首页
登录
职称英语
When, If Ever, Can Museums Sell Their Works? The director
When, If Ever, Can Museums Sell Their Works? The director
游客
2023-07-26
31
管理
问题
When, If Ever, Can Museums Sell Their Works?
The director of the art-rich yet cash-poor National Academy Museum in New York expected strong opposition when its board decided to sell two Hudson River School paintings for around $15 million.
The director, Carmine Branagan, had already approached leaders of two groups to which the academy belonged about the prospect. She knew that both the American Association of Museums (AAM) and Association of Art Museum Directors (AAMD) had firm policies against museums’ selling off artworks because of financial hardship and were not going to make an exception.
Even so, she said, she was not prepared for the directors group’s immediate response to the sale. In an e-mail message on Dec. 5 to its 190 members, it condemned the academy, founded in 1825, for "breaching one of the most basic and important AAMD’s principles" and called on members "to suspend any loans of works of art to and any collaboration on exhibitions with the National Academy."
Branagan, who had by that time withdrawn her membership from both groups, said she "was shocked by the tone of the letter, like we had committed some crimes." She called the withdrawal of loans "a death knell (丧钟声)" for the museum, adding, "What the AAMD have done is basically shoot us while we’re wounded."
Beyond shaping the fate of any one museum, this exchange has sparked larger questions over a principle that has long seemed sacred. Why, several experts ask, is it so wrong for a museum to sell art from its collection to raise badly-needed funds and now that many institutions are facing financial hardship, should the ban on selling art to cover operating costs be eased?
Lending urgency to the discussion are the efforts of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, which has one of the world’s best collections of contemporary art but whose funds is said to have shriveled(萎缩) to $6 million from more than $40 million over the last nine years. Wouldn’t it be preferable, some people asked this month, to sell a Mark Rothko painting or a couple of Robert Rauschenberg’s legendary "combines" -- the museum owns 11 -- than to risk closing its doors. Finally, the museum announced $30 million donations by the billionaire Eli Broad last week that would prevent the sales of any artworks.
Yet defenders of the prohibition warn that such sales can irreparably (不能挽回地) damage an institution. "Selling an object is a knee-jerk (下意识的)act, and it undermines core principles of a museum," said Michael Conforti, president of the directors’ association and director of the Clark Art Institute in Williams-town, Massachusetts. "There are always other options."
The sale of artwork from a museum’s permanent collection, known as deaccessioning(博物馆收藏品等出售), is not illegal in the United States, provided that any terms accompanying the original donation of artwork are respected. In Europe, by contrast, many museums are state-financed and prevented by national law from deaccessioning.
But under the code of ethics of the American Association of Museums, the proceeds should be "used only for the acquisition, preservation, protection or care of collections." The code of the Association of Art Museum Directors is even stricter, specifying that funds should not be used "for purposes other than acquisitions of works of art for the collection."
Dorm Zaretsky, a New York lawyer who specializes in art cases, has sympathized with the National Academy, asking why a museum can sell art to buy more art but not to cover overhead costs or a much-needed education center. "Why should we automatically assume that buying art always justifies a deaccessioning, but that no other use of proceeds -- no matter how important to an institution’s mission--ever can" he wrote.
Even Patty Gerstenblith, a law professor at DePaul University in Chicago known for her strong standpoint on protecting cultural patrimony (祖传的财物), said her position had softened over the years. "If it’s really a life-or-death situation, if it’s a choice between selling a Rauschenberg and keeping the museum doors open, I think there’s some justification for selling the painting," she said.
But several directors drew a much harder line, noting that museums get tax-deductible donations of art and cash to safeguard art collections for the public. Selling off any holdings for profit would thus betray that trust, they say, not to mention robbing a community of art, so no exceptions for financial hardships should be allowed.
It’s a classic slippery slope. This thinking goes: letting one museum sell off two paintings paves the way for dozens of museums to sell off thousands of artworks, perhaps routinely.
Deaccessioning has proven thorny for museums even when the money is directed into accepted channels like acquisitions.
Sometimes the controversy centers on the irreplaceable nature of the object for sale, when Thomas Hoving, then the director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, began aggressively sorting out its collection in the early 1970s, selling high-profile paintings like Van Gogh’s "Olive Pickers" and Rousseau’s "Tropics". The Metropolitan owned only one other painting by Rousseau, and the resistance was fierce.
Yet critics of strict deaccessioning rules make a public-access argument as well. "Most big museums can’t show 90 percent of the objects they own -- it’s all in storage," said Michael O’Hare, a cultural policy professor at the University of California, Berkeley. "What’s wrong with selling these objects to smaller museums or even private collectors, who are more likely to put them on display?"
At the National Academy, Branagan called deaccessinning an act of last resort, one that she would not have considered without a "long-range financial and programmatic" plan. Branagan said she told her members as much before they voted for the sale -- 181 to 2 in favor -- in November:
"I remember saying: unless you believe you can support sweeping change, then do not vote for deaccessioning," she said. "The tragedy isn’t that we’re going to sell these four pieces. That’s not a tragedy. The tragedy would be if in 10 or 15 years we were back here having the same conversation." [br] From the first paragraph we know that the National Academy Museum is ______.
选项
A、abundant in artworks
B、expecting strong resistance
C、abundant in money
D、selling three paintings
答案
A
解析
段首处设题。第段第一句提到The director of the art-rich yet cash-poor National Academy Museum in New York....其中art-rich与选项 A 中的abundant in artworks属于同义转换,故 A 为本题答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/2869666.html
相关试题推荐
Wemustnot______(想当然地认为)thattheboardofthedirectorswillapproveofthe
Thenewdirectorisquitereserved.Never______(我从未见他和手下员工进行私下交谈).haveIfoundh
______(怀疑该计划的可靠性),thedirectoraskedsomeexpertstoinspectit.Doubtingther
When,IfEver,CanMuseumsSellTheirWorks?Thedirector
When,IfEver,CanMuseumsSellTheirWorks?Thedirector
When,IfEver,CanMuseumsSellTheirWorks?Thedirector
When,IfEver,CanMuseumsSellTheirWorks?Thedirector
FromBostontoLosAngeles,fromNewYorkCitytoChicagotoDallas,museums
FromBostontoLosAngeles,fromNewYorkCitytoChicagotoDallas,museums
Hissalaryasadirectorismuchhigher____________(和老师的工资相比).Hissalaryasadi
随机试题
Tobesuccessfulinajob【B1】______,youshould【B2】______certainpersonal
[originaltext]W:Wouldyouliketoseeamenu?M:No,thankyou.Ialreadyknow
一国两制OneCountry,TwoSystems
下列对保险表述不正确的是()。A.危险是保险存在的前提条件,但并非任何危险都
工字形截面梁在图示荷载作用上,截面上的正应力分布为:A.图(1) B.图(2)
在某企业的工程项目管理数据库中供应商关系Supp、项目关系Proj和零件关系Pa
下列不属于探究式教学特征的是()。A.问题情境特征 B.思维开放特征 C
可用于成瘾性阿片类镇痛药过量解救的药物是A.苯甲酸钠咖啡因 B.纳洛酮 C.
下列属于注册建造师管理签章文件中合同管理文件类别的有( )。A.工程费用索赔申请
甲公司的资质等级为二级,而某工程项目需要一级资质的承包商承建,于是甲公司就借用了
最新回复
(
0
)