The sale of a glove used in training by astronaut Alan Shepard for an Apollo mission has been questioned by NASA. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and Heritage Auctions.

NASA says it’s working to resolve ownership of space items

The sale of a  glove used in training by astronaut Alan Shepard for an Apollo mission has been questioned by NASA. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and Heritage Auctions.

The sale of a glove used in training by astronaut Alan Shepard for an Apollo mission has been questioned by NASA. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and Heritage Auctions.

MIAMI (AP) – The head of NASA met Monday with former astronauts to discuss who owns space artifacts from moon shots and other missions, saying afterward that the agency will work cooperatively with them to resolve what’s recently become a contentious issue.

NASA chief Charles Bolden said in a statement that there have been “fundamental misunderstandings and unclear policies” regarding items that astronauts took home from the Mercury, Gemini, Apollo and Skylab programs. The statement marks a switch from NASA’s recent confrontational stance, which included suing Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell in Miami federal court over rights to a 16mm video camera that went to the moon.

“These are American heroes, fellow astronauts, and personal friends who have acted in good faith, and we have committed to work together to find the right policy and legal paths forward to address outstanding ownership questions,” Bolden said.

Mitchell and other astronauts have said NASA officials told them long ago they could keep certain equipment from the missions, and over the years collectors have paid millions for space items.

Monday’s meeting followed stories by The Associated Press and others last week on NASA raising questions about whether Apollo 13 commander James Lovell had the right to sell a 70-page checklist from Apollo 13, which received a bid at a November auction of more than $388,000. It is valuable because it contains Lovell’s handwritten calculations considered key to navigating the crippled spacecraft back to Earth following an oxygen tank explosion.

In a letter to Dallas-based Heritage Auctions, NASA also questioned the ownership of two items from Apollo 9 astronaut Rusty Schweickart—a lunar module identification plate and a hand controller—and a glove worn by Alan Shepard during training for Apollo 14. Those also received sizable bids in the November auction.

Schweickart also attended the Monday meeting, according to NASA, along with fellow Apollo astronauts Gene Cernan and Charlie Duke.

Bolden said the ownership discussions will explore “all policy, legislative and other legal means” to resolve ownership issues “and ensure that appropriate artifacts are preserved and available for display to the American people.”

An assistant said Monday that Lovell was traveling and wasn’t immediately available to comment. The checklist and other items from the November auction are being kept in a Heritage Auctions vault pending outcome of the inquiry, company officials said.

Mitchell and others have said they were given broad latitude in deciding which artifacts they could take home.

Before he settled the camera lawsuit with NASA, Mitchell produced a 2002 letter from a former director at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston that appeared to back up their position. That letter, signed by retired director Christopher Kraft Jr., said that he approved a policy allowing Apollo astronauts to keep personal items that flew with them as well anything from the lunar landing module that was abandoned on the moon anyway.

“It was generally accepted that the astronauts could bring back pieces of equipment or hardware from this spacecraft for a keepsake of these journeys,” Kraft wrote.

That letter, however, does not address whether astronauts can sell the items. In its letter to the auction house, NASA insisted only the agency can approve such artifacts for sale.

_____

Follow Curt Anderson on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Miamicurt

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-01-09-12 2147GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


The sale of a  glove used in training by astronaut Alan Shepard for an Apollo mission has been questioned by NASA. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and Heritage Auctions.

The sale of a glove used in training by astronaut Alan Shepard for an Apollo mission has been questioned by NASA. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and Heritage Auctions.

Sheena Wagstaff to head Met’s Modern & Contemporary Art

NEW YORK – Sheena Wagstaff has been appointed to the newly created position of Chairman of the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Wagstaff is currently chief curator of Tate Modern in London, where for the past decade she has been responsible for programming strategy and planning. She will begin work in her new role at the Metropolitan Museum in late spring.

“With creativity and foresight, Sheena has devised and carried through her large portfolio of responsibilities at Tate Modern, to the enjoyment and edification of millions of visitors,” said Thomas P. Campbell, director and CEO of the Metropolitan Museum, in making the announcement.

Wagstaff will succeed Gary Tinterow as he assumes the position of director of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, in late January.

“Along with appointing Sheena to this position, I am reverting the 19th-century paintings area back to the Department of European Paintings, under the guidance of John Pope-Hennessy Chairman Keith Christiansen, thereby reconfiguring two of our curatorial departments,” said Campbell.

He added that this shift suits the museum’s mission “as we it recalibrate our program in modern and contemporary art to engage a global approach that will take advantage of our encyclopedic collections.”

“We are also looking forward to operating the nearby Breuer building beginning in 2015,” continued Campbell, “and exploring the possibility of renovating and updating our Lila Acheson Wallace Wing in the main building. I look forward to working closely with Sheena as she develops the strategies and curatorial team to accomplish these exciting challenges over the coming period of transition and beyond.”

As chief curator since 2001, Wagstaff devised Tate Modern’s program strategy and forward plan, embracing a broad scope of contemporary artistic practice in alignment with Tate’s collecting strategy to provide a more global account of art. In addition to contributing to Tate’s international monitoring group for modern and contemporary acquisitions, she has been particularly involved with the Middle East and North African Acquisitions Committee, as well as Tate’s broad interests in the United States.

Wagstaff has played a key role in the success of Tate Modern’s program by initiating and leading an extensive international program of exhibitions, commissions, and other projects, many in collaboration with other major institutions. She has overseen more than 60 exhibitions initiated by Tate Modern’s curatorial team, ensuring that each is based on original research and scholarship, and that all exhibitions and their accompanying publications contribute new thinking to their subjects to become benchmarks for subsequent investigations. These projects have included: Eva Hesse, Barnett Newman, Sigmar Polke, Constantin Brancusi, Robert Frank, Frida Kahlo, August Strindberg, Henri Rousseau, Albers & Moholy Nagy, Wassily Kandinsky, David Smith, Helio Oiticica, Duchamp/Man Ray/Picabia, Rothko, Cildo Meireles, Rodchenko & Popova, Arshile Gorky, Francis Alys, Paul Gauguin and Joan Miró.

Wagstaff has curated numerous major exhibitions herself, including exhibitions of Edward Hopper, Jeff Wall, and Juan Munoz, as well as a forthcoming Roy Lichtenstein retrospective that she has co-curated with the Art Institute of Chicago.

Wagstaff is a graduate in History of Art & Architecture from the University of East Anglia, and subsequently undertook postgraduate curatorial studies in the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Independent Study Program in New York. She has worked for several important institutions over the course of her career, including the Museum of Modern Art at Oxford; the Whitechapel Art Gallery in London; and the Frick Art Center (Pittsburgh), where she was Director of Collections, Exhibitions & Education from 1993 to 1998. In 1998 she joined Tate Britain as Head of Exhibitions & Displays, where she played a key senior role in the transformation of the former Tate Gallery into Tate Britain by devising a new five-year program of exhibitions and collection displays, as well as establishing a new curatorial department.

 

 

Vintage large-letter postcard 'Greetings from Florida.' Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

Floridiana Festival moves to St. Petersburg College

Vintage large-letter postcard 'Greetings from Florida.' Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

Vintage large-letter postcard ‘Greetings from Florida.’ Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – St. Petersburg College’s historic Palladium Theatre will be the new location for the Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show to be held Sunday, Jan. 29.

Presented by Hula Hula Productions, the Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show will celebrate 10 years in 2012, and while the focus of the Jan. 29 “winter show” remains on early Florida tourist memorabilia, attendees will notice a return to the eclectic offerings of earlier Floridiana Festivals, as well as the incorporation of some Hawaiiana.

“All of our exhibitors focus on vintage Florida, which also can easily blend into old Hawaiiana,” said Annette Vedsegaard-Ross, owner of Hula Hula Productions. “My husband and I lived in Hawaii before moving to Florida, and so this show is sort a hybrid of everything we appreciate about these cultures. In addition to all the roadside attraction souvenir kitsch, the merchandise for sale is typical of what could be found in an old Florida house and things that would be common in a tropical setting. Many aren’t even made anymore, and some are particularly unique, such as items made from cypress knee woods or actual alligator heads. It’s not necessarily politically correct, but it’s different!”

Many of America’s premier collectors of Floridiana will be exhibiting at the show, and attendees will find everything for sale from fun Florida travel ephemera and tacky tourist treasures like alligator handbags and flamingo figurines, to sought-after collectibles such as hand-painted jewelry with miniature Florida scenes, vintage Florida photographic art, and citrus and cigar box labels. Showgoers will discover small furnishings and lighting made of cypress knee woods, vintage wall mirrors with flamingo images, ceramic statues of tropical birds, and old Florida art. Decorators will especially enjoy the tropical backcloths, including fabulous pillows. One of the largest collections of vintage Florida license plates will be available for sale as well. It’s an interest for the heyday of Florida, and the iconic images of the past that bring people to the Floridiana Festival.

“I see people coming to the show for a sense of nostalgia, sometimes hoping to find a souvenir from some Florida tourist attraction that their family may have visited in the 1950s or ’60s, or even earlier,” said Vedsegaard-Ross. “Plus, our exhibitors are some of the most knowledgeable in this field, and are always happy to discuss the old Florida memories that go hand-in-hand with the memorabilia!”

Several Florida authors will be participating on Jan. 29. Larry Roberts, author of Florida’s Golden Age of Souvenirs: 1890 to 1930 and considered by many to be the guru of collecting old Florida memorabilia will be exhibiting and selling, as well as Ken Breslauer, author of Roadside Paradise: the Golden Age of Florida’s Tourist Attractions 1929-71 and Wayne Ayers, author of numerous Florida history books, including Tampa Bay’s Gulf Beaches: Fabulous 1950s and 1960s and St. Petersburg: The Sunshine City.

The Florida Highwaymen are an important part of Florida’s cultural legacy, and the Jan. 29 show is an opportunity to meet and mingle with these artists, who will be selling their beautiful Florida sea and landscape paintings. “I’m always happy that we can bring so many of the Highwaymen artists to this side of the state.

“When you consider that most of the artists are in their 70s and many still live in Fort Pierce or the surrounding east coast towns, it’s not that often that an event brings them over here to the west coast,” said Vedsegaard-Ross.

Artists James Gibson, Issac Knight, R.L. Lewis, Roy McLendon Sr. and Carnell Smith are some of the artists who have signed up for the show. And Florida Highwaymen art isn’t the only art that will be available, as some exhibitors will have vintage Florida paintings by lesser-known artists for sale as well. Complimentary valuations of vintage Florida paintings—including that of the Highwaymen—will be available at the show by Robert LeBlanc of highwaymen-buy-sell-trade, an appraiser and expert in the field.

Other special features include lectures and slide presentations. Dr. Gary Moss will discuss “The Culture of Aloha Shirts.” His collection of vintage Aloha shirts is featured in the Schiffer book Hawaiian Shirts: Dress Right for Paradise , and has also been exhibited at the American Textile History Museum. This interesting lecture will cover the history of Aloha shirts, what makes them collectible, and how to recognize if your shirt is valuable. Wear or carry your vintage Aloha shirts to receive a free appraisal of age and value. Several exhibitors will have vintage Aloha shirts, including “The Aloha Shirt” folks, who will have hundreds of shirts for sale at the show.

Attendees can also enjoy the lecture “Taking a Textile Trip Back in Time … to the Era of Barkcloth” by Brian Walsh, aka the “King of Barkcloth.” Walsh is a textile archeologist of sorts, having spent over two decades searching for the very best of barkcloth designs. Covered in Brian’s talk will be a discussion of an era gone and the impact barkcloth had on the designs of the time, how to differentiate new from old barkcloths and what are the most collectible patterns and colorways, plus tips on collecting and caring for vintage fabrics.

Hula Hula Productions invites everyone to come celebrate Florida’s cultural and historical legacy at the Florida Memorabilia & Highwaymen Show, Sunday, Jan. 29, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Palladium Theater. The Theater is located at 253 Fifth Ave. N. in downtown St. Petersburg. Show admission is $6. Lectures, slide presentations and art valuations are included in the price of show admission. For information, call Hula Hula at (727) 421-0441 or visit www.hulahula.biz.


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


Vintage large-letter postcard 'Greetings from Florida.' Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

Vintage large-letter postcard ‘Greetings from Florida.’ Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

Painting by Isaac Knight. Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

Painting by Isaac Knight. Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

 Painting by James Gibson. Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

Painting by James Gibson. Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

Painting by Roy McLendon Sr. Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

Painting by Roy McLendon Sr. Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

J.R. Wilcox 1934 hand-colored photo print of tropical palms. Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

J.R. Wilcox 1934 hand-colored photo print of tropical palms. Image courtesy of Floridiana Festival & Highwaymen Artist Show.

Sir Thomas Lawrence PRA, 1769-1830, 'Portrait of John Millington, aged 16,' red and black chalks 8 7/8 x 7 1/8 inches; signed with initials and dated: 'TL June 1795.' Image courtesy Lowell Libson Ltd.

Master Drawings New York returns for Jan. 21-28 exhibition

Sir Thomas Lawrence PRA, 1769-1830, 'Portrait of John Millington, aged 16,' red and black chalks 8 7/8 x 7 1/8 inches; signed with initials and dated: 'TL June 1795.' Image courtesy Lowell Libson Ltd.

Sir Thomas Lawrence PRA, 1769-1830, ‘Portrait of John Millington, aged 16,’ red and black chalks 8 7/8 x 7 1/8 inches; signed with initials and dated: ‘TL June 1795.’ Image courtesy Lowell Libson Ltd.

NEW YORK – The internationally acclaimed Master Drawings New York is returning to Manhattan on Jan. 21-28. Over 23 of the world’s leading drawing dealers are holding coordinated exhibitions in art galleries located on New York’s Upper East Side. This annual event enables both collectors and curators to view fine works dating from the 16th to the 20th centuries.

Based on the highly successful Master Drawings London launched in 2001, Master Drawings New York includes 23 exhibitions from the UK, France, Spain, Germany and the U.S., enabling connoisseurs to buy drawings across a broad range of price points at galleries all within walking distance of one another.

Margot Gordon, the New York-based dealer and organizer of the event with English dealer Crispian Riley-Smith is exhibiting Italian drawings of the 16th to the late 20th centuries. A pen and dark brown ink on account ledger paper titled Study of Three Athletes by Francesco Fontebasso (1707-1769), is being shown by Richard A. Berman Fine Arts, while Mia Weiner is bringing a red chalk, pen and brown ink drawing of St. Francis Marrying Poverty, 1633, by Andrea Sacchi. Returning London-based exhibitor Lowell Libson Ltd is exhibiting a portrait of Sir John Millington, age 16, in red and black chalk, 1795. It is one of the finest drawings by Thomas Lawrence to come onto the market for many years. New exhibitor Pia Gallo is bringing a pencil drawing by Theodore Chassertiau titled Two Women: One sitting and holding a child; the other sitting under a tree, 1839, and new exhibitor Moeller Fine Art is featuring an ink on paper by Lyonel Feininger titled, Scene from Bleak House, 1891, in honor of the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens (1812-1870.)

First-time exhibitor from Paris, Laura Pecheur, will present a large overview of the work of Dora Maar from the Picasso lover period and after. An untitled oil on paper, 1932, by Gerhard Richter, one of the most influential painters of the post-World War period who over the course of more than 40 years systematically explored the fundamental principles of painting, alternating between abstract and representational imagery is being shown by the Barbara Mathes Gallery. Mary-Anne Martin Fine Art is showing a signed Diego Rivera watercolor entitled Study for H.P, 1927.

There will be a preview at all galleries on Friday, Jan. 20, from 4 to 8 p.m. enabling collectors to view the exhibitions before the opening weekend.

Participating galleries are Didier Aaron Inc., L’Antiquaire & The Connoisseur Inc. Richard A. Berman Fine Arts, Christopher Bishop, C.G. Boerner, Sigrid Freundorfer Fine Art LLC, Pia Gallo, Margot Gordon Fine Arts, Lowell Libson Ltd., James Mackinnon, José de la Mano Galeria de Arte, Mary Ann Martin Fine Art, Barbara Mathes Gallery, Moeller Fine Art, Mirelle Mosler, Laura Pecheur, Nissman Abromson Ltd., Crispian Riley-Smith Fine Arts Ltd., Stiebel Ltd., David Tunick Inc., Monroe Warshaw, Mia W. Weiner and Jill Newhouse Gallery.

For information on Master Drawings New York visit www.masterdrawingsnewyork.com.


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


Sir Thomas Lawrence PRA, 1769-1830, 'Portrait of John Millington, aged 16,' red and black chalks 8 7/8 x 7 1/8 inches; signed with initials and dated: 'TL June 1795.' Image courtesy Lowell Libson Ltd.

Sir Thomas Lawrence PRA, 1769-1830, ‘Portrait of John Millington, aged 16,’ red and black chalks 8 7/8 x 7 1/8 inches; signed with initials and dated: ‘TL June 1795.’ Image courtesy Lowell Libson Ltd.

Andrea Sacchi (Nettuno 1599-1661 Rome), 'St. Francis Marrying Poverty,' circa 1633, red chalk, pen and brown ink. Image courtesy Mia Weiner.

Andrea Sacchi (Nettuno 1599-1661 Rome), ‘St. Francis Marrying Poverty,’ circa 1633, red chalk, pen and brown ink. Image courtesy Mia Weiner.

Gerhard Richter (b. 1932), Untitled (29.1.94), 1994, oil on paper, 11 3/4 x 16 1/4 inches, signed center: '29.1.94 - Richter.'Image courtesy Barbara Mathes Gallery.

Gerhard Richter (b. 1932), Untitled (29.1.94), 1994, oil on paper, 11 3/4 x 16 1/4 inches, signed center: ‘29.1.94 – Richter.’ Image courtesy Barbara Mathes Gallery.

Guggenheim gives nod to new Helsinki museum

HELSINKI (AFP)  – The foundation that administers the iconic Guggenheim museums has given Helsinki the go-ahead to build a state-of-the-art museum, city officials said Tuesday.

The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation handed over its concept and development study to city officials on Tuesday, proposing that a new museum be built at a cost of 140 million euros ($179 million).

“A Guggenheim Museum in Helsinki would benefit the whole Finnish museum and arts field,” Helsinki mayor Jussi Pajunen said during the handover ceremony.

Helsinki city council must still vote on the issue, but Pajunen said a Guggenheim museum would boost the city’s cultural credentials.

“It would strengthen Helsinki’s position as a Nordic cultural capital and bring more cultural tourists to Helsinki from Finland, Scandinavia, Russia, the Baltic States and other parts of the world,” he added.

Guggenheim’s world-famous network includes museums in New York, Bilbao, Berlin and Venice, while another establishment is currently being built in Abu Dhabi.

According to the study, a Helsinki Guggenheim museum would “play a unique role in testing new approaches and technologies” for the benefit of the global museum network.

A Helsinki Guggenheim would primarily be a noncollecting institution, incorporating some typical elements of an art museum, while “pushing the boundaries of process, presentation and audience engagement,” the report said.

If a formal decision is taken to move ahead, an international competition would be held to select the architect for the new museum.

The study recommended a city-owned location along the south harbor waterfront.

“We undertook this work in the conviction that the information and insight it would produce could be of great value for Helsinki and the Guggenheim,” said Richard Armstrong, the director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Foundation.

 

 

‘Grape Vine,’ Giorgio Lucchesi (Italian, 1855-1941), oil on canvas, 54½ x 27 in. (sight), est. $14,000-$18,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Fine art, J.P. Morgan Estate items at Auctions Neapolitan, Jan. 14

‘Grape Vine,’ Giorgio Lucchesi (Italian, 1855-1941), oil on canvas, 54½ x 27 in. (sight), est. $14,000-$18,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

‘Grape Vine,’ Giorgio Lucchesi (Italian, 1855-1941), oil on canvas, 54½ x 27 in. (sight), est. $14,000-$18,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

NAPLES, Fla. – Auctions Neapolitan in sunny Naples, Fla., will host its annual Winter Collector’s Choice auction on Saturday, Jan. 14, starting at 12 noon Eastern Time. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide the Internet live bidding on 396 lots of antiques, fine and decorative art, and quality collectibles. Of special historical note are two items with provenance from Parke-Bernet’s 1944 auction of Property from the Estate of J.P. Morgan.

The sale contains an excellent mix of goods from prestigious southwest Florida estates, with additional select consignments. Within the offering, bidders will find paintings, fine and costume jewelry, clocks, lighting and furniture. The ongoing demand for Asian art will be well served by a grouping of carved Chinese and Japanese ivories from several periods.

Many genres are represented by the fine art section of the sale. Daphne Odjig’s (Canadian, 1919-) acrylic-on-canvas painting titled Friends Rejoicing measures 49¼ x 41¼ inches and is signed at lower right. Estimate: $18,000-$24,000. The other top-estimated artwork is an impressive still life painting titled Grape Vine, by Italian artist Giorgio Lucchesi (1855-1941). The signed and framed oil on canvas, 54½ x 27 inches (sight) could bring $14,000-$18,000.

Canadian paintings of note include Arthur Shilling’s (1941-1986) oil on canvas portrait titled Reflections, which is estimated at $4,000-$6,000; and “Group of Seven” artist Franz Johnston’s (1888-1949) picturesque oil-on-board landscape titled October on the Rouge, Quebec. It has hopes of garnering $3,000-$5,000.

Several sculptures will be auctioned, the most important being Richard Hallier’s life-size bronze titled Dance. It depicts a couple, nude with flowing “scarves,” in a graceful pas de deux. The signed work measures 72 x 48 x 36 inches and is estimated at $8,000-$12,000.

Blue-chip provenance accompanies two highlight items that were previously sold in Parke-Bernet Galleries’ 1944 auction of property from the estate of the J.P. Morgan. A pair of Chinese Ch’ien Lung miniature cabinet bottles with peachbloom dragon motif are entered in the sale with a $700-$900 estimate for the pair. An Ancient Egyptian gold, pearl and sapphire necklace in Etruscan style measures 20½ inches long and is expected to make $2,000-$3,000.

A small bonus selection has been consigned by the Friends of Collier County (Fla.) Library and includes a handsome English William & Mary slant-front desk with 18th- and 19th-century elements. It is estimated at $1,500-$1,800. Also offered to benefit the library is a set of six matching late-19th-century Biedermeier upholstered dining chairs, est. $1,200-$1,600.

Other items of interest include a Chinese blue and white porcelain floor vase, a signed Handel 8-panel overlay parlor lamp and two Salvador Dali Daum crystal sculptures of Venus.

For additional information on any lot in the sale, contact Kathleen Pica, owner of Auctions Neapolitan, by calling 239-262-7333 or e-mailing sales@auctionsn.com.

View the fully illustrated catalog and sign up to bid absentee or live via the Internet at www.LiveAuctioneers.com.

# # #

View the fully illustrated catalog and register to bid absentee or live via the Internet as the sale is taking place by logging on to www.LiveAuctioneers.com.


ADDITIONAL LOTS OF NOTE


‘Grape Vine,’ Giorgio Lucchesi (Italian, 1855-1941), oil on canvas, 54½ x 27 in. (sight), est. $14,000-$18,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

‘Grape Vine,’ Giorgio Lucchesi (Italian, 1855-1941), oil on canvas, 54½ x 27 in. (sight), est. $14,000-$18,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Miniature Chinese Ch’ien Lung cabinet bottles with peachbloom dragon motif, ex Estate of J.P. Morgan, est. $700-$900. Auctions Neapolitan image.

 

Miniature Chinese Ch’ien Lung cabinet bottles with peachbloom dragon motif, ex Estate of J.P. Morgan, est. $700-$900. Auctions Neapolitan image.

‘Friends Rejoicing,’ Daphne Odjig (Canadian, 1919-), acrylic-on-canvas, 49¼ x 41¼ in., est. $18,000-$24,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

‘Friends Rejoicing,’ Daphne Odjig (Canadian, 1919-), acrylic-on-canvas, 49¼ x 41¼ in., est. $18,000-$24,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Richard Hallier, life-size bronze titled ‘Dance,’ 72 x 48 x 36 in., est. $8,000-$12,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Richard Hallier, life-size bronze titled ‘Dance,’ 72 x 48 x 36 in., est. $8,000-$12,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Franz Johnston (Canadian, 1888-1949), October on the Rouge, Quebec,’ oil on board, 11¾ x 15.6 in., est. $3,000-$5,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Franz Johnston (Canadian, 1888-1949), October on the Rouge, Quebec,’ oil on board, 11¾ x 15.6 in., est. $3,000-$5,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Ancient Egyptian gold, pear and sapphire necklace, Etruscan style, 20½ in. long, ex Estate of J.P. Morgan, est. $2,000-$3,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Ancient Egyptian gold, pear and sapphire necklace, Etruscan style, 20½ in. long, ex Estate of J.P. Morgan, est. $2,000-$3,000. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Chinese export blue and white porcelain floor vase, 19th century, 32in. tall, est. $1,200-$1,800. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Chinese export blue and white porcelain floor vase, 19th century, 32in. tall, est. $1,200-$1,800. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Signed Handel 8-panel overlay lamp with Mission-style floral design, cast bronze base with original Handel cloth label, est. $1,200-$1,800. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Signed Handel 8-panel overlay lamp with Mission-style floral design, cast bronze base with original Handel cloth label, est. $1,200-$1,800. Auctions Neapolitan image.

Louisiana's Civil War Museum in New Orleans. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Civil War museums struggle to remain relevant

Louisiana's Civil War Museum in New Orleans. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Louisiana’s Civil War Museum in New Orleans. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) – Inside Louisiana’s Civil War Museum, battle flags line the walls. Uniforms, swords and long-barreled guns fill museum cases beside homespun knapsacks, dented canteens and tiny framed pictures of wives that soldiers carried into battle.

In the back, there’s a collection devoted to Jefferson Davis, one-time president of the Confederacy formed by the southern states which seceded from the United States in 1861, complete with his top hat and fancy shoes at the spot where his body once lay in state.

It’s all housed in a little red stone building next door to the bigger and much more heavily visited Ogden Museum of Southern Art and near the National World War II Museum. Yet 150 years after the Civil War, the little museum finds itself struggling—like others both in the North and South—to make changes and stay relevant with new generations.

For some museums, that means more displays on African-Americans or exhibits on the roles women played as combatants and spies. For others, it means adding digital maps and electronic displays to attract tech-savvy youth. Or it may simply mean adopting a wider, more holistic approach to the war—without taking sides.

But it’s not always easy for museums to update their exhibits because of the high costs, curators say. And some would-be visitors’ dollars are kept away by the perception that southern Civil War museums are one-sided—or even racist—because of the legacy of slavery in the South.

“It’s a challenge on several fronts, one is getting enough money for it,” said John Coski, historian and library director at the Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond, Virginia. “Most have recognized the need to make the transition to a more modern perspective, but for some that’s a struggle. Especially in the South, there are still strong feelings about some of these museums.”

Louisiana’s museum opened in 1891, then called Confederate Memorial Hall: The Battle Abbey of the South. The combative name was dropped in the 1960s and today it’s seeking a “more inclusive, broader” perspective, museum curator Patricia Ricci said. It has been invited to become affiliated with the Smithsonian Institution, which will further spur the effort to showcase a more modern interpretation of the war.

“I think we will add some information on the Union effort here,” Ricci said. “And we will probably make some other additions with it. It always comes down to money, and we never have enough.”

Today, the museum has the second largest collection of Confederate artifacts in the U.S. Visitors can view the uniforms of eight Confederate generals from Louisiana, rare swords and rifles, more than 125 original battle flags and rare photographs.

Ricci, the museum’s curator of 31 years, notes that fewer people have visited the museum with each decade since the 1950s. But the 150th anniversary offers hope that a tide of new visitors will arrive. Attendance in December was up by 800 people over 2010, Ricci said.

The 150th anniversary observances began in April with the commemoration of the first shots fired at Fort Sumter in Charleston, S.C. It will end in four years with remembrances of the Confederate surrender at Appomattox in Virginia.

For now, the Confederate Museum draws just a fraction of the visitors who flock to bigger museums nearby, averaging about 16,000 people a year. That’s down from some 20,000 visitors before Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005.

The museum’s main revenue source is the $7 fee collected from each visitor, leaving it forever scrambling to make ends meet. Many of the artifacts are in need of restoration; the building needs a new slate roof and still hasn’t added the handicapped facilities it wants.

“We have to be very frugal,” Ricci said. “I look at the World War II museum which gets millions of visitors and wish we could get just part of that.”

Some visitors do stumble upon the museum after visiting the others nearby—and are surprised by its scope.

“I think it’s a very important part of our history,” said Rose Adams, 47, visiting from Dallas. “This is a wonderful display, full of such interesting things. I just happened on it after going to the World War II museum.”

Interest in the Civil War got a huge boost in 1990 with the airing of Ken Burns’ Public Broadcasting Service documentary on the war, still the most-watched public television series ever.

“One of the interesting things is that the series did in the North was it really provided a sense of ownership of the Civil War, which had been since 1865 the province of the South,” Burns said. “We ceded the interest generally to the South, which is unusual, because it’s usually the winners who write the history, not the losers.”

But he notes museums that may have once been shrines to one side or another are adapting new kinds of displays exploring the war from new angles.

“I think a lot of that is changing and getting more centered on the war and not a distorted idea of it,” Burns said. “Basically museums have started to interpret a more holistic look of the war.”

In Charleston, the National Park Service has worked to make anniversary events more hospitable to blacks, offering events featuring Gullah storytellers and basket weavers, discussions of slavery and programs with re-enactors portraying black units that fought for the North. Gullah is the culture of the descendants of slaves who live on the region’s sea islands.

Later this year the Charleston Museum will mount an exhibition about Robert Smalls, the slave who commandeered a Confederate transport vessel and piloted it past Southern batteries to the blockading Union fleet. He later served five terms in Congress from South Carolina.

Still, the feeling that Southern museums dedicated to the war are racist is a lingering problem, said President and CEO of the Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond, Va., Waite Rawls.

“It’s still one of the greatest challenges Confederate museums face, and we are all working on it,” he said. “Unfortunately the Confederate flag was used as a symbol of white supremacy in the civil rights era. We got hit with a double whammy of the 1860s and the 1960s.”

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AP writer Bruce Smith in Charleston, S.C., contributed to this report.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rightes reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-01-09-12 1633GMT


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Louisiana's Civil War Museum in New Orleans. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Louisiana’s Civil War Museum in New Orleans. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

The Liberty Bell ruby sculpture is 5 inches high and weighs 4 pounds. Image courtesy of Stuart Kingston Jewelers.

FBI joins search for $2M Liberty Bell ruby sculpture

 The Liberty Bell ruby sculpture is 5 inches high and weighs 4 pounds. Image courtesy of Stuart Kingston Jewelers.

The Liberty Bell ruby sculpture is 5 inches high and weighs 4 pounds. Image courtesy of Stuart Kingston Jewelers.

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) – The FBI is involved in the search for a $2 million Liberty Bell sculpture made from the largest mined ruby in the world.

The News Journal of Wilmington reports that the ruby found near Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa more than a half-century ago is not of gem quality and was sculpted into the shape of the Liberty Bell guarded by a bald eagle and decorated with 50 diamonds.

Stuart Kingston Jewelers in Wilmington had kept the 5-inch, 4-pound Liberty Bell Ruby in its vault for about two years while trying to broker a deal to sell it before it was stolen in a smash-and-grab robbery in November. The California owners had hoped to sell it to a philanthropist who would donate it to the National Liberty Museum in Philadelphia.

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Information from: The News Journal of Wilmington, Del., http://www.delawareonline.com

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-01-09-12 1447GMT


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 The Liberty Bell ruby sculpture is 5 inches high and weighs 4 pounds. Image courtesy of Stuart Kingston Jewelers.

The Liberty Bell ruby sculpture is 5 inches high and weighs 4 pounds. Image courtesy of Stuart Kingston Jewelers.

Antique weapons missing from North Dakota museum

MINOT, N.D. (AP) – Officials at the Ward County Historical Museum in Minot say thieves who broke in on Dec. 30 made off with valuable historical artifacts.

Historical society board member Sue Bergan tells The Minot Daily News that officials initially thought nothing had been stolen, but they later realized that more than half a dozen antique shotguns and rifles and a Civil War-era sword were missing.

Officials did not immediately place a value on the stolen items. They are still trying to determine if anything else was taken. Bergan says the museum is still in disarray after last year’s record Souris River flooding. The museum on the State Fairgrounds suffered about $1 million in damage.

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Information from: Minot Daily News, http://www.minotdailynews.com

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-01-06-12 1749GMT

 

 

 

 

Matthews’ Vortex draws admirers to De Buck Gallery

The opening reception for Victor Matthews will be Thursday, Jan. 12, from 6-8 p.m. at De Buck Gallery, 511 W. 25th St., Suite 502, in New York. 'Victor Matthews: The Vortex' will run through Feb. 23. Image courtesy of De Buck Gallery.

The opening reception for Victor Matthews will be Thursday, Jan. 12, from 6-8 p.m. at De Buck Gallery, 511 W. 25th St., Suite 502, in New York. ‘Victor Matthews: The Vortex’ will run through Feb. 23. Image courtesy of De Buck Gallery.

NEW YORK – De Buck Gallery will present its first exhibition of the new year, Victor Matthews: The Vortex, opening Thursday, Jan. 12. This exhibition will mark the artist’s premiere at the gallery. The Vortex will feature several large-scale oil paintings and pastels all created within the last year.

Matthews’ colorful swirls of primary colors convey a trance-inducing motion, luring the viewer into their realm, but unlike the menacing hypnotist portrayed in movies, pendulum in hand, probing for dark secrets, Matthews unlocks childhood nostalgia, memories of circus tents and lollipops, dreams, and the subconscious thrill of, who knew, living. From even a quick meeting with the artist, his joie de vie is uniquely recognizable, and one can find this refreshing optimism evident in his work.

Regarding the creation of this series Matthews has said, “I started to daydream about the first time my mother took me to Coney Island. It was the Fourth of July and I saw a child with a large lollipop that resembled a twisted rainbow. It is as clear today as it was then.” Like childhood, and the circus for that matter, there are undertones of mystery and the unknown apparent in Matthews’ work, he states, “I always had dreams of tornados, the center that pulls, the power within, natural force.” The dialogue between these two seemingly opposing forces creates a dramatic tension that is The Vortex, a story Matthews tells through the language of color.

The saturated hues of the artist’s oil paintings, rotating feverishly atop the canvas, stand in contrast to the gentle nature of his pastels, which Matthews shapes by hand, less tools or artifice, creating an alternative juxtaposition within this exhibition. Matthews credits Brice Marden, an old friend and artistic hero, as inspiration for showing the works included in this exhibition. During a visit to Matthews’ studio, Marden was drawn to the spontaneity of the work.

Rather than meticulously creating faultless shapes, Matthews focuses on the organic process of inventing each one, a method that one could read as more pure and innocent, much like his childhood inspiration of time spent with his mother. Whatever this “vortex” is that Matthews has created, it is, at least partially, the power, or “pull” of the act of creating art. Like hypnotism, the success of the work lies in the subject’s (viewer’s) receptivity to the power of suggestion.

Victor Matthews was born in Brooklyn in 1963 and currently lives and works in New York City. His work has been included in exhibitions worldwide including Galleria Sala 1, Rome; Sculpture Center, Long Island City; Museum Overholland, Amsterdam; Guggenheim, Venice; and the 48th Biennale de Venezia (1999.) His work is in the private collection of Brice Marden, Francesco Clemente, Salman Rushdie, Donald Baechler, Russell Simmons, Beth Rudin DeWoody, Ronald Perelman, Forest Whitaker, Patrice and Gisele Courtier, and Jay Z, among others. For more information on the artist, contact Kathryn McSweeney at Kathryn@debuckgallery.com.


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The opening reception for Victor Matthews will be Thursday, Jan. 12, from 6-8 p.m. at De Buck Gallery, 511 W. 25th St., Suite 502, in New York. 'Victor Matthews: The Vortex' will run through Feb. 23. Image courtesy of De Buck Gallery.

The opening reception for Victor Matthews will be Thursday, Jan. 12, from 6-8 p.m. at De Buck Gallery, 511 W. 25th St., Suite 502, in New York. ‘Victor Matthews: The Vortex’ will run through Feb. 23. Image courtesy of De Buck Gallery.