Smithsonian to create new education center with $8M gift

Doorway to the 1885 Smithsonian Institution Building (The Castle), which originally housed all of the Institution's collections and remains its symbol. Photo by David Bjorgen, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
Doorway to the 1885 Smithsonian Institution Building (The Castle), which originally housed all of the Institution's collections and remains its symbol. Photo by David Bjorgen, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
Doorway to the 1885 Smithsonian Institution Building (The Castle), which originally housed all of the Institution’s collections and remains its symbol. Photo by David Bjorgen, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

WASHINGTON (AP) – The Smithsonian American Art Museum has received an $8 million gift to create an education center and says it will expand its reach to more U.S. classrooms.

The museum said Wednesday that it will create the 2,300-square-foot facility to host tour discussions, video conferences, workshops for teachers and graduate seminars. It is scheduled for completion in spring 2012.

The museum did not immediately disclose who gave the $8 million gift.

Museum director Elizabeth Broun says the center will use artworks to teach about the American experience. Part of the gift will fund an endowment to create new U.S. history and civics resources for teachers and students based on the museum’s best pieces.

Many of the museum’s education programs have focused on schools in D.C., Maryland and Virginia.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Doorway to the 1885 Smithsonian Institution Building (The Castle), which originally housed all of the Institution's collections and remains its symbol. Photo by David Bjorgen, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
Doorway to the 1885 Smithsonian Institution Building (The Castle), which originally housed all of the Institution’s collections and remains its symbol. Photo by David Bjorgen, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Children’s Museum of Virginia to reopen in May

View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children's Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children's Museum of Virginia.
View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children's Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children's Museum of Virginia.
View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children’s Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children’s Museum of Virginia.

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP) – The Children’s Museum of Virginia is preparing to reopen after being closed for more than a year for an expansion project.

The Virginian-Pilot reports that the Portsmouth museum is scheduled to reopen May 26. The museum has been closed since September 2009.

According to the museum’s website, the expansion will add nearly 12,000 square feet. The first floor is geared to children up to 6 years old. The second floor has three themes: science, the environment and art.

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Online:

Children’s Museum of Virginia: www.childrensmuseumva.com.

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Information from: The Virginian-Pilot, http://pilotonline.com

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-03-30-11 1600GMT

 


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children's Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children's Museum of Virginia.
View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children’s Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children’s Museum of Virginia.
View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children's Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children's Museum of Virginia.
View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children’s Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children’s Museum of Virginia.
View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children's Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children's Museum of Virginia.
View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children’s Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children’s Museum of Virginia.
View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children's Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children's Museum of Virginia.
View of current construction to renovate and expand the Children’s Museum of Virginia in Portsmouth. Image used with permission of Children’s Museum of Virginia.

Stolen Drtikol photograph found in US

PRAGUE (AP) – Police say a print by famed Czech photographer Frantisek Drtikol stolen from a Prague museum was found in California.

The print of Drtikol’s 1925 female nude “The Wave” disappeared March 13 from the Museum of Decorative Arts in the Czech capital.

Police spokeswoman Eva Kropacova says it was offered to be auctioned at a gallery in California. Kropacova says the gallery owner Joseph Bellow contacted the London-based Art Loss Register, which informed police investigators.

The print, which was insured for 1,25 million koruna ($71,500) was transported from London to Prague Wednesday.

Police declined to give any detail about a suspect who remains at large.

Prague museum has 10 prints of the photograph, including the one Drtikol marked “the final.”

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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British arts groups feel the sting of funding cuts

LONDON (AP) – Hundreds of British arts organizations had their public funding slashed or eliminated Wednesday, the result of government spending cuts aimed at tackling the country’s deficit.

The Arts Council England must cut 15 percent from the amount it gives to art, music, theater, dance, literature and other groups by 2015 – which still leaves it with almost 1 billion pounds ($1.6 billion) to hand out.

The council said that instead of “salami slicing” – cutting 15 percent from everyone – it wanted to create a smaller but stronger portfolio of groups. So some have been cut off entirely, while others have seen their funding increase.

“We have taken the brave path of strategic choices, not salami slices, which has meant some painful decisions,” said council chair Liz Forgan.

The council had funded about 850 groups but that has shrunk to 695 – chosen from 1,330 applicants. More than 200 groups will now have their funding cut entirely from next year, while many others face reductions.

Several major institutions, including the National Theatre, the Royal Opera and English National Ballet, have received cuts of about 15 percent to their annual funding.

But some companies are seeing increases – from innovative stage company Punchdrunk to the British Federation of Brass Bands – and 110 organizations are being funded for the first time.

For a decade before the financial crisis began in 2007, Britain spent hundreds of millions of pounds building, renovating and expanding museums, galleries and theaters. Some fear that artistic golden age is now under threat.

Ivan Lewis, culture spokesman for the opposition Labour Party, said the cuts would have a “chilling impact” and mean higher ticket prices.

“I fear a return to the 80s and 90s when the arts were for the few, not the many,” he said.

The government was unsympathetic, saying that in tough times, everyone needed to share the pain. Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt said the Arts Council was “in a much better position than many other parts of the public sector.”

The government plans to cut 80 billion pounds ($128 billion) from public expenditure over the next four years. Hunt said the government would take steps to encourage private arts philanthropy, and had increased the amount arts groups get from national lottery profits.

The council has been told to cut its overall budget by almost 30 percent by 2015, and says it will reduce administrative costs by half to meet the target.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-03-30-11 0916GMT

 

Getty Museum to return Dutch painting looted by Nazis

Pieter Molijn (Dutch, 1625-1650), Landscape with Cottage and Figures.
Pieter Molijn (Dutch, 1625-1650), Landscape with Cottage and Figures.
Pieter Molijn (Dutch, 1625-1650), Landscape with Cottage and Figures.

LOS ANGELES (AP) – The J. Paul Getty Museum has agreed to return a 370-year-old painting that once belonged to an art dealer who fled Holland when the Nazis invaded in 1940.

Jacques Goudstikker was the Netherlands’ biggest art dealer in the 1930s. He was fleeing the Nazis with his wife and young son at the beginning of World War II when he fell through a trap door on an outbound ship and died.

His collection was looted, with some works claimed by Adolf Hitler chief deputy Hermann Goering.

Goudstikker’s daughter-in-law, Marei von Saher, has spent years trying to track down the works. Her successes have been on tour around the country in an exhibition that ends Tuesday in San Francisco and featured 45 recovered pieces from the collection.

The Getty bought the 1640 Pieter Molijn painting titled Landscape With Cottage and Figures in good faith at a 1972 auction, the museum said, according to the Los Angeles Times. The museum did not disclose the purchase price and has never displayed the painting.

“Working in cooperation with representatives of the Goudstikker heirs, the Getty’s research revealed that the painting was in Goudstikker’s inventory at the time of the invasion in 1940, and that it was never restituted after World War II,” according to a written statement from the museum. “Based on its findings, the Getty concluded that the painting should be transferred to the heirs.”

At least four other museums in the United States and Canada have works from the collection, and family attorney Lawrence Kaye said he hopes they will follow Getty’s lead. About 1,000 of Goudstikker’s 1,400 paintings remain unaccounted for, he said.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-03-29-11 2202GMT

 


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Pieter Molijn (Dutch, 1625-1650), Landscape with Cottage and Figures.
Pieter Molijn (Dutch, 1625-1650), Landscape with Cottage and Figures.