EXPANDING ART SALES

Worldwide art auction sales increased 16 percent in the 1999-2000 season. “The US sold $922 million worth of art and the UK sold £578 million; closest behind them were France with £93 million ($130.8 million) and Germany at £46 million ($64.7 million). Italy came fifth with £26 million ($36.6 million).” – The Art Newspaper

QUESTION OF CONTROL

Canada’s Ontario government decides to turn control of the disputed McMichael Gallery back to the gallery’s founders. The decision could have a wide impact. “The spectre of government intrusion into the direction of a gallery robs curators of other galleries of the ability to assure potential donors that their artworks will be held securely in the future, said Richard Darroch of the Canadian Museums Association.” – The Globe and Mail (Canada)

FIRE SALE

The Barnes Collection, deep in financial trouble, considers selling some objects. “Envisaged for the block are not the Matisses and Cezannes that the now disgraced former Barnes director Richard Glanton wanted to sell for $200 million, but pottery and other personal property which remain in the offices and other locations that belong to the foundation.” – The Art Newspaper

ART OF PROTEST

“Artists don’t understand politics better than anyone else. Why should they? So when they turn their political views into art, something often goes wrong. Not always, of course. Goya and Picasso made great art out of political protest, but did so by going beyond the issues of the moment.” A new show in London looks at protest art from the 1960s and ’70s. – The Telegraph (UK)

RUMORS OF ITS DEATH…

Even before the British Arts Council promised £37 million in additional funding, there were plenty of signs that regional theater is already thriving. Audiences are growing, communities are showing support, and theaters are discovering that their power is in numbers. “If one regional theatre thrives, so will others. If one closes, it threatens others. If you’ve got leprosy and your hand drops off, it doesn’t benefit the rest of the body. It’s still dying.” – The Guardian

DRINK UP

German Chancellor Gerhard Shroeder is about to become a pop star. “Earlier this year Mr Schroeder joked to an autograph hunter ‘Get me a beer or I’ll go on strike!’ as he toured eastern Germany to rally support for his centre-left Social Democrats. But his remark was recorded, and comedian Stefan Raab mixed it into a drinking song called Get Me A Beer!” – BBC