and we were talking about the ethical rule on the use of proceeds of deaccessioning. When I asked whether there should be an exception where the survival of the museum was at stake, she replied, “Those museums deserve to die.” It was a stunning moment for me. And even more stunning when I later found that she was no outlier.
Yet this view persists, along with the naïve belief that objects in closed museums will find happy and welcoming homes in other museums. The experience of the Fresno Metropolitan Museum, in which the entire collection was sold for the benefit of creditors, should be a wake-up call to those who take comfort in that myth.
I think the professional associations become more relevant when they acknowledge that there are legitimate exceptions to the rule – some whose rationale cannot be denied without a complete loss of credibility. Illustratively, how can it be unethical for a museum to finance the purchase of an important painting for the collection (thereby keeping it in the public domain), by pledging the work as collateral while donors have time to raise the cash? How can it be unethical to sell the multiple duplicates of a particular object in the basement to other museums to raise cash to keep the doors open? The point is that, like most rules, there are factual situations that cry out to be exceptions. To deny them, undermines the rule itself, as well as the professional associations that seek to enforce it regardless of the circumstances.
But we’ve strayed a bit from the role of trustees in making decisions for the parent organization.
Q. So let’s come back to that. What is the role of a trustee in these situations, where, as you point out in your piece, her legal obligation is “to focus on the specific mission of the [parent] organization” … but, at the same time, there are these professional organizations (again quoting from your essay) “weigh[ing] in on these decisions with outrage and condemnation,” “relentlessly assert[ing]” that the interests of the museum trump those of its parent?
A. A prudent trustee will – or at least should – consider and give weight to the positions taken by the professional associations. These are serious people with considerable knowledge of their field, deserving of respect.
But the law is very clear. The trustees are bound by a duty of obedience, which you describe above, as well as a duty of due care - to act in the best interest of the corporation. In the case of academic museums, for example, the duty of trustees is to hold paramount the college or university and its educational mission. When times are tough and programs need to be cut or assets monetized, they will naturally look to all programs and all assets. It is not reasonable to think that they will or should hold the museum and its collections exempt from this process.
In my opinion, an astute museum professional will spend time and energy building relationships and posturing his or her museum solidly within the broader mission of the parent, rather than insisting that it be afforded special treatment or privileged status. No one does that better than Lyndel King at the Weisman Art Museum at the University of Minnesota. She also has an essay in our book that outlines her strategies in a very helpful way. Educating parent organization trustees about what the museum and its collections contribute to the broader mission in a way that makes it unthinkable that the museum and its collections ever be compromised – and building relationships across campus - is far more effective than relying upon the dictates of professional associations that are not binding on the parent organization or its trustees.
Q. It won't come as any surprise to regular readers of the blog that I thought your piece was terrific. If you were a museum director, I would put you in my Hall of Fame. One thing I particularly liked is how you emphasize that, to the art world, the needs of the parent organization are completely irrelevant. They don't matter at all. I've long thought that, rather than being impartial "arbiters" of the ethics of the situation, groups like the AAMD are just lobbyists for a particular point of view (namely that art is more important than any competing need the parent organization can point to). Do you think that's a fair assessment? Is the AAMD really just lobbying for their desired outcome?
A. I do think that’s a fair assessment, but it goes far beyond lobbying. As you know, the response of AAMD, AAM and others includes condemnation and punishment. I can appreciate, actually, the passion with which they take that position, although I don’t agree with it. But their apparent lack of appreciation for the fiduciary duties of trustees to do what is best for the parent organization and its broader mission, and the often vitriolic response, can cause them to look more like petulant children than collegial partners in addressing the difficult situation in which the parent organization finds itself. And, frankly, I think that harms their cause.
At the end of the day, trustees will do what is best for the organization and its mission. Indeed, the “settlement” reached in the Rose litigation does not limit in any way the ability of future trustees to monetize all or part of the unrestricted collection. The inflexibility of the position that the collection trumps all (including the survival of the museum), or that the museum trumps the competing needs of the parent organization, renders the professional associations and their rules essentially irrelevant when crunch time comes for a parent organization – or even a free-standing museum. A prudent trustee is not going to let the rules of a professional association (in some cases, such as Randolph, of which the museum is not even a member!) get in the way of doing what is best for the parent organization.
Q. I think that’s right. As I’ve noted from time to time, their position is a classic of circularity. Step 1: If you sell that work, we will sanction you. Step 2: It would not be a good thing for you to be sanctioned. Step 3: Therefore, you should not sell that work. You almost have to admire the chutzpah! But what do you think a more useful role for these organizations would look like? How could they stay more relevant?
A. I had a conversation with a museum director when I first started looking at this issue, and we were talking about the ethical rule on the use of proceeds of deaccessioning. When I asked whether there should be an exception where the survival of the museum was at stake, she replied, “Those museums deserve to die.” It was a stunning moment for me. And even more stunning when I later found that she was no outlier.
Yet this view persists, along with the naïve belief that objects in closed museums will find happy and welcoming homes in other museums. The experience of the Fresno Metropolitan Museum, in which the entire collection was sold for the benefit of creditors, should be a wake-up call to those who take comfort in that myth.
I think the professional associations become more relevant when they acknowledge that there are legitimate exceptions to the rule – some whose rationale cannot be denied without a complete loss of credibility. Illustratively, how can it be unethical for a museum to finance the purchase of an important painting for the collection (thereby keeping it in the public domain), by pledging the work as collateral while donors have time to raise the cash? How can it be unethical to sell the multiple duplicates of a particular object in the basement to other museums to raise cash to keep the doors open? The point is that, like most rules, there are factual situations that cry out to be exceptions. To deny them, undermines the rule itself, as well as the professional associations that seek to enforce it regardless of the circumstances.
But we’ve strayed a bit from the role of trustees in making decisions for the parent organization.
Q. So let’s come back to that. What is the role of a trustee in these situations, where, as you point out in your piece, her legal obligation is “to focus on the specific mission of the [parent] organization” … but, at the same time, there are these professional organizations (again quoting from your essay) “weigh[ing] in on these decisions with outrage and condemnation,” “relentlessly assert[ing]” that the interests of the museum trump those of its parent?
A. A prudent trustee will – or at least should – consider and give weight to the positions taken by the professional associations. These are serious people with considerable knowledge of their field, deserving of respect.
But the law is very clear. The trustees are bound by a duty of obedience, which you describe above, as well as a duty of due care - to act in the best interest of the corporation. In the case of academic museums, for example, the duty of trustees is to hold paramount the college or university and its educational mission. When times are tough and programs need to be cut or assets monetized, they will naturally look to all programs and all assets. It is not reasonable to think that they will or should hold the museum and its collections exempt from this process.
In my opinion, an astute museum professional will spend time and energy building relationships and posturing his or her museum solidly within the broader mission of the parent, rather than insisting that it be afforded special treatment or privileged status. No one does that better than Lyndel King at the Weisman Art Museum at the University of Minnesota. She also has an essay in our book that outlines her strategies in a very helpful way. Educating parent organization trustees about what the museum and its collections contribute to the broader mission in a way that makes it unthinkable that the museum and its collections ever be compromised – and building relationships across campus - is far more effective than relying upon the dictates of professional associations that are not binding on the parent organization or its trustees.
"I have a duty to ensure residents do not suffer from the brunt of the horrendous cuts being imposed on us"
The Borough of Tower Hamlets in the East End of London has decided to sell a Henry Moore sculpture. "The Tower Hamlets council ... is looking at a potential sale price
estimated around $32 million, which would cushion it against cuts in
government funding that are forcing the council to make drastic trims
in its own budget." Repulsive!
Around here, every day is Art Law Day
Had a good time talking about the state of fractional giving at the Appraisers' Association's "Art Law Day" down at NYU this afternoon. Many thanks to Aleya Lehmann Bench and her team for putting together such a nice event.
Thursday, November 08, 2012
"Perhaps the most quietly revealing comment on the nature of disputes in the art market"
The Art Market Monitor has it here.
"Where Now for the Charitable Contribution Deduction?"
The Nonprofit Law Prof Blog has some thoughts.
Tuesday, November 06, 2012
More on Jenack (UPDATED 2X)
ARTINFO's Julia Halperin has a piece on the meaning of the Jenack decision which quotes from this post last week.
UPDATE: Some thoughts from the Art Market Monitor.
UPDATE 2: More from Nicholas O'Donnell: "The decision does not say that an auction house has to disclose the seller as a matter of course. To the extent that reports have simplified it in that way, the criticism is correct, and a welcome clarification."
UPDATE: Some thoughts from the Art Market Monitor.
UPDATE 2: More from Nicholas O'Donnell: "The decision does not say that an auction house has to disclose the seller as a matter of course. To the extent that reports have simplified it in that way, the criticism is correct, and a welcome clarification."
"Something like a game of Whac-A-Mole"
The NYT's Patricia Cohen on fakes that just keep resurfacing.
Friday, November 02, 2012
On the Jenack Decision
There
was an interesting Appellate Division decision last month involving the
application of the statute of frauds to auction sales. Nicholas
O’Donnell summarizes the facts here. It's been described as a “bombshell,” “monumental,” “potentially game-changing,” “mind-boggling.” But Jonathan Olsoff of Sotheby’s has convinced me that the decision is being misread.
The Maine Antique Digest, for example, says “the justices’ decision meant that for the sale to be binding on the buyer, the name of the seller must be included in some part of the invoice, memorandum, bill of sale, clerking sheet, or other document given to the buyer at point of sale” (my emphasis). Not so, says Jonathan:
“The court did not require disclosure of the name of the consignor during the auction process. The decision deals only with the evidence that is required if an auction purchaser defaults in paying and is sued by the auction house. The court held that because the auction house in the Jenack case refused to disclose the name of the consignor during the litigation – when an order protecting the consignor’s confidentiality could presumably have been obtained – the auction house failed to offer sufficient evidence to establish its claim. Under the Jenack ruling, if an auction house offers evidence that its internal records comply with the requirements of Section 5-701 of the New York General Obligations Law, it will establish its claim against a defaulting purchaser and will be entitled to a court judgment requiring the purchaser to pay.”
But didn’t the court say the “auctioneer’s memorandum” must include the name of the seller? Again, Jonathan says no:
“It seems clear enough that the Court based its holding on the fact that the auction house ‘failed to produce any writing identifying consignor “#428” by name, either in response to defendant’s discovery demands or in opposition to the defendant’s motion for summary judgment.’ If it was necessary for ‘the name of the person on whose account the sale was made’ to be on the ‘auctioneer’s memorandum,’ the production of another writing in discovery or on summary judgment would be immaterial. But the Court did note that and, just as it said that the absentee bid form could satisfy the writing requirement for the bidder, it clearly meant that the consignment agreement or other ‘writing identifying the consignor’ when ‘taken together’ with the auctioneer’s memorandum with the corresponding number would satisfy the statutory requirements requiring ‘the name of the person on whose account the sale was made.’ Further support is found in the form of the summary, in which the Court notes that the deadbeat bidder showed ‘prima facie’ that the memorandum failed to include the consignor’s name and that the auction housed ‘failed to raise a triable issue of fact in that regard.’ If a name on the auctioneer’s memorandum was necessary, there would be no way for the auction house to raise a ‘triable issue’ in any way. The auctioneer’s memorandum either had the consignor’s name or it didn’t. If a ‘triable issue’ could be raised, it would have to be raised by ‘another writing identifying’ the consignor. But that would apparently have been enough, as that writing, plus the memorandum, taken together, would satisfy the statute.”
That seems right to me, but for a second opinion I went to my friend Jo Laird, formerly General Counsel at Christie’s. She agreed with Jonathan:
“In further support of the argument, note that the court held that with respect to the buyer the existence of a direct paper trail that could identify the buyer by his number in the clerk's book was sufficient to satisfy the statutory requirement. There is no reason why the court would not have made the same decision with respect to the seller had the auction house provided the same kind of paper trail with respect to the seller. In fact, the court seemed to indicate that it would have by noting the gap in the evidence presented.”
Jo adds that “the real danger here is not the opinion itself. It is appealing the case to the Court of Appeals. [There are reports that Christie’s is ‘joining in Jenack's appeal to New York's highest court’ -- DZ] On the record as it appears to stand in the case (i.e., with the house's failure to produce the consignment agreement, etc.) the appeal risks getting a worse opinion from a court with broader jurisdiction. Maybe not a good idea.”
The Maine Antique Digest, for example, says “the justices’ decision meant that for the sale to be binding on the buyer, the name of the seller must be included in some part of the invoice, memorandum, bill of sale, clerking sheet, or other document given to the buyer at point of sale” (my emphasis). Not so, says Jonathan:
“The court did not require disclosure of the name of the consignor during the auction process. The decision deals only with the evidence that is required if an auction purchaser defaults in paying and is sued by the auction house. The court held that because the auction house in the Jenack case refused to disclose the name of the consignor during the litigation – when an order protecting the consignor’s confidentiality could presumably have been obtained – the auction house failed to offer sufficient evidence to establish its claim. Under the Jenack ruling, if an auction house offers evidence that its internal records comply with the requirements of Section 5-701 of the New York General Obligations Law, it will establish its claim against a defaulting purchaser and will be entitled to a court judgment requiring the purchaser to pay.”
But didn’t the court say the “auctioneer’s memorandum” must include the name of the seller? Again, Jonathan says no:
“It seems clear enough that the Court based its holding on the fact that the auction house ‘failed to produce any writing identifying consignor “#428” by name, either in response to defendant’s discovery demands or in opposition to the defendant’s motion for summary judgment.’ If it was necessary for ‘the name of the person on whose account the sale was made’ to be on the ‘auctioneer’s memorandum,’ the production of another writing in discovery or on summary judgment would be immaterial. But the Court did note that and, just as it said that the absentee bid form could satisfy the writing requirement for the bidder, it clearly meant that the consignment agreement or other ‘writing identifying the consignor’ when ‘taken together’ with the auctioneer’s memorandum with the corresponding number would satisfy the statutory requirements requiring ‘the name of the person on whose account the sale was made.’ Further support is found in the form of the summary, in which the Court notes that the deadbeat bidder showed ‘prima facie’ that the memorandum failed to include the consignor’s name and that the auction housed ‘failed to raise a triable issue of fact in that regard.’ If a name on the auctioneer’s memorandum was necessary, there would be no way for the auction house to raise a ‘triable issue’ in any way. The auctioneer’s memorandum either had the consignor’s name or it didn’t. If a ‘triable issue’ could be raised, it would have to be raised by ‘another writing identifying’ the consignor. But that would apparently have been enough, as that writing, plus the memorandum, taken together, would satisfy the statute.”
That seems right to me, but for a second opinion I went to my friend Jo Laird, formerly General Counsel at Christie’s. She agreed with Jonathan:
“In further support of the argument, note that the court held that with respect to the buyer the existence of a direct paper trail that could identify the buyer by his number in the clerk's book was sufficient to satisfy the statutory requirement. There is no reason why the court would not have made the same decision with respect to the seller had the auction house provided the same kind of paper trail with respect to the seller. In fact, the court seemed to indicate that it would have by noting the gap in the evidence presented.”
Jo adds that “the real danger here is not the opinion itself. It is appealing the case to the Court of Appeals. [There are reports that Christie’s is ‘joining in Jenack's appeal to New York's highest court’ -- DZ] On the record as it appears to stand in the case (i.e., with the house's failure to produce the consignment agreement, etc.) the appeal risks getting a worse opinion from a court with broader jurisdiction. Maybe not a good idea.”
Thursday, November 01, 2012
"Scarcely a gallery was unscathed" (UPDATED)
The New York Times on Sandy's toll on Chelsea.
UPDATE: Jerry Saltz has a "devastating" on-the-scene report: "This could spell the end of many galleries small and large."
UPDATE: Jerry Saltz has a "devastating" on-the-scene report: "This could spell the end of many galleries small and large."
Friday, October 26, 2012
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Randolph College: A Study in Governance and Decision-making
I mentioned
recently that I have a chapter in a new book on academic museums. One of
the most interesting chapters in the book is co-authored by the President of
Randolph College and Peter Dean, the Trustee who was most deeply involved in
the decision to sell
four paintings from the college’s collection. I believe that, aside
from a letter to the editor of Museum magazine a couple of years ago,
it’s the first time they have publicly discussed their decision-making
process. In an Art Law Blog first, I conducted the following Q+A with
Peter over the course of the last several days:
Q.
Let’s start at the beginning. Can you tell us what led the school to
decide to sell the paintings?
A.
To answer that, I need to provide some context.
Since its foundation in 1891,
Randolph-Macon Woman’s College had existed for the purpose of providing a
single-sex undergraduate education for women. By the first decade of this
century it was becoming increasingly difficult to attract sufficient numbers of
qualified young women with the ability to pay the tuition necessary to maintain
financial sustainability. Since the college’s operating costs went up
over time, as all such costs do, the operating deficit was increasing.
This deficit was covered to some extent by donations, but most significantly by
draws from the college’s endowment. By 2006 the amount of this annual
draw had increased to the point that it had become unsustainable.
In order to address this
problem, the first and most important decision was taken in 2006: the college
should become co-educational and admit male students. This occurred in
2007, when the college’s name was changed to Randolph College. However,
the board of trustees recognized that, even with the admission of men and the
implementation of cost reductions, the college would continue to incur a
substantial operating deficit until enrollment grew and tuition discounting
could be reduced. This meant that the excessive draw from the college’s
endowment would continue for several years because the absolute amount of funds
required would not be reduced. Since the amount of the draw was not going
to be reduced soon, the only way to make the draw sustainable (preferably at a
rate that is close to the recognized benchmark of 5%) was to increase the size
of the endowment.
The pressure to find a
solution was increased at the end of 2006 by the decision of the college’s
accreditation agency to place the college on warning because of its financial
condition.
One well-established way to
increase the endowment would have been to conduct a capital campaign
specifically for that purpose. However, that option was ruled out at that
time because the change to co-education as well as the inevitable change to the
college’s name had, predictably, resulted in many alumnae being disaffected and
the level of financial support from donations to decline, though they are now
climbing again. Recognizing the great difficulty of launching a successful
capital campaign the board concluded that the required capital infusion would
have to come from the sale of selected assets with the proceeds being placed in
the general endowment. No other group of assets represented anything like
the value of the college’s art collection so that became the focus of
attention, though it was hoped that a sufficient sum could be raised by a sale
of a partial interest in selected works that would allow the college to
continue to display the paintings for some of the time. The college
had extensive discussions with two institutions but was unable to work out an
acceptable transaction.
That left the college with no
alternative but to make the difficult decision to select a smaller number of
paintings to be sold outright with the proceeds from sale being transferred to
the college’s general endowment. After extensive debate, that decision
was unanimous.
Q.
That sounds to me like a board wrestling with a set of less than
ideal alternatives, and then ultimately pursuing the path that, in their
judgment, was least damaging to the overall well-being of the
institution. But to some in the art world, none of that
matters. In their view, it’s never okay for a museum to sell work
and use the proceeds for general endowment purposes. Those works,
according to this view, are “held
in the public trust” and therefore may not be sold. Was the
college aware of this point of view when it made its decision and, if so, what
impact did it have, if any, on its thinking?
A.
Randolph College is an educational institution, whose principal purpose is to
provide an undergraduate education to current and future students. The
college’s assets are held by it for that purpose. This principle applies
to all the assets of the college, whether in the form of real estate,
buildings, equipment, financial assets, books and educational materials,
individual works of art or artifacts, or collections of such items.
Unless an express condition has been imposed by a donor on a specific asset at
the time of the gift, the college is free to manage its assets in accordance
with its stated purposes.
The college owns its art
collection outright and has never taken any steps to limit its authority to
deal with individual items or the collection as a whole.
While it is surely true that
in 2007 some members of the board of trustees were aware of the position taken
by many in the art world that museum collections, at least those of accredited
museums, are held “in the public trust”, there was never a suggestion by anyone
on the board that such a concept applies to the Randolph College art
collection. The short answer to your question is “no, the public trust point of
view did not affect our thinking”. What the “public trust” concept may
mean in general, or to any other institution in particular, may be the subject
of debate, but that would be in a different forum.
Q.
The other argument (besides the
“public trust” argument) that the anti-deaccessionists like to make is that
selling art will discourage future donations. They say that, in the
future, people will be reluctant to donate work because they’ll be afraid the
school will turn around and sell it to pay the bills. What do you make of
that argument? Did that factor into the decision-making process at all?
A.
I cannot speak for any other institution, but in Randolph College’s experience
that has not been an issue. Since the announcement of the college’s
intention to sell four paintings, and the sale of one of them, the college has
continued to receive donations of both additional art as well as financial
contributions expressly for the purpose of acquiring art. I am not aware
of any decision by a potential donor to withhold a gift of art because of the
proposed sale of selected paintings.
I would also add that we did
not and do not intend to use sale proceeds “to pay the bills”. Our intent
is to use the proceeds to increase the size of the endowment so that it
continues as a permanent asset providing financial support for all the
College’s activities for the indefinite future.
The college’s art collection
has been built up by a sustained and deliberate process of acquiring
contemporary art by the college over a period of more than 100 years. It
has received gifts and bequests of art, but in general the acquisitions have
been made by the college, and we expect this to continue. One of its most
recent acquisitions was of an important piece by Betye Saar, Nevermore,
which was purchased earlier this year from the college’s 100th
Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Art: The Vision Endures. Thirteen
alumnae made donations towards that purchase.
Randolph College’s financial
support comes from people who believe in its academic mission, which includes
the use of its art collection as an educational asset, and in the case of
donations of art from those who wish to add to that collection. There is
no doubt that the decision to sell four paintings upset many people, including
alumnae and other supporters, and it was made very reluctantly. We
recognized that would be the case, but we believed that our fiduciary
obligation was to do all we could to enable Randolph College to survive and
thrive, and that if we did so we would continue to receive financial
support. We have every reason to think that judgment was and remains
correct.
Q. That was actually
going to be my next (and final) question: with the benefit of hindsight,
do you still feel it was the right decision? (It sounds like your answer
is clearly yes.) Would you have done anything differently? What
advice would you offer to a college or university facing a similar predicament
in the future?
A.
Yes, when the time came to make the decision, this was the right
decision. When we considered the challenges facing the college in 2006
and 2007, the need to put the college on a financially sustainable foundation,
the educational purpose of the college, the duties of the board of trustees in
overseeing the college’s affairs and, finally, the options available to us, we
did not have a better option. I would make the same decision.
In hindsight it is always
possible to see ways in which a matter could have been handled
differently. I wish that the fact that the college owns its art
collection directly and is not subject to any legal or other obligations
restricting it from selling the paintings and transferring the proceeds to its
endowment had been better understood by others who were not standing in our
shoes. Perhaps we could have done a better job of explaining that
important point, and also that our obligations to the college as an educational
institution take priority over other concerns.
Hindsight also requires us to
consider the effect of the financial crisis that started in 2008 on the value
of the college’s endowment. Though the endowment value performed
relatively well compared to some benchmarks, as was the case with other
colleges it suffered a severe decline. That decline reduces the amount of
the sustainable draw, and exacerbates the need to increase the overall value of
the endowment with the proceeds of sale.
What is my advice to other
colleges or universities?
· First, and at all times, focus on
the primary mission of the institution, and make decisions with that in
mind.
· When it comes to the management of
college assets of any kind, be very clear about ownership and control. It
is better to clarify that at the outset than have to try and explain it later
on.
· Before accepting proposals that,
even if attractive in other respects, could result in actual or perceived
restrictions on the college’s freedom to act and to manage its assets, ask all
the necessary questions.
· Do not let others try to set your
agenda, but if a decision is made to establish a program or subsidiary institution
that will restrict the use of assets, then make sure the issues are understood
by the governing body, the administration and, to the extent they are involved,
the faculty.
· Educational institutions of all
sizes, both public and private, are under increasing financial pressure.
Over the next several years they may have to examine more closely than before
which assets are really essential to their mission and which are
secondary. Tough choices may have to be made and not all constituencies
can be accommodated, so good preparation will be important.
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Student Note on Deaccessioning
Sara Tam, In Museums We Trust: Analyzing the Mission of Museums, Deaccessioning Policies, and the Public Trust, Fordham
Urban Law Journal, Vol. 39, No. 3, p. 849, 2012.
Monday, October 22, 2012
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Changes to the New York Consignment Statute
Recent posts by Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento and ARTINFO's Rachel Corbett remind me that I've been negligent in not mentioning the important changes to the New York consignment statute. You can see the changes here. The New York City Bar Association Art Law Committee has some good background here, and Nicholas O'Donnell has an excellent summary here. To my mind, the most significant change is the provision allowing the artist to recover his legal fees if his lawsuit is successful. That will have huge practical effects.
Rotterdam Update
In the New York Times this morning, the museum "denied accusations of sloppy security."
The ARCA blog is really the go to place for news on the theft. Just keep scrolling.
ARCA founder Noah Charney had a piece at ARTINFO maintaining that "there is a good chance that the art was stolen only in order to be ransomed back to the victim ... or their insurers."
The Daily Beast's Megan McArdle says "the big mystery is ... why thieves continue to steal the stuff" (since it's so hard to sell). She quotes retired FBI art theft agent Robert Wittman that "the general pattern is that the criminals who do these jobs, these heists, are good thieves, but they're terrible businessmen. That's what it comes down to." (Full interview with Wittman here.)
Tom Flynn dissents from the view that the thieves are stupid.
The ARCA blog is really the go to place for news on the theft. Just keep scrolling.
ARCA founder Noah Charney had a piece at ARTINFO maintaining that "there is a good chance that the art was stolen only in order to be ransomed back to the victim ... or their insurers."
The Daily Beast's Megan McArdle says "the big mystery is ... why thieves continue to steal the stuff" (since it's so hard to sell). She quotes retired FBI art theft agent Robert Wittman that "the general pattern is that the criminals who do these jobs, these heists, are good thieves, but they're terrible businessmen. That's what it comes down to." (Full interview with Wittman here.)
Tom Flynn dissents from the view that the thieves are stupid.
Friday, October 19, 2012
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Rotterdam Roundup
Lots more today on the big Dutch art heist.
The New York Times reports "the theft was the latest alarm about museum security in Europe, now a prime hunting ground for art thieves," includes a slide show of some of the stolen works, and also has an op-ed by Anthony Amore, director of security at the Gardner Museum, who says that art thieves "are often opportunistic and almost always shortsighted." The Guardian's Edward Dolnick has a similar take: "what are the thieves thinking? Less than you would imagine."
CBS News wonders if it was an inside job.
ARCA's Catherine Sezgin rounds up some additional reports.
And Crispin Sartwell speculates that the thieves "are art-rights extremists who are trying to free all the works of art that are imprisoned in museums. how can i help? let my paintings go. we need to bring the art back into the world and stop locking it up behind layers of bulletproof glass and impregnable marble."
The New York Times reports "the theft was the latest alarm about museum security in Europe, now a prime hunting ground for art thieves," includes a slide show of some of the stolen works, and also has an op-ed by Anthony Amore, director of security at the Gardner Museum, who says that art thieves "are often opportunistic and almost always shortsighted." The Guardian's Edward Dolnick has a similar take: "what are the thieves thinking? Less than you would imagine."
CBS News wonders if it was an inside job.
ARCA's Catherine Sezgin rounds up some additional reports.
And Crispin Sartwell speculates that the thieves "are art-rights extremists who are trying to free all the works of art that are imprisoned in museums. how can i help? let my paintings go. we need to bring the art back into the world and stop locking it up behind layers of bulletproof glass and impregnable marble."
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
"The big question every reader will want to know is, how and why does a person become an art forger?"
Vanity Fair: "The Greatest Fake-Art Scam in History?"
The Art Market Monitor says they may the most boring art forgers in history.
The Art Market Monitor says they may the most boring art forgers in history.
"Those thieves got one hell of a haul." (UPDATED 2X)
Says the Art Loss Register's Chris
Marinello, about a theft today from a Rotterdam museum. AP story here.
UPDATE: Derek Fincham: "Most likely of all, these
beautiful clear windows made for such an easy target that the thieves stole
first and will decide to worry about selling the works later."
UPDATE 2: More from the ARCAblog.
Monday, October 15, 2012
New Book on Academic Museums
I’m thrilled to have contributed to a new book on
issues involving academic museums, A Handbook for Academic Museums: Beyond
Exhibitions and Education. You can find more information about it here. My
chapter is on issues regarding donor intent in the Fisk-O’Keeffe litigation. I
hope to have more about the book in the coming days.
Friday, October 12, 2012
"The thing with gentlemen’s agreements is that gentlemen tend to disagree, in retrospect, over what they meant."
The Observer's Rozalia Jovanovic reports on a copyright infringement lawsuit by photographer Rodrigo Pereda against artist Ivan Navarro. Josh Baer expressed what's probably a pretty widespread view last week, writing that the suit "doesn’t seem to make much sense to me on the surface" because Pereda is suing "over the use of copyrighted photos of NAVARRO’s own sculpture." But there's no doubt that a photograph of a work of art is an independently copyrightable thing; the artist isn't automatically entitled to use it.
Navarro's team seems to be setting up a work-for-hire defense, but, as the Observer piece notes:
"'If the photographer was in fact the artist’s employee, ... that’s probably a work made for hire and the copyright belongs to the sculptor,'" said Christopher Sprigman, a professor of intellectual property law at the University of Virginia. But if the photographer was an independent contractor and not an employee, Dr. Sprigman said it’s not a work made for hire situation unless there’s an agreement that says as much."
Navarro's team seems to be setting up a work-for-hire defense, but, as the Observer piece notes:
"'If the photographer was in fact the artist’s employee, ... that’s probably a work made for hire and the copyright belongs to the sculptor,'" said Christopher Sprigman, a professor of intellectual property law at the University of Virginia. But if the photographer was an independent contractor and not an employee, Dr. Sprigman said it’s not a work made for hire situation unless there’s an agreement that says as much."
Oh, by the way: museums may not be able to display foreign-made, copyrighted works
It's a first-sale doctrine thing. Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento explains.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
"The work is part of a large cache of art attributed to Modernist masters that the F.B.I. is investigating as possible forgeries."
Another lawsuit involving the "Rosales collection." Patricia Cohen has the details.
Friday, October 05, 2012
Wednesday, October 03, 2012
Are those sets and costumes held in the public trust?
To be accessible to present and future generations.
If not, why not?
It's a serious question. How is it that only some assets of only some nonprofits come to be held in the public trust (and then only some of the time)?
What, exactly, is the mechanism?
If not, why not?
It's a serious question. How is it that only some assets of only some nonprofits come to be held in the public trust (and then only some of the time)?
What, exactly, is the mechanism?
Tuesday, October 02, 2012
Brant Borrows
Is this a violation of Dr. Barnes's intent?
The new Barnes gets high marks from the United States Green Building Council.
Friday, September 28, 2012
"Potomack is relieved this came to light in a timely manner as we do not want to sell any item without clear title."
It turns out that a work bought for $7 at a flea market and now believed to be an authentic Renoir may have been stolen from the Baltimore Museum of Art. Patricia Cohen has the details in the NYT. Derek Fincham says "the case reveals the importance of reporting a theft, even decades into the
future." Nicholas O'Donnell says sorting it all out "looks to be a complicated question of history, records, legitimacy of sale, and a host of art law issues."
Tell me again about the public trust ("the usual array" edition)
Carol Vogel's Inside Art column today reports that "when the big November auction catalogs begin arriving in the mail next month, they will include the usual array of art being sold by museums."
The Brooklyn Museum is selling one of Yves Klein's "classic painted sponges on board." Aparently that work, although under the aegis of a museum, is not held in the public trust, to be accessible to present and future generations. Future generations are on their own when it comes to that work. Maybe there is a painted sponges on board exception to the "held in trust" rule.
The work was a 1992 bequest to the museum from William K. Jacobs Jr. But, obviously, no one is going to look at this sale and say, "Why should I give this to you? What guarantee do I have that you're not going to sell this tomorrow?"
The Hirshhorn is selling a Picasso musketeer painting. That too must be a work that is somehow not held in the public trust, to be accessible to present and future generations. Perhaps a musketeer exception. And, again, no one is going to say, Why should I give this to you if there is no guarantee that you're not going to sell it?
Kelly Crow had a similar story in the Wall Street Journal, pointing out that "some of the biggest sellers in the upcoming fall auctions in New York are museums."
The Cleveland Museum of Art is selling a Monet that it received as a gift in 1947. Gee, you'd think that, seeing this, someone considering making a gift to the museum in the future might say, "Why should I give this to you? What guarantee do I have that you're not going to sell this tomorrow?" But I guess that's not a legitimate concern. And future generations in and around Cleveland will have to find other Monets to look at. What do you think this is, a public trust or something?
Finally, the Virginia Museum of Art is selling a Renoir still life that it received as a gift in 1994. Come on, that's almost 20 years. That's almost a full generation. What do you people want? Where did you ever get the idea that museums had some kind of obligation to hold onto works so they can be accessible to present and future generations? Who ever suggested that potential donors will be discouraged from giving without a guarantee that the museum won't sell?
Stop being so touchy. It's no big deal when museums sell work.
The Brooklyn Museum is selling one of Yves Klein's "classic painted sponges on board." Aparently that work, although under the aegis of a museum, is not held in the public trust, to be accessible to present and future generations. Future generations are on their own when it comes to that work. Maybe there is a painted sponges on board exception to the "held in trust" rule.
The work was a 1992 bequest to the museum from William K. Jacobs Jr. But, obviously, no one is going to look at this sale and say, "Why should I give this to you? What guarantee do I have that you're not going to sell this tomorrow?"
The Hirshhorn is selling a Picasso musketeer painting. That too must be a work that is somehow not held in the public trust, to be accessible to present and future generations. Perhaps a musketeer exception. And, again, no one is going to say, Why should I give this to you if there is no guarantee that you're not going to sell it?
Kelly Crow had a similar story in the Wall Street Journal, pointing out that "some of the biggest sellers in the upcoming fall auctions in New York are museums."
The Cleveland Museum of Art is selling a Monet that it received as a gift in 1947. Gee, you'd think that, seeing this, someone considering making a gift to the museum in the future might say, "Why should I give this to you? What guarantee do I have that you're not going to sell this tomorrow?" But I guess that's not a legitimate concern. And future generations in and around Cleveland will have to find other Monets to look at. What do you think this is, a public trust or something?
Finally, the Virginia Museum of Art is selling a Renoir still life that it received as a gift in 1994. Come on, that's almost 20 years. That's almost a full generation. What do you people want? Where did you ever get the idea that museums had some kind of obligation to hold onto works so they can be accessible to present and future generations? Who ever suggested that potential donors will be discouraged from giving without a guarantee that the museum won't sell?
Stop being so touchy. It's no big deal when museums sell work.
"[T]he news is that it has stayed true to its founder’s intentions and is fulfilling its fiduciary responsibility to optimise assets in support of its charitable purpose"
Christine Vincent tells us what the Warhol Foundation's art sale tells us about artists' foundations.
Lost, Then Found
Lots of art law happened while I was busy atoning for my sins this week. For starters, "star bond fund manager" Jeffrey Grundlach had a bunch of art (including works by Johns, Mondrian, and Diebenkorn) stolen from his "posh Santa Monica home" ... and then recovered on Wednesday when police cracked the case and made two arrests. His 2010 Porsche Carrera 4S is still missing.
Friday, September 21, 2012
"The case has attracted attention in part because of e-mails and other documents that have been made public, revealing frank details of how the painting was offered to a collector" (UPDATED)
The NYT's Randy Kennedy reports that Jan Cowles's suit against Gagosian Gallery has survived a motion to dismiss. More later after I've had a chance to read the decision.
UPDATE: Okay, I've had a chance to read the decision. It's a motion to dismiss, so technically all the court decided was that, if you assume everything in the complaint is true, it states a claim for relief. But you are left with the feeling that Judge Ramos is a little alarmed by the picture the complaint presents. He let the fraud claim stand because, even though this is a "sophisticated plaintiff" -- the gallery argued that Cowles's son Charles "is himself an art dealer and had access to the same information and resources concerning the condition of the Work" -- whether his reliance on the gallery was reasonable is nevertheless "fact-intensive." The breach of fiduciary duty claim survived because the gallery "purportedly disclosed to the buyer ... that [Charles] was in 'terrible straights' and invited him to make a 'cruel and offensive offer' in order to ... capitalize on his misfortune, while concealing information that was material to his interests" -- and, if true, that is "conduct that would constitute a breach of fiduciary duty." He even left in the demand for punitive damages, which are only available "where there is a showing of conduct exhibiting a conscious disregard of rights or a high degree of moral turpitude."
Felix Salmon had some thoughts on the case back when it was first filed here.
The Art Market Monitor responded here: "Remember that this is January of 2009. The world is in the depths of the credit crisis. The bubble has burst and the entire financial class is bracing for what might be a near collapse. Credit markets remain frozen and equity markets are approaching a bottom. All asset classes have correlated and are falling sharply. This may be the most important point about the entire saga. The art market’s spectacular recovery is still unforeseeable."
UPDATE: Okay, I've had a chance to read the decision. It's a motion to dismiss, so technically all the court decided was that, if you assume everything in the complaint is true, it states a claim for relief. But you are left with the feeling that Judge Ramos is a little alarmed by the picture the complaint presents. He let the fraud claim stand because, even though this is a "sophisticated plaintiff" -- the gallery argued that Cowles's son Charles "is himself an art dealer and had access to the same information and resources concerning the condition of the Work" -- whether his reliance on the gallery was reasonable is nevertheless "fact-intensive." The breach of fiduciary duty claim survived because the gallery "purportedly disclosed to the buyer ... that [Charles] was in 'terrible straights' and invited him to make a 'cruel and offensive offer' in order to ... capitalize on his misfortune, while concealing information that was material to his interests" -- and, if true, that is "conduct that would constitute a breach of fiduciary duty." He even left in the demand for punitive damages, which are only available "where there is a showing of conduct exhibiting a conscious disregard of rights or a high degree of moral turpitude."
Felix Salmon had some thoughts on the case back when it was first filed here.
The Art Market Monitor responded here: "Remember that this is January of 2009. The world is in the depths of the credit crisis. The bubble has burst and the entire financial class is bracing for what might be a near collapse. Credit markets remain frozen and equity markets are approaching a bottom. All asset classes have correlated and are falling sharply. This may be the most important point about the entire saga. The art market’s spectacular recovery is still unforeseeable."
Copyright Office Seeking Comments on Possible Resale Royalty Law
"This initial notice of inquiry seeks comments from the public on the means by which visual artists exploit their works under existing law as well as the issues and obstacles that may be encountered when considering a federal resale royalty right in the United States."
Some useful context from Rachel Corbett here.
Some useful context from Rachel Corbett here.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Friday, September 14, 2012
Another one bites the dust (UPDATED)
Josh Baer reports that the Keith Haring Foundation is disbanding its authentication committee. This is becoming a trend.
UPDATE: More here from GalleristNY.
UPDATE: More here from GalleristNY.
Thursday, September 13, 2012
"What responsibility ... do institutions have to hold on to donated works and display them?"
The Evansville Museum's newly-discovered Picasso makes it to the pages of the New York Times. Patricia Cohen had a story on the front page of today's Arts section.
Notably absent from the story is the usual outrageous outrage -- Lee Rosenbaum hasn't called for the trustees to be taken away in handcuffs, Ford Bell is not on the scene reminding us that the work is held in the public trust, to be accessible to present and future generations, nobody's warning that, if we allow this sale to happen, future donations will dry up because potential donors will worry that, if the value of the works they donate goes up, museums will get rid of them rather than pay the costs of insurance.
I've been assuming the reason for the silence is that the museum (cleverly) has not said what they plan to do with the proceeds (if they spend it on more art, then the Deaccession Police will be perfectly pleased with the sale; if they spend it on anything else, then you can cue up the outrageous outrage -- how dare they sell off this important part of the public trust?!). But maybe there's an alternative explanation I'm not seeing.
Notably absent from the story is the usual outrageous outrage -- Lee Rosenbaum hasn't called for the trustees to be taken away in handcuffs, Ford Bell is not on the scene reminding us that the work is held in the public trust, to be accessible to present and future generations, nobody's warning that, if we allow this sale to happen, future donations will dry up because potential donors will worry that, if the value of the works they donate goes up, museums will get rid of them rather than pay the costs of insurance.
I've been assuming the reason for the silence is that the museum (cleverly) has not said what they plan to do with the proceeds (if they spend it on more art, then the Deaccession Police will be perfectly pleased with the sale; if they spend it on anything else, then you can cue up the outrageous outrage -- how dare they sell off this important part of the public trust?!). But maybe there's an alternative explanation I'm not seeing.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
If it's not the tax exemptions, what is it?
Speaking of the Warhol Foundation, I thought it was interesting that Juila Halperin's ARTINFO story on last week's big news said that "thousands of works by the Pop icon will hit the market when the artist’s
foundation deaccessions its entire collection through a combination of
sales and donations" (my emphasis).
I don't mean in any way to criticize Julia, who was using it in its ordinary, dictionary sense ("to sell or otherwise dispose of an item in a collection"), but seeing the word "deaccession" there was, I think, instructive. No one would suggest that what the Warhol Foundation is doing is "unethical" or "repulsive" or "Stalinist." Nobody questions the right of artist-endowed foundations to sell work. Nobody claims those works are held in the public trust, to be accessible to present and future generations.
But why? Why are works owned by, say, the Warhol Museum held in the public trust, while works owned by, say, the Warhol Foundation are not? I've mentioned before that Lee Rosenbaum is the one critic of deaccessioning who even attempts to justify the existing rules (the others just cluck their tongues and congratulate each other on how much more ethical and non-repulsive they are than everyone else). She argues that the public "in essence" has paid for the works: "The tax exemptions that are granted to nonprofit institutions and the tax deductions allowed to donors are the way by which the American public subsidizes museums and their acquisitions. The objects are [therefore] held in trust for us by these nonprofit institutions." But that theory can't explain why sales by one kind of nonprofit institution (museums) should be viewed differently than sales by another kind of nonprofit institution (foundations).
This isn't just an academic debate. There are real-world consequences. The Detroit Institute of Art just convinced local residents to pay as much as $400 million in property taxes, "in a city so financially troubled that its leaders announced this year that it was at risk of running out of cash entirely." It did so, in part, by telling voters it could not sell art to raise the money it needed because those works are "held in trust for the benefit of the public."
If those works are in fact held in the public trust, I still haven't heard a good explanation of how they got there.
I don't mean in any way to criticize Julia, who was using it in its ordinary, dictionary sense ("to sell or otherwise dispose of an item in a collection"), but seeing the word "deaccession" there was, I think, instructive. No one would suggest that what the Warhol Foundation is doing is "unethical" or "repulsive" or "Stalinist." Nobody questions the right of artist-endowed foundations to sell work. Nobody claims those works are held in the public trust, to be accessible to present and future generations.
But why? Why are works owned by, say, the Warhol Museum held in the public trust, while works owned by, say, the Warhol Foundation are not? I've mentioned before that Lee Rosenbaum is the one critic of deaccessioning who even attempts to justify the existing rules (the others just cluck their tongues and congratulate each other on how much more ethical and non-repulsive they are than everyone else). She argues that the public "in essence" has paid for the works: "The tax exemptions that are granted to nonprofit institutions and the tax deductions allowed to donors are the way by which the American public subsidizes museums and their acquisitions. The objects are [therefore] held in trust for us by these nonprofit institutions." But that theory can't explain why sales by one kind of nonprofit institution (museums) should be viewed differently than sales by another kind of nonprofit institution (foundations).
This isn't just an academic debate. There are real-world consequences. The Detroit Institute of Art just convinced local residents to pay as much as $400 million in property taxes, "in a city so financially troubled that its leaders announced this year that it was at risk of running out of cash entirely." It did so, in part, by telling voters it could not sell art to raise the money it needed because those works are "held in trust for the benefit of the public."
If those works are in fact held in the public trust, I still haven't heard a good explanation of how they got there.
Bananas (UPDATED)
There was a decision in the Warhol Foundation-Velvet Underground lawsuit, but the press reports aren't getting it quite right. Here's Rolling Stone, for example, with the headline "Velvet Underground Lose Andy Warhol Copyright Claim," and the following lead: "The Velvet Underground do not have a valid copyright claim on the Andy Warhol artwork on the cover of the band's 1967 debut, a federal judge ruled ...." And in their morning round-up of links, GalleristNY said: "Judge says the Andy Warhol Foundation does not own rights to banana image, in Velvet Underground suit."
That's actually not what happened. What happened was the band brought several trademark claims, but also brought a claim seeking a declaration that the Foundation had no copyright in the banana image. After the action was brought, the Foundation gave the band a covenant not to sue for copyright infringement, "unconditionally and irrevocably" agreeing never to sue them over the banana image. The court ruled that this "eliminated any justiciable controversy between the parties over copyright" in the image, and so dismissed the claim for declaratory judgment. The Velvet Underground wasn't claiming any copyright on the image, nor did the court rule that the Foundation "does not own rights" to the image.
UPDATE: More from Nicholas O'Donnell: "Reporting of the decision has been spotty at best, however, ranging from declaring a 'win' for the Velvet Underground, to suggestions that the copyright question was decided. In fact, the Court did not reach the copyright issue, and the Velvet Underground still has other trademark-based claims that remain very much alive and unaffected by the decision."
That's actually not what happened. What happened was the band brought several trademark claims, but also brought a claim seeking a declaration that the Foundation had no copyright in the banana image. After the action was brought, the Foundation gave the band a covenant not to sue for copyright infringement, "unconditionally and irrevocably" agreeing never to sue them over the banana image. The court ruled that this "eliminated any justiciable controversy between the parties over copyright" in the image, and so dismissed the claim for declaratory judgment. The Velvet Underground wasn't claiming any copyright on the image, nor did the court rule that the Foundation "does not own rights" to the image.
UPDATE: More from Nicholas O'Donnell: "Reporting of the decision has been spotty at best, however, ranging from declaring a 'win' for the Velvet Underground, to suggestions that the copyright question was decided. In fact, the Court did not reach the copyright issue, and the Velvet Underground still has other trademark-based claims that remain very much alive and unaffected by the decision."
Friday, September 07, 2012
Thursday, September 06, 2012
"The sales will take several years to complete and are expected to garner about $100 million."
In today's New York Times, Robin Pogrebin reports that the Warhol Foundation will "disperse its entire collection," through a combination of donations and sales, and "shift[] almost exclusively into a grant-making organization."
Wednesday, September 05, 2012
Tuesday, September 04, 2012
"Just what will the Evansville museum do with its windfall?"
"There are no plans."
We still don't know whether the museum's sale of a Picasso is repulsive or to be encouraged.
We still don't know whether the museum's sale of a Picasso is repulsive or to be encouraged.
Online Art Sales
Monitoring the New York Times, the Art Market Monitor picks out some interesting data points from Patricia Cohen's front-page story yesterday on the growth in the online art market:
- One recent study estimated that 91 percent of the Henry Moore drawings and small sculptures sold online were fake.
- The Giacometti Foundation spent more than 40 percent of its 2011 operating budget on tracking fakes.
Friday, August 31, 2012
"It’s unclear to me what, exactly, is being licensed."
Mike Madison on a deal between the Warhol Foundation and Campbell's Soup.
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Artelligence 3
Another terrific-sounding conference from The Art Market Monitor. September 13. Register here.
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Handicapping Prince-Cariou
Rachel Corbett talks to Columbia's Pippa Loengard about the possibilities.
"Does this represent a new line in the sand … a raising of the bar for all of us in the arts?"
Diane Ragsdale has some questions about the Detroit Institute's recent millage campaign.
Related post from Nina Simon.
Related post from Nina Simon.
"I looked upon my activities as a contest of wits with world experts, and I enjoyed every moment of it."
NPR has a story on forger Ken Perenyi. Derek Fincham says Perenyi "does not exactly seem to have reformed."
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
"40 Kinkade paintings are gone, and local art dealers are on alert for limited edition prints."
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
What do they call it again when you do the same thing over and over and expect a different result?
I see the Friends of the Barnes have posted the latest petition to re-open the lawsuit based on the "shocking" new evidence that the Barnes was not bankrupt at the time of their initial petition. They've also posted the Barnes's response, seeking a fresh round of sanctions (which I'd bet they'll get).
Beyond the obvious issue of standing, the Barnes's response points out that the shocking new evidence "is not new": "No witness at the hearing ever claimed that the Foundation filed its petition because it was bankrupt; indeed, the testimony made clear that the Foundation was desperately seeking to reverse its financial distress so that it could avoid bankruptcy." They quote extensively from the Jan. 2004 interim opinion which I summarized recently here, and note that, after surveying the evidence, Judge Ott concluded: "What has been established beyond peradventure is that The Foundation's finances have reached a critical point."
Beyond the obvious issue of standing, the Barnes's response points out that the shocking new evidence "is not new": "No witness at the hearing ever claimed that the Foundation filed its petition because it was bankrupt; indeed, the testimony made clear that the Foundation was desperately seeking to reverse its financial distress so that it could avoid bankruptcy." They quote extensively from the Jan. 2004 interim opinion which I summarized recently here, and note that, after surveying the evidence, Judge Ott concluded: "What has been established beyond peradventure is that The Foundation's finances have reached a critical point."
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)