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1997-02-17
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<RCZARTS_HEADER>
<BLOCKQUOTE>
<A name="1">
<CENTER>
<FONT SIZE=+2 COLOR="#000000"><B><I>Arts Reach</I></B></FONT>
</CENTER>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=4 COLOR="003366">
CHRISTO PLOTS GRANDE LID FOR RIO OF THAT NAME
</FONT>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=3>
NEW MEXICO -- Christo and his wife Jeanne -- Claude have announced plans
to install the biggest picnic ramada in the world over the Rio Grande
south of Pilar, N.M. The plan calls for suspending fabric panels from
steel wire cables above the churning waters for about five miles. The
panels will be interrupted only by bridges, trees and rocks big
enough to be in the way. Not in my back yard, some are already
saying. The Santa Fe New Mexican fears the project will send "squadrons
of Mexican owls scurrying back across the border" despite Christo's
perennial promises to be sensitive to the environment. Plans call for
the giant lid to remain over the river and through the woods for 14
days once installed.
</FONT>
<P>
<CENTER>
<FONT SIZE=+2 COLOR="#000000"><B><I>Arts Reach</I></B></FONT>
</CENTER>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=4 COLOR="003366">
'FLAG BALL' UNRAVELED BY VANDAL
</FONT>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=3>
LONG ISLAND, N.Y. -- Art using the American flag remains a controversial
proposition. The most recent demonstration of this occurred when an
unknown vandal slashed to bits Donald Lipski's 8╨foot╨high outdoor
sculpture, Flag Ball, a sphere of dacron batting surrounded by nylon
printed like the American flag. The work was already raising tempers
before the slashing that left about half of the exterior in shreds on
the ground. Republican Congressman Peter King (N.Y.) had asked the
president of the University of Long Island, where the piece was
installed, to remove the "appalling and senseless act of flag
desecration." The request was denied, and King participated in a
protest at the campus with veterans. Snow covered the piece until
recently, revealing the damage. Lipski wants the work to be seen
as scheduled in an exhibition at the Whitney Museum's Phillip Morris
branch. As a "visual representation of intolerance" the piece is
more powerful than ever, he says. People for the American Way,
which is helping Lipski research his legal options, notes the
number of cases of harassment against the arts has increased by
about 30 percent in each of the four years it has tracked such
cases across the U.S.
</FONT>
<P>
<A name="3">
<CENTER>
<FONT SIZE=+2 COLOR="#000000"><B><I>Arts Reach</I></B></FONT>
</CENTER>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=4 COLOR="003366">
LANDMARK VICTORY FOR VAN GOGH SELLER
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<BR>
<FONT SIZE=3>
PARIS -- The one-time owner of Vincent van Gogh's Jardin a Auvers has
won a monumental appeal from the French court awarding him $29 million
as compensation for the government's decision to refuse an export license
to him when the painting was auctioned. Jacques Walters (whose father
Jean donated his entire collection to the Orangerie Museum) fought
since 1982 to punish the government for denying him the license, an
action he termed "abusive." Walters argued that the painting is not
by a French artist and therefore not a legitimate national monument.
Too, Walters noted that he himself is Swiss and brought the painting
into France from outside. In December 1992, the painting was
auctioned for $10.2 million. American and Japanese bidders were excluded
from the sale. Experts estimated at the time that the painting might
have sold for $60 million. French museum officials are concerned that
the ruling will set a major precedent, making it more expensive for
museums to acquire major pieces.
</FONT>
<P>
<A name="2">
<CENTER>
<FONT SIZE=+2 COLOR="#dd6600"><B><I>ArtDirect</I></B></FONT>
</CENTER>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=4 COLOR="003366">
JAPANESE MUSEUM PAYS RECORD PRICE FOR MAGRITTE
</FONT>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=3>
TOKYO -- A Belgian collector whose family has owned Rene Magritte's La
grande famille since early in the artist's career has agreed to
sell the work for $5.9 million to the city of Utsunomiya for a new
museum scheduled to open in March 1997. The surrealist work is
considered one of the most important paintings by Magritte
remaining in private hands. The sale smashes Magritte's record
price at auction of $2,028,000, set at Christie's in 1989. The
price reflects Magritte's popularity in Japan: La grande famille, in
particular, is featured in many art textbooks used in Japanese schools,
and Magritte shows have consistently done well in Japan.
</FONT>
<P>
<CENTER>
<FONT SIZE=+2 COLOR="#dd6600"><B><I>ArtDirect</I></B></FONT>
</CENTER>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=4 COLOR="003366">
SOTHEBY'S SETTLES OVER DISPUTED CASSATT WORK
</FONT>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=3>
NEW YORK -- Prominent collector William C. Foxley of Foxley Cattle Co.,
and Sotheby's have reached a settlement regarding Foxley's claim of
fraud over his purchase of Mary Cassatt's Lydia Reclining on a Divan.
He bought the painting at Sotheby's for $632,000 in 1987. There were
questions at the time, but the '87 sale catalogue included an essay
crediting the painting to Cassatt. However, when Foxley consigned a
large chunk of his collection to Sotheby's for a sale in 1993, Peter
Rathbone, director of American paintings, asked to have the painting
withdrawn to clear up questions about it. Foxley said he would have
sued then if Sotheby's hadn't promised to refund his money if the
painting turned out to be fake. Ultimately, the Cassatt Foundation
excluded the painting from its catalogue raisonne, but not until the
five year standard time limit for claiming refunds had passed. The
U.S. District Court in Manhattan found that the delays were beyond
Foxley's control, preventing him from meeting the time limit imposed
by the agreement of the sale. A court battle of experts ensued until
the recent settlement. The deal was described as amicable by Sotheby's
and Foxley, but neither side would disclose details.
</FONT>
<P>
<A name="3">
<CENTER>
<FONT SIZE=+2 COLOR="#ff0000"><B><I>Stare</I></B></FONT>
<BR>
<I>Stare. It is the way to educate your eye. Stare, pry, listen,
eavesdrop. Die knowing something. You are not here long.</I>
</CENTER>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=4 COLOR="003366">
IN PASSING
</FONT>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=3>
Early in 1995 the artist Danny Martinez came to Newcastle upon Tyne,
where he did a bit of street performance art, <em>How to Con a
Capitalist</em>. He also gave a talk at the local university, where
he told of how tough life was in his native Los Angeles: "People come
up to you when your car's stopped at a traffic light, stick a gun in
your face, and blam! You're dead!"
<p>
He also showed a lot of work, such as the series of five buttons
("I can't," "imagine," "ever wanting," "to be," "white") that were among
the most memorable pieces of the 1993 Whitney biennale. His work attacking
the rich (<em>"In a rich man's house, the only place to spit is in
his face"</em>) and the powerful has lead to a curious symbiotic
relationship. The leaders of the rich and powerful art establishment
keep inviting him to participate in their events, thus demonstrating
that they're not only rich and powerful, but hip to boot. Still, he
tirelessly goes to what he describes as "awful" events like the
Whitney and Venice biennales to take advantage of the upper classes.
<p>
His message went over well in class-conscious northern England, and
not just among the students and art cognoscenti. While Martinez was
videotaping in the town market, some of the local lads apparently
mistook the working-class artist from the Los Angeles barrios for a
rich American tourist. In an act that could have come from one of his
street theatre, the locals robbed the rich visitor of his very
expensive video camera.
<p>
It was, by any definition, a class act.
</FONT>
<P>
<CENTER>
<FONT SIZE=+2 COLOR="#ff0000"><B><I>Stare</I></B></FONT>
</CENTER>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=4 COLOR="003366">
ARTIST ENVY
</FONT>
<BR>
<FONT SIZE=3>
I'm sure that Anya Hulbert, the organizer of a day on <i>The Art and Science
of Vision</i> at the British Association's 1995 Annual Festival of
Science never intended to mislead anyone. In practice, though, the
real theme of the day seemed to be "Artist Envy."
<p>
Here's an example. Professor Richard Gregory from the University of
Bristol began the day by asking The Question: "Does it demote art to
attribute optical effects [such as those produced from Bridget Riley's
work] to science rather than more lofty sources? I'm not going to try
to answer."
<p>
He wouldn't but I will: Yes, absolutely.
<p>
Now let's put on our lab coats and examine that anecdote. I am an
artist with only a minimal understanding of science in general and the
scientific method in particular. Nevertheless I can give a definitive
answer to a complex question without giving any proof, citing any
precedents, et cetera. Just as something is art because I say it's
art, an aesthetic truth is an aesthetic truth because I say so.
<p>
You might say I'm wrong. You might be right. But that doesn't matter,
because art is about ideas and opinions, not provable facts. And
thus is it any wonder men and women who spend their entire lives
attempting to prove things are jealous of artists? Tom Stoppard said
it best: "What is an artist? For every thousand people there's nine
hundred doing the work, ninety doing well, nine doing good, and one
lucky bastard who's the artist."
<p>
Artist envy was repeated frequently by other speakers. Patrick Cavanagh
from Harvard interrupted his facinating presentation on <i>The Art of
Perceiving Contour</i> with the observation that "These are things
all artists know, but that we scientists have to work out." And artist
sitting next to me appeared bored during a presentation by Doctor
Andrew Parker from Oxford University. My friend responded to Dr.
Parson's diagrams that a subject is illuminated by indirect as well as
direct light by jotting "Reflected light illuminates shadows! What
a concept!" (In fairness, it should be noted that Dr. Parson went on
to cite the example of 19th century photographer Fox Talbot's use of
reflectors as a precedent.)
<p>
Although the scientists seemed jealous of artists' license to
say "It is thus because I say it is thus," the reverse was not true.
Professor Heinrich Buumthoff from the Max-Planck-Institute for
Biological Cybernetics in Tübingen, Germany gave an interesting
talk about <i>Recognition and Navigation in Virtual Realities</i>. To
examine how humans perceive three-dimensional space, graduate students
were asked to identify shapes on a computer monitor. The same experiment
was repeated on monkeys, who reportedly were more perceptive than the
humans. Professor Bülthoff introduced yet another spiffy
three-dimensional graph by mentioning almost in passing that his
colleagues at Baylor University then "did something they couldn't do
with graduate students; they attached electrodes directly to the
monkeys' brains."
<p>
This apparent "fact" left many of the artists confused. Why <i>can</i>
scientists attach electrodes to monkeys and not graduate students? Did
the coauthor of some of the research, Shimon Edelman from the Weizmann
Institute in Israel feel as comfortable with performing science
experiments on living sentient beings? And anyway, hadn't vivisection
been widely discredited as a tool of psychological inquiry?
<p>
Artist envy aside, there are times when it's intellectually easier to
be a scientist. That's true because I'm an artist and I said so.
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