Portrait Gallery’s New Chief

“Martin E. Sullivan, the chief executive officer of the Historic St. Mary’s City Commission, has been selected as the new director of the National Portrait Gallery, the Smithsonian Institution announced yesterday… [Sullivan] wants to continue the collaboration with other Smithsonian museums, expand the Portrait Gallery’s Web site and beef up the electronic information in the galleries.”

D.C. Wilson Tribute Losing Its Star Power

“Yesterday Charles S. Dutton dropped out of the Kennedy Center’s August Wilson tribute this spring — the second big name to leave the 10-play retrospective.” Actress Phylicia Rashad had already departed the ambitious project for a Broadway role; Dutton’s jilting apparently came as the result of being offered a part in an undisclosed movie.

Vancouver Olympics Embrace Anti-Olympic Art

Included in the Cultural Olympiad accompanying Vancouver’s hosting of the 2012 Olympic Games is a disturbing photo in which First Nations protesters decry what they see as the decimating of native lands for the Olympics. Olympic organizers see the photo’s inclusion as “proof that their event is artistically sound, not just a cheery diversion.”

Another Antiquities Dealer Under Fire

California antiquities dealer Robert Olson, 79, is under investigation by federal authorities for illegal importation and tax fraud. Olson is loudly proclaiming his innocence, but the feds, who have been keeping tabs on Olson for five years, say that he has smuggled illegal artifacts into the US, convinced appraisers to drastically overvalue them, and then taken huge tax deductions after donating them to museums.

Jer-ry! Jer-ry! Jer-ry!

“Will it turn out that the great American musical of the early 21st century is an opera born in Britain? A convincing case for the rights to that title was made by the celestial Jerry Springer: The Opera, the notorious show from London about the transcendent within tabloid television.”