Georg Jensen silver expert to speak at Stephenson’s, Dec. 27

Janet Drucker, author of Georg Jensen: A Tradition of Splendid Silver (Schiffer Books), will speak on the subject of Georg Jensen and the Acorn pattern in a PowerPoint presentation slated for Tuesday, Dec. 27, at Stephenson's Auctioneers. Image courtesy of Janet Drucker and Schiffer Books.
Janet Drucker, author of Georg Jensen: A Tradition of Splendid Silver (Schiffer Books), will speak on the subject of Georg Jensen and the Acorn pattern in a PowerPoint presentation slated for Tuesday, Dec. 27, at Stephenson's Auctioneers. Image courtesy of Janet Drucker and Schiffer Books.
Janet Drucker, author of Georg Jensen: A Tradition of Splendid Silver (Schiffer Books), will speak on the subject of Georg Jensen and the Acorn pattern in a PowerPoint presentation slated for Tuesday, Dec. 27, at Stephenson’s Auctioneers. Image courtesy of Janet Drucker and Schiffer Books.

SOUTHAMPTON, Pa. – On Tuesday, Dec. 27, commencing at 5 p.m., Stephenson’s Auctioneers in the Philadelphia suburb of Southampton will host an open house preview and lecture by Janet Drucker, America’s foremost authority on the subject of Georg Jensen silver. Drucker authored the book Georg Jensen: A Tradition of Splendid Silver.

Drucker’s PowerPoint presentation will focus on Jensen flatware and the classic Acorn pattern.

“We felt this would be of great interest to both dealers and collectors, especially since there will be an extensive Jensen silver service in the Acorn pattern on view at the gallery,” said Stephenson’s owner, Cindy Stephenson. The service is one of the highlights of Stephenson’s New Year’s Day auction.

“The service contains more than 200 pieces, including rare serving pieces and accessories. I have never before seen a Jensen flatware service this extensive,” Stephenson said.

For additional information, call Stephenson’s Auctioneers at 215-322-6182 or visit www.stephensonsauctioneers.com.

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ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Janet Drucker, author of Georg Jensen: A Tradition of Splendid Silver (Schiffer Books), will speak on the subject of Georg Jensen and the Acorn pattern in a PowerPoint presentation slated for Tuesday, Dec. 27, at Stephenson's Auctioneers. Image courtesy of Janet Drucker and Schiffer Books.
Janet Drucker, author of Georg Jensen: A Tradition of Splendid Silver (Schiffer Books), will speak on the subject of Georg Jensen and the Acorn pattern in a PowerPoint presentation slated for Tuesday, Dec. 27, at Stephenson’s Auctioneers. Image courtesy of Janet Drucker and Schiffer Books.

London Eye: December 2011

LONDON – Ever since Velasquez’s compelling portrait of his Moorish servant and studio assistant Juan de Pareja set a new benchmark for post-war prices at Christie’s in 1970, when it sold for £2.3 million, (the equivalent of around £27 million in today’s money), the name Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velasquez has enjoyed a particular resonance in trade circles. Whenever polls are taken, the Spanish master is said to be consistently cited as the greatest painter by museum curators, dealers, critics and art historians.

Thus it was not surprising that all eyes were on Bonhams’ Bond Street salerooms on Dec, 7 when a portrait of an unidentified gentleman came under the hammer with a firm attribution to Velasquez.

The painting arrived at Bonhams’ Oxford saleroom in August 2010 among a consignment of works from the studio of the little-known 19th century British artist, Matthew Shepperson. Its quality was quickly recognised, however, and Bonhams’ London experts were alerted. A combination of connoisseurial pondering, art historical research and technical analysis were finally sufficient to arrive at a firm attribution to Velasquez and it came under the hammer with an estimate of £2 million to £3 million.

A good deal was riding on the outcome. Would the market offer an economic endorsement of the picture’s authenticity, or would it be treated with indifference? In the event Portrait of a Gentleman reached its estimate, selling for £2,953,250 ($4.5 million) including the buyer’s premium. This might be deemed a satisfactory outcome given that its subject is still to be identified, but it may yet turn out to be a bargain if it is indeed an autograph work by Velasquez and its sitter can be identified. Might it reappear at the TEFAF fair in Maastricht in March with a different price tag?

Bonhams have had an excellent final quarter across a number of departments. Not only did they enjoy the top price of London’s annual capital-wide Asian art event when £9,001,250 ($13.9 million) was offered on Nov. 10 for a Qianlong mark and period famille rose turquoise ground vase (which we reported in our last London Eye in November); they also secured the top price of the recent London sales of Russian art when a biblical subject by the Russian painter Vasilii Polenov (1844-1927) — He That is Without Sin, dated 1908

—realized £4,073,250 ($6.3 million) on Nov. 30, more than double the upper estimate and a world record for the artist at auction. Neither Sotheby’s nor Christie’s could get even close to that figure at their equivalent offerings of Russian art.

Away from the salerooms, there are a number of interesting exhibitions on the immediate horizon.

Even the most casual glance at the self-portrait by the peripatetic British painter George Chinnery (1774-1852)

This work by George Chinnery (1774-1852), 'Self-portrait of the artist at his easel,' oil on canvas, is included in the current George Chinnery exhibition at Asia House, London until Jan. 21. National Portrait Gallery, London. Image courtesy Asia House and National Portrait Gallery.
This work by George Chinnery (1774-1852), ‘Self-portrait of the artist at his easel,’ oil on canvas, is included in the current George Chinnery exhibition at Asia House, London until Jan. 21. National Portrait Gallery, London. Image courtesy Asia House and National Portrait Gallery.

will be enough to alert one to the idiosyncratic personality of the artist who is now the subject of a long-overdue exhibition on view at Asia House in London until Jan. 21. The pouting insouciance of the sitter gives little clue to the hard times he was to encounter when his luck eventually ran out while plying his trade around India and the China coast during the last 50 years of his life.

A student contemporary of Turner at the Royal Academy Schools, Chinnery’s curiosity about the exotic Orient took him to Calcutta, Canton, Macau—and all points in between it would seem. Unlike many British artists infected with wanderlust at that time, Chinnery did not return home but stayed in Asia, consolidating his status as a well-traveled India-hand, executing portraits for wealthy European travelers and indigenous merchants.

'Tom Raw sits for his portrait,' aquatint after Sir Charles D’Oyly, (private collection) included in the current George Chinnery exhibition at Asia House, London until Jan. 21. Image courtesy Asia House, London.
‘Tom Raw sits for his portrait,’ aquatint after Sir Charles D’Oyly, (private collection) included in the current George Chinnery exhibition at Asia House, London until Jan. 21. Image courtesy Asia House, London.
 George Chinnery (1774-1852), 'Portrait of the Hong merchant Mowqua.' Oil on canvas. The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited. Image courtesy Asia House, London.
George Chinnery (1774-1852), ‘Portrait of the Hong merchant Mowqua.’ Oil on canvas. The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited. Image courtesy Asia House, London.

Eventually, however, the outgoings of his lavish lifestyle exceeded his income, forcing him to flee his creditors by dissolving into the ex-patriate community in Macau, Hong Kong and elsewhere. He died and was buried on the China coast.

The Asia House exhibition, titled “The Flamboyant Mr Chinnery (1774-1852): An English Artist in India and China,” sponsored by HSBC Bank, is the first devoted to Chinnery’s work since the Arts Council show of 1957.

Today, Palermo is arguably more familiar to most people not only as the capital of Sicily but as the birthplace of the Mafia. Happily this sinister aspect of Palermo’s past is now being overshadowed by more positive historical discoveries. Dulwich Picture Gallery in South East London — Britain’s oldest public gallery — has succeeded in reassembling a group of 16 paintings by the great Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641), all of which were executed during the artist’s size-month visit to Palermo between 1624 and 1625.

The most significant pictures painted during that brief sojourn include images of the city’s patron saint, Rosalia, a Sicilian hermit of the Middle Ages. Shortly after van Dyck’s arrival, Palermo was gripped by a plague which decimated the population. At around the same time, Rosalia’s bones were discovered in a cave on Mount Pellegrino and soon after were carried in a procession through the city, at which point the pestilence is said to have miraculously ceased. Rosalia was promptly proclaimed Palermo’s patron saint.

The Dulwich exhibition, curated by Dr. Xavier Salomon from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, briefly reunites the van Dyck canvases that are now dispersed in museums around the world. It includes typical van Dyck portraits of illustrious patrons such as Emanuele Filiberto, the Viceroy of Savoy,

Sir Anthony van Dyck, 'Emanuele Filiberto of Savoy, Prince of Oneglia,' 1624, oil on canvas. © By permission of the Trustees of Dulwich Picture Gallery.
Sir Anthony van Dyck, ‘Emanuele Filiberto of Savoy, Prince of Oneglia,’ 1624, oil on canvas. © By permission of the Trustees of Dulwich Picture Gallery.

as well as a Saint John the Baptist in the Wilderness

Sir Anthony van Dyck, 'Saint John the Baptist in the Wilderness,' circa 1624-5, oil on canvas. Houston Baptist University, Permanent Collection and gift from the Morris Collection Houston Texas, © Houston Baptist University.
Sir Anthony van Dyck, ‘Saint John the Baptist in the Wilderness,’ circa 1624-5, oil on canvas. Houston Baptist University, Permanent Collection and gift from the Morris Collection Houston Texas, © Houston Baptist University.

and a striking airborne image of St. Rosalia interceding on behalf of the plague-stricken citizens of Palermo.

Sir Anthony van Dyck, 'St. Rosalia interceding for the Plague-stricken of Palermo,' 1624. Oil on canvas. New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/Scala, Florence.
Sir Anthony van Dyck, ‘St. Rosalia interceding for the Plague-stricken of Palermo,’ 1624. Oil on canvas. New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/Scala, Florence.

The exhibition offers further confirmation, if any were needed, of the Dulwich Picture Gallery’s renowned facility at stimulating interest in hitherto neglected aspects of Old Master painting.

Few of Van Dyck’s Italian contemporaries could have foreseen the extraordinary direction Italian art would take in the 350 years after his visit to Sicily in the 1620s. Had van Dyck been invited to paint the procession of Saint Rosalia’s bones, it is a fair bet it would have born no resemblance to the Procession of the Dead Christ painted in 1946 by the Italian artist Alberto Burri (1915-1995). Burri’s thickly impastoed expressionist composition

Alberto Burri, 'Procession of the Dead Christ,' 1946. Oil on canvas. Private collection. Image copyright Fondazione Palazzo Albizzini, Collezione Burri, Città di Castello, 2012. Image courtesy Estorick Collection, London.
Alberto Burri, ‘Procession of the Dead Christ,’ 1946. Oil on canvas. Private collection. Image copyright Fondazione Palazzo Albizzini, Collezione Burri, Città di Castello, 2012. Image courtesy Estorick Collection, London.

is to be included in a new exhibition of the artist’s works at the Estorick Collection in Islington, north London from Jan. 13 and continuing until April 8.

Burri is generally associated with the Arte Povera movement in postwar Italian art, which celebrated the use of impoverished materials. This exhibition illustrates Burri’s influential contribution to the contemporary art of the 1960s and includes a number of works that reveal how even the humblest materials were lent surprising elegance in the hands of Burri and his contemporaries.

Alberto Burri, Iron, 1960. Iron on wood stretcher. Private collection. Image copyright Fondazione Palazzo Albizzini, Collezione Burri, Città di Castello, 2012. Image courtesy Estorick Collection, London.
Alberto Burri, Iron, 1960. Iron on wood stretcher. Private collection. Image copyright Fondazione Palazzo Albizzini, Collezione Burri, Città di Castello, 2012. Image courtesy Estorick Collection, London.
Alberto Burri, 'Sacking with Red,' 1950. Acrylic and hessian collage on canvas. Tate, London. Image copyright Fondazione Palazzo Albizzini, Collezione Burri, Città di Castello, 2012. Image courtesy Estorick Collection, London.
Alberto Burri, ‘Sacking with Red,’ 1950. Acrylic and hessian collage on canvas. Tate, London. Image copyright Fondazione Palazzo Albizzini, Collezione Burri, Città di Castello, 2012. Image courtesy Estorick Collection, London.

Finally, a brief foray into the distant wilds of the British provinces — or Ilkley in West Yorkshire to be precise. The Ilkley auctioneers, Hartleys, are among a number of north of England firms who occasionally turn up the unmistakably naive paintings by the Liverpool-born artist Brian Shields, or “Braaq” as he was nicknamed at school (a misspelling of George Braque, the Cubist painter whom he admired). Shields was also known as “The Lowry of Liverpool” on account of the L.S.Lowry-like stick figures that populate his industrial townscapes, and it was a typical example of this genre that turned up at Hartleys’ sale on Dec. 7.

Painted in oils on board and titled Industrial Landscape at Twilight with Figures on a Frozen Lake (Fig. 12), it was knocked down to a private buyer in the room for a hammer price of £14,000 ($21,700), thereby demonstrating that paintings by the man described in The Times in 1977 as “one of the six most successful painters in England” continue, 35 years later, to enjoy a healthy commercial profile at auction.

Unpublished Charlotte Bronte manuscript tops $1M

LONDON (AFP) – An unpublished manuscript by a 14-year-old Charlotte Bronte, who went on to write Jane Eyre, sold at auction in London on Thursday for a record £690,850 ($1,069,000, 822,900 euros).

Sotheby’s auction house said the sale, at more than double the estimated price, was the highest ever price at auction for any literary work by Charlotte Bronte or her two famous sisters, Emily and Anne.

The miniature manuscript, titled Young Men’s Magazine, Number 2 and dated August 1830 was bought by the Museum of Letters and Manuscripts in Paris and will be exhibited in January.

The manuscript consists of 19 pages measuring just 35mm by 61mm (approximately 1 1/2 by 2 1/2 inches) as well as the original folder and case.

It contains characters who inhabited the imaginary world called Glass Town that Bronte and her siblings created when they were growing up.

It includes a passage very similar to a scene in Jane Eyre, the novel Bronte wrote 17 years later, in which the insane wife of the eponymous heroine’s love interest, Mr. Rochester, sets fire to his bed curtains.

Sotheby’s director Philip Errington said: “Sotheby’s was honored to sell a manuscript of such rarity and huge literary significance, and the record price set today reflects the international interest in Charlotte Bronte’s work.

“This tiny manuscript represents her first burst of creativity and provides a rare and intimate insight into one of history’s great literary minds.”

The manuscript was sold by a private owner.

 

 

100th anniversary of Amundsen’s South Pole feat observed

A page from Roald Amundsen's account of reaching the South Pole in December 1911. The two-volume American edition was published in 1913. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and PBA Galleries.
A page from Roald Amundsen's account of reaching the South Pole in December 1911. The two-volume American edition was published in 1913. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and PBA Galleries.
A page from Roald Amundsen’s account of reaching the South Pole in December 1911. The two-volume American edition was published in 1913. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and PBA Galleries.

OSLO, Norway (AP) – Polar adventurers, scientists and the prime minister of Norway gathered at the bottom of the world Wednesday to mark the 100th anniversary of explorer Roald Amundsen becoming the first to reach the South Pole.

Under a crystal blue sky and temperatures of minus 40 F, the group remembered the Norwegian explorer’s achievement on the spot where he placed his flag on Dec. 14, 1911.

“We are here to celebrate one of the greatest feats in human history,” Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said as he unveiled an ice sculpture of Amundsen.

Several expeditions skied across Antarctica to attend the ceremony, which was broadcast on Norway’s NRK television. Many were delayed and had to be flown the last stretch.

“Our respect for Amundsen’s feat 100 years ago grew as we traveled in his ski tracks, and felt the physical challenges he experienced,” said Jan-Gunnar Winther, director of the Norwegian Polar Institute.

Winther dropped out of an expedition trying to follow Amundsen’s entire route, skiing 800 miles to the South Pole, and was airlifted the last part. Two other members of his group were racing against the clock to reach the South Pole on Wednesday.

Stoltenberg also honored British explorer Robert Falcon Scott, who lost the race against Amundsen and arrived at the South Pole more than month later, only to find Amundsen’s tent, a Norwegian flag and a letter from Amundsen. Scott and four companions died on the way out.

“Scott and his men will forever be remembered for their valor and their determination to reach the most inhospitable place on earth,” Stoltenberg said.

Amundsen and his team spent almost two months skiing across the frozen Ross Sea, climbing steep hills to the Antarctic plateau at about 9,800 feet (3,000 meters) and crossing vast ice fields to reach the pole.

During the preparations they placed several depots of food and supplies along parts of the route before the final assault toward the pole. Once there, they spent three days doing scientific measurements before starting the return trip.

Experts agree that Amundsen succeeded because he was better-prepared than Scott. Amundsen used skis and dog sleds, while Scott used motorized sleds that broke down and ponies that couldn’t take the cold. The men ended up pulling their sleds themselves.

Amundsen’s well-marked depots contained over three tons of supplies, while Scott had fewer and badly marked depots the expedition often couldn’t find in the blizzards and cold.

In contrast to the bitter competition between Amundsen and Scott, Stoltenberg pointed out that the South Pole today is marked by international cooperation, regulated by the Antarctic treaty, where peace and stability, environmental activity and scientific research are in focus.

Among the most important fields of research are global warming and its effects on Antarctica.

“The loss of ice in the Antarctic can have grave global consequences. Roald Amundsen and Robert Scott and their men went to extraordinary lengths to accomplish their goals. We must be prepared to do the same,” Stoltenberg said, alluding to the struggle against climate change.

Scientists and support personnel from the U.S. Antarctic Program at the Amundsen-Scott research station at the South Pole took part in the ceremony, and stressed the occasion was a special day not only for Norway.

“It’s also a special day in human history since the real discovery of the last of the great continents started,” said Simon Stephenson, who represented USAP.

The USAP had not wanted a new permanent monument by the scientific base, but the ice sculpture is bound to stay put for a long time since temperatures at the South Pole rarely rise above freezing.

Amundsen disappeared aboard a French Latham 47 flying boat in the Barents Sea on June 18, 1928. The plane had been searching for the gas-filled airship Italia, which crashed when returning from the North Pole during an expedition led by Italian aeronautical engineer Umberto Nobile.

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Associated Press writer Karl Ritter in Stockholm contributed to this report.

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


A page from Roald Amundsen's account of reaching the South Pole in December 1911. The two-volume American edition was published in 1913. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and PBA Galleries.
A page from Roald Amundsen’s account of reaching the South Pole in December 1911. The two-volume American edition was published in 1913. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and PBA Galleries.

Humana sends smuggled Italian statues home

The Humana Building in Louisville, Ky., designed by architect Michael Graves, is a well-known example of postmodern architecture. It was completed in 1985. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
 The Humana Building in Louisville, Ky., designed by architect Michael Graves, is a well-known example of postmodern architecture. It was completed in 1985. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
The Humana Building in Louisville, Ky., designed by architect Michael Graves, is a well-known example of postmodern architecture. It was completed in 1985. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

ROME (AP) – Officials say two Roman statues that were smuggled from Italy and purchased at a New York gallery in 1984 are being returned home.

The announcement was made Wednesday by the Italian government and Humana Inc., a health insurance company based in Louisville, Ky., that bought the statues in good faith and had displayed them at its headquarters.

The marble statues were of the Goddess Fortuna and another female figure.

Italy praised Humana for having come forth voluntarily and contacting the Culture Ministry with its suspicions about the statues. Italy has for years been on a campaign to compel museums and private collectors to return looted antiquities.

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


 The Humana Building in Louisville, Ky., designed by architect Michael Graves, is a well-known example of postmodern architecture. It was completed in 1985. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
The Humana Building in Louisville, Ky., designed by architect Michael Graves, is a well-known example of postmodern architecture. It was completed in 1985. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Artist plans to light up Bay Bridge in San Francisco

Artist Leo Villareal intends to create an LED light sculpture on the western span of the Bay Bridge in San Francisco. This image is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.
Artist Leo Villareal intends to create an LED light sculpture on the western span of the Bay Bridge in San Francisco. This image is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.
Artist Leo Villareal intends to create an LED light sculpture on the western span of the Bay Bridge in San Francisco. This image is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – A pioneering artist plans to turn the western span of the Bay Bridge into the region’s biggest light sculpture with 25,000 bulbs flickering from its cables in sequences inspired by ebbs and flows of the Bay environment.

The Contra Costa Times reports that artist Leo Villareal has exhibited light sculptures at the National Gallery of Art and other major museums. He has already mapped out the computer software to operate his network of LED lights.

But the project still needs approval from the California Department of Transportation and $7 million in private donations.

Arts supporters on Tuesday kicked off a fund-raising drive, saying they hope to start the four-month-long light installation in spring, and keep the sculpture lighted at night for two years.

Information from: Contra Costa Times, http://www.contracostatimes.com

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


Artist Leo Villareal intends to create an LED light sculpture on the western span of the Bay Bridge in San Francisco. This image is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.
Artist Leo Villareal intends to create an LED light sculpture on the western span of the Bay Bridge in San Francisco. This image is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.

‘The Thinker’ spending holidays getting spruced up

Rodin's 'The Thinker' in front of Grawemeyer Hall at the University of Louisville is being restored at a cost of $74,000. This image is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.
Rodin's 'The Thinker' in front of Grawemeyer Hall at the University of Louisville is being restored at a cost of $74,000. This image is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.
Rodin’s ‘The Thinker’ in front of Grawemeyer Hall at the University of Louisville is being restored at a cost of $74,000. This image is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) – He’s not officially enrolled in classes at the University of Louisville, but he is part of campus life, so it’s only fair that the Rodin sculpture The Thinker gets away for the holidays too.

The statue is out for a few weeks being cleaned and restored to a dark brown patina with a hint of green, the university says on its website. Shelley Reisman Paine is performing the work.

The $74,000 restoration is part of the improvements to the oval in front of Grawemeyer Hall, with funding from federal and private sources.

The statue at U of L is the first full-size bronze cast of the work by Rodin, who supervised the casting on Dec. 25, 1903. It has been at U of L since 1949.

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


Rodin's 'The Thinker' in front of Grawemeyer Hall at the University of Louisville is being restored at a cost of $74,000. This image is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.
Rodin’s ‘The Thinker’ in front of Grawemeyer Hall at the University of Louisville is being restored at a cost of $74,000. This image is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.