Archive for the ‘Baltimore’ Category

Should the Rosetta Stone go Back to Egypt?

Posted by Gary Vikan on Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Photo: GV

Photo: GV

Zahi Hawass, Egypt’s “Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities,” friend of Walters’ curator Regine Schulz (left), and charismatic star of anything pyramids-related on TV, was all over CNN prime time two weeks ago.

His emotional plea was simple and complelling: Zahi wants to borrow the famous Rosetta Stone from the British Museum for an exhibition in Egypt. What a novel idea!

Photo: GV

Photo: GV

Now, some might reasonably wonder if the Rosetta Stone, once back in to Egypt, will ever make its way back to England again. Not to worry, says Zahi, we are not the “Pirates of the Caribbean”; you English (and, by implication, all western powers) are the real pirates. 

This is a line of reasoning that Ben Weideman of CNN finds quite compelling. 

And Zahi goes on to point out the obvious: namely, that King Tut’s treasures have been sent all over the world by the Egyptians.

Well, have a look at the label, and read it through the eyes of Zahi Hawass.

Photo: GV

Photo: GV

The Rosetta Stone was discovered in the town the Egyptians call Rashid, not Rosetta, by the invading French, but very soon taken from them by the conquering British. In fact, the British “captured” it and “presented” it to King George the III.

Interesting enough, but read on: it seems that the usefulness of the Rosetta (aka Rashid) Stone for deciphering hieroglyphs was realized nearly 200 years ago! It certainly is not much to look at and, until recently, it was exhibited without a glass cover on its case, so that anyone could touch it.

So Zahi Hawass seems to have a point, and at this stage, no decision on the possible loan to Egypt has been made by the Trustees of the British Museum.

And so that pretty plain chunk of black stone in the main Egyptian gallery at the British Museum – the one with all those little squiggles on it – is now more popular than ever!

Photo: GV

Photo: GV

A Ray of Hope from within the Gloom of the Arts Scene

Posted by Gary Vikan on Monday, January 4th, 2010

In an article in the SUN on December 29th (“Audience for the arts down, but not out”) – which draws on a recent survey issued by the National Endowment for the Arts – we learned that between 2002 and 2008 attendance at art museums and galleries declined by 22% (classical music was down by 17% and opera by nearly 34%); this happened in just six years.

And this was happening during a period of unprecedented museum building expansion! 

Nowadays, significantly fewer people are taking part in the arts, and those that are, are doing so less frequently than in the past.

In that same article we learned that the percentage of leisure time among those 18 and over devoted to “arts” activities declined from 41% to 34.6% between 1992 and 2008.

Another disturbing fact: only 2 of 10 people ages 18-24 had ever taken a visual arts class in 2008, compared with 4 of 10 in 1982.

Ouch!

This seems not to be just a phase or cycle, but a fundamental shift, driven by technology and by the explosion in competing choices for our leisure time.

 The good news, such as it is, is that participation in sports and movies has declined even more precipitously - and, as might be expected, many more people are experiencing art on the internet than in the past. 

Today, on the op-ed page of the SUN (“A new exodus”), we learned, among other things, that the population of Baltimore City declined by 13.5% between 1990 and 2010.

And we all know that this decade ended with the DOW lower than it was in 2000.

Is there any good news out there?

There certainly is.  Since the Walters eliminated its general admission fee in 2006, our base-line (non-exhibition-driven) attendance is up, and remaining up, by about 40%.

And the attendance at the show we closed yesterday, HEROES: Mortals and Myths in Ancient Greece, exceeded our projections by 40%.

Something to be thankful for at the beginning of a new decade.

Photo: GV

Photo: GV

The Mega-Walters – the one that was never built!

Posted by Gary Vikan on Monday, December 21st, 2009

IMG_8284

An article in The New York Times of December 12th, titled “In the Arts, Bigger Buildings May Not Be Better” (http://s.nyt.com/u/vd0), invites us to consider whether art museum directors and thier donors were taken in with “irrational exuberance” in recent years rivaling that of the crazies in the stock market.

The articles references lots of expensive buildings with flash that aspired to the same civic economic and public-relations impact of Frank Gehry’s Bilbao adventure of 1997 – and in various degrees, failed.

Short-term assets with an initial spike in attendance and, in some but not all cases, good press, were turning into long-term financial liabilities.

One might come away thinking that it was a sign of good museum management NOT to build.

Well, in 1958 the WALTERS had great ambitions for a mega-museum. It would have occupied the entire block upon which its three present public buildings now sit.  That the Garrett-Jacobs Mansion (Stanford White/John Russell Pope) would have been a casualty of this new Walters got people’s attention. There was a campaign to defeat the  bond bill, and the building never happened.

Which was probably a good thing.

The fall-back “new Walters” was realized with the Brutalist-style Shepley Bulfinch adventure in concrete of 1974. The problem (among many others) was that it leeked heat in the winter and absorbed heat in the summer – and it opened just in time for the oil crisis!

The Walters itself was nearly a casualty of that unlucky timing.

But then, for all its faults, it was probably good for Baltimore that we got it. Without the 74 Wing, as it was called, there would be no Walters auditorium, no Walters temporary exhibition space, and thousands of works collected by Walters father and son would have remain in storage. 

But had that Times article been written in 1975 and not in 2009, we certainly would have been mentioned – and not at all favorably.

Walters - Centre Street Building

Walters - Centre Street Building

You got a problem with Jeff Koons?

Posted by Gary Vikan on Friday, December 18th, 2009

Photo: GV

Photo: GV

Well, I did, too.

I used to be really hostile toward the glitzy sorts of things in this photo.  Specifically, the shiny busted eggs and balloon dogs, at  $10+m.

A gimmick.

Koons was born in York, PA, and went to MICA.  A home town guy.

Nonetheless, I just didn’t like those things.

But I’ve changed my mind.  Artists, I’ve come to recognize, are intuitive neuroscientists. Which means to say that I believe that they struggle to “work” our visual brain. Our neurons. Simple as that.

Michelangelo was doing just that as he probed Carrara marble to discover those powerful “slaves” imprisoned inside.

And I think Koons has figured it out, too.  Sort of.

So what if those Koons dogs and eggs cost a fortune?

The Magi are Triple-Bunked!

Posted by Gary Vikan on Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Burgundy.Paris.2006 419

We have some pretty spectacular art in our current show, The Christmas Story: Picturing the Birth of Christ in Medieval Manuscripts. But it’s very hard to top this Romanesque limestone relief in the Cathedral of Sainte-Lazare in Autun, France.

It’s my favorite.

The Three Magi are triple-bunked, sleeping with their crowns on, perhaps so they can get an early start. The Angel of the Lord is about the necessary business of sending them on to Bethlehem, where they will give their exotic gifts to the Baby Jesus.

But the Magi’s wake-up call is ever so subtle. Just a gentle tap on a pinkie finger, and the kingly owner of that finger suddenly has his eyes wide open. Simultaneously, and above, the Angel offers a pointed reminder of the Star of Bethlehem,  that will be their guide.

Could it be any sweeter?

But don’t be mistaken, these mid-12th century French sculptors could just as skillfully show the brutality of  the Last Judgement. 

Autun, France - Last Judgement (detail)

Autun, France - Last Judgement (detail)

Art Museums: Men run them, but don’t much visit them

Posted by Gary Vikan on Saturday, December 12th, 2009

The Walters - some "manly" swords

The Walters - some "manly" swords

According to The New York Times (11/29), the proportion of men taking in the current exhibition at the Met featuring Samuri swords is unusally high.

HHHmmm…

So maybe, the writer speculated, there should be more shows on the shapes of WWII bombs, on naked women, and maybe on fishhooks.

After all, upward to 70% of those attending fine arts mueums are women. So how about some outreach to the male population, the ones watching the NFL on Sunday afternoon when they could as well be enjoying some Renaissance Madonnas or French 19th-century landscapes?

Food for thought.  And by the way, while it is true that almost 70% of museum visitors are women, more than 80% of those very museums are directed by men.

And until fairly recently, almost all the artists were men. (This is certainly true for the Walters.) 

Go figure…

Guess what Tom Hoving said about the Walters?!

Posted by Gary Vikan on Friday, December 11th, 2009

 hoving7-20-1

Tom Hoving died yesterday (NYT, 12/11: “Thomas Hoving, Who Shook Up The Met as Its Director, Dies at 78″). Unless you’re way into art museums, you probably don’t recognize the name. But Hoving had an enormous impact no only on the Met, but on all art museums, both here and abroad.

How So?

Though a true American aristocrat himself, Tom Hoving broke the then thoroughly retro American museum world wide open in the most un-aristocratic sorts of ways. As director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art from 1967 to 1977 (he was appointed at age 35!), Hoving literally “made the mummies dance,” along with virtually everything and everybody else, as he opened up the stodgy old Met to Harlem, and with the first incarnation of King Tut, invented the blockbuster.

Art museums have not been the same since.

Tom Hoving was bash, sometimes abrasive, and always self-promoting. He had a wicked gift for the baroque embellshment of his own past.

He was afraid of nothing.

So it’s not surprising that Tom Hoving’s picture is on the cover of Art for Dummies.  He had the guts to write this thoroughly-commercial self-help guide for art novices.

In it, he spouts opinions about every artist and architectural monument, and every art museum you could possibly imagine.

Including the Walters.

On page 274, in his cross-country tour of US art museums, Tom Hoving stops in Baltimore. And as for the Walters, Hoving’s opinion is categorical: in his view, the Walters is the finest art museum, “piece for piece,” in America.

I think we should all take some pride in that.

Internet Exposure for Art Museums, Good or Bad?

Posted by Gary Vikan on Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

 

mona.2nd visit

About a week ago I was part of an intense conversation with the director of a major New York City museum (in fact, MoMA) about whether it is good or bad to have broad exposure for our collections on the Internet. (As if, in the end, we have a choice.)

The point of view he was articulating is a  familiar one.  Namely, that if we put high quality digitized images of our works of art on our websites, the “authentic” work will somehow be devalued, people will visit us on screen, and our galleries will be empty. And things can only get worse, with the integration of the  Internet and television, and 3D TV just around the corner.

Variations on a theme…. 

As TV was going to be the death of movies, as Blockbusters – the “Home Entertainment Center” – was going to be the death of both TV and the movies – and bowling, and just about everything that would oblige us to leave the comfort and safety of our homes.  

“Nesting,” “cocooning,” and the inevitable disintegration of our social fabric.

So why do those tens of thousands of people jostle in front of the Mona Lisa in the Louvre, so far from their respective “nests”?  For one simple reason: because it is famous. So people want to get close to it, even if they never really see it very well. And how did it get to be so famous? Through reproductions!

And wouldn’t be great if our version of the Mona Lisa at the Walters (above the door, at the left) were that famous?

Well, maybe not quite that famous.

The Walters - Renaissance Gallery

The Walters - Renaissance Gallery

Is Satellite Radio the Coal-Mine Canary for Classical Music?

Posted by Gary Vikan on Sunday, December 6th, 2009

images

I recently got satellite radio for my home. Commercial free, and pre-selected channels by the dozens, covering every musical taste.  My plan has about 180 stations, including a few that I don’t have any use for – like Martha Stewart’s “How-To For Living,” and Traffic & Weather for the Dallas/Forth Worth area.

The first 30 or so stations are variations on “pop” and “rock,” including Elvis 24/7 (wow!) and “Deep Classic Rock” as well as “Hard and Heavy Classic Rock.”

Eventually, in the 70-80 station bracket, after 6 country stations and as many with variantions on “Hip-Hop/R&B,” we arrive at the stuff of opera houses and concert halls.     

And there are just thee: “Met Opera Radio,” “Classical Pops,” and “Symphonic & Chamber Music” !

Is the marketplace speaking?

Is the classical-music canary dozing off?

Henry Walters Made Some Mistakes

Posted by Gary Vikan on Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Henry Walters

Henry Walters

Yes, it’s true. And all you have to do to uncover them is to get your hands on the first Walters ”Handbook of the Collection,” from 1936, and compare it with the 1997 Handbook.

About a quarter of the works in the later book were acquired by the museum after Henry died, in 1931. Most of these are Asian objects, donated by regional collectors, but there is Ethiopian art as well, which came into the collection by purchase in the 1990s.

But there was, in the 1930s Walters, a Canaletto “View of the Doges’ Palace,” which wasn’t a Canaletto after all, and a Rembrandt portrait of his wife, which turn out to be wishful thinking.

But strangest of all is Gallery XII of the origianl Walters; it was the English Gallery, with all the English greats, including  Hogarth, Gainsborough, Reynolds, and Constable.

You’ll find none of these paintings on the walls the Walters of 2009; they simply didn’t pass the test of time, and are now bearing other labels, in deep storage.

All great collectors make mistakes, and Henry Walters was no exception. The amazing thing is how often he got it right.