The attorneys representing the 100,000 plaintiffs who sued Sotheby’s and Christie’s for price fixing stand to make $27 million for their work after negotiating a $512 million settlement. – New York Times
Author: Douglas McLennan
GIOTTO OR NOT?
Scholars are arguing about whether the bones found under the Duomo in Florence are those of Renaissance painter Giotto. Those who believe it’s the painter base their identification on “an analysis of the skeleton. Reconstructing the face, they came up with a strong likeness to what may or may not be a Giotto self-portrait in a fresco.” A planned reburial of the bones was put on hold while the identity got sorted out, but now it’s on again for Jan. 8, the anniversary of the painter’s death. – Nando Times
SWISS BANKS AND THE HOLOCAUST
Swiss banks plan to distribute $1.25 billion in reparations to Holocaust survivors. “Until just recently, Swiss bankers were demanding impossible-to-produce death certificates and other documentation before they would pay out claims.” But many of the survivors or their heirs are contesting the settlement. – New Jersey Online
BILBAO’S FANCY NEW AIRPORT
“As it yaws into view from the window of your incoming jet, the new Bilbao airport looks like a giant bird or plane that has made it to the ground shortly ahead of you. Perched on a virgin hillside site, untainted by the usual miasma of support buildings, Santiago Calatrava’s operatic design, known locally as la paloma (the dove), is as precious as it is special. It has been designed – unlike, say, Heathrow or Gatwick, which have grown as if organically – as a gateway to the Basque capital, which in recent years has become a showcase for show-off contemporary architecture.” – The Guardian
BUT IS IT ART?
An artist claims to have created the first “serious” art on a Palm Pilot. But is it really art? “While such pioneering work is often interesting, the question is whether novelty alone is a useful criterion for art or merely a great excuse for talking about technology.” – Wired
THE UNPREPOSSESSING NOBEL WRITER
Just who is Gao Xingjian, the Chinese writer who won the 2000 Nobel for literature? “Mr. Gao has 18 plays, 4 works of literary criticism and 5 books of fiction to his name, but his entire oeuvre has been banned on the Chinese mainland since 1985, while his best-known novel, ‘Soul Mountain,’ a lyrical account of a long journey through the Chinese backlands, has so far been published only in Taiwan, Sweden, France and Australia.” – New York Times
FESTIVAL FEUD
What started out as a dispute over rent for Laguna Beach’s famed Festival of the Arts and Pageant of the Masters show has escalated to a threat to move the festival and a campaign by the artists to remove the festival’s board. “Artists are usually more accepting of change. This came as a surprise to me that this particular group of artists doesn’t have the willingness to look at the possibilities.” – CNN 11/20/00
AN “INFORMATION MAP OF THE WORLD”
New online encyclopedias turn to users as contributors, hoping to create real-time maps of all of current human knowledge. One site has 60,000 contributors from 90 countries. “These sites appear at a time in the Internet’s history when its utopian ideals linger as tenuously as the fun money investors doled out over the past two years.” – The Standard 11/20/00
WHO OWNS IMAGES?
Some San Francisco muralists are suing Bill Gates’ giant photo image company Corbis because Corbis is selling photos of murals in the Bay Area. The images include copyright notices but the owner is listed as the photographer and not the muralist. – Law.com 11/20/00
IT’D BE DIFFERENT IF IT WAS GREAT ARCHITECTURE
It will cost $1.5 billion to repair New York’s crumbling Lincoln Center. So instead, why not just tear it down and start over? “It’s time to start thinking hard about tearing down Lincoln Center and building up a new, much better one—an architectural masterpiece that will signal New York City’s miraculous recovery over the last decade and its renewed confidence that it will be the capital of the twenty-first century as it has been of the twentieth.” – City Journal 11/00
