“In a long-awaited decision, a US federal court has rejected an appeal by a New York antiquities dealer who argued that he should not be convicted of violating US law for having dealt in Egyptian antiquities. The objects are claimed as Egyptian property under Egyptian law. The dealer, Frederick Schultz, was sentenced in June 2002 to 33 months in prison for conspiracy to receive stolen property, but argued that Egypt’s claim to own the objects under its patrimony law did not make them ‘stolen’ in the U.S.”
Category: issues
Cleveland’s Arts Industry Takes A Big Hit
A new study showing that Cleveland’s arts industry has lost 163 jobs and millions of dollars in the last year is raising serious red flags among the area’s cultural and political power players. The arts are hurting all over, of course, but in Cleveland, which has never made arts funding a priority, the economic pain is multiplied, and arts advocates are saying that only a large infusion of cash can hope to turn around the city’s slumping cultural fortunes.
Fortifying An ‘Arts Neighborhood’
“Standing by a South Boston construction site, Mayor Thomas M. Menino yesterday quoted Pablo Picasso, as the Fort Point Cultural Collaborative announced plans for Midway Studios, a 200,000-square-foot development that will house 89 new artists’ live/work studios, a gallery, a black box theater, and other cultural facilities in Boston’s Fort Point neighborhood.” The project is designed to combat the seemingly endless cycle that sees artists move into a run-down urban neighborhood and breathe new life into it, only to be forced out by the rising property values that their good work makes inevitable.
Committing To The Arts In Elvis City
The city of Memphis is known mainly for barbecue and Elvis, but lately, the western Tennessee city has been making a concerted push to become what is commonly referred to as a “big-league town.” That means getting at least one major league sports franchise to move in: Memphis swiped Vancouver’s NBA team last year. It means a serious effort to revitalize the downtown area: check. And, according to the folks in charge of Memphis, it means creating major public-private partnerships to support the arts and cultivate a unique musical and artistic scene in the city. Despite the nationwide trend towards slashing arts funding, Memphis is launching “a fund drive to generate $25 million for the Greater Memphis Arts Council.”
Recycle Me
“Is nothing new under the sun? some critics are asking (properly attributing that phrase to the writer of Ecclesiastes in the Bible, of course). Author Joan Didion pointed out in a 1996 speech that when she arrived at college ‘it was immediately impressed on me that all the novels necessary had already been written.’ Does that suggest we’re living in unimaginative times in which lazy artists simply mimic the past or, worse, slip into plagiarism? A quick scan of popular culture could suggest that.”
Boston To Create New Artist Center
Boston is about to break ground on a new project to develop artist spaces in three hundred-year-old warehouses. The Fort Point artist project is a $23-million, 206,000-square-foot complex. “Architectural designs for the project include 200-seat and 50-seat black box theaters, classroom and rehearsal space, an art gallery and cafe, and 89 units of artist housing ranging from 920 to 2,300 square feet. The collaborative also plans to rent about 7,000 square feet of office and retail space to nonprofit arts groups and arts-related businesses.”
Californians Rally To Save State Arts Funding
Hundreds of Californians rallied in San Francisco Wednesday to protest state legislature plans to eliminate arts funding. “Beating drums, reciting poetry and waving signs, the crowd of artists and arts lovers danced, chanted and cheered as speakers urged the state Legislature to spare the 27-year-old California Arts Council. Legislators are considering slashing the agency’s budget to help close the state’s $38.2 billion deficit.”
Ending Cal. Arts Funding Is Shortsighted (And Costly)
A proposal to zero out the California Arts Council will make recovering it difficult later. “Eliminating the Arts Council in a bad budget year is like taking your car to the junkyard because you can’t afford to buy gas this week. Times will get better, and when they do, re-creating a state arts council will be far more costly and complex than keeping the existing one in place.”
Delaying Hall Might Put Austin Arts Groups On The Street
Because of funding problems, a long-awaited new performing arts center in Austin, Texas might be delayed. And that could be a disaster for the city’s performing arts groups. “It remains to be seen whether the opening of the Long Center will come before the University of Texas must close Bass Concert Hall for safety improvements in 2006. If neither large hall is open, the city’s symphony, opera and ballet and major touring shows will be left without a suitable home.”
Libeskind, Silverstein Agree To Team Up On Ground Zero Rebuild
Ground Zero will be rebuilt with oversight from an apparently tenuous partnership between architect Daniel Libeskind and developer Larry Silverstein. Still, for New York officials, any partnership is better than the uncertainty that has been dogging the project. “The agreement… came during an eight-hour negotiating session that stretched from Tuesday afternoon into Wednesday morning… The impasse centered on how much influence Mr. Libeskind would have on the design of the first office building to go up at the site, the 1,776-foot tower that will define the rebuilt trade center’s presence on the Lower Manhattan skyline.”
