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  • Why Greece Does Not Need the Elgin Marbles

    Michael Daley – an (unpublished) paper delivered at the Economist Athens Conference, 12 March 2003

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Joshua Charow unveils the remaining spaces that helped foster New York City’s epicentral art world reputation

    (All photography in this article courtesy of Joshua Charow.)

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • “The Fate of the Parthenon Sculptures before and after Elgin”

    The abiding central contention in the Elgin Marbles dispute is unfounded

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Holbein’s Anne Boleyns and the “Discovery” Trope

    In art restoration, where claimed “discoveries” so often mask bungled interventions, the proof of the pudding is in the looking

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Sex, Trigonometry and Anne Boleyn’s Recovered Likeness

    Art can suffer many injuries and indignities. The worst of these, short of outright destruction – but also irreversible – is restoration damage

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • ARTWATCH AT THIRTY, PART II: THE ARTFUL PROMOTION OF THE WORLD’S WORST RESTORATIONS

    How the defence of bad restorations spawns shadowy, secretive Committees-of-Exoneration

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • ArtWatch at Thirty, Part I: The Unstoppable, “Rapidly Filed Away” Sistine Chapel Restoration

    November this year marked ArtWatch International’s thirtieth anniversary and May 26th next year will mark the fifteenth anniversary of the death of its founder, James Beck, Professor of Renaissance Art History at Columbia University. 

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Further Thoughts II: The less and less Leonardo ex-Cook collection Salvator Mundi

    Jacques Franck concludes a three-part demolition of the once attributed but now deposed, $450m New York/Russian/Saudi Leonardo da Vinci Salvator Mundi.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • PROLOGUE TO FURTHER THOUGHTS II

    Jacques Franck explores the damaging restorations and mis-attributed works that follow art historical studies and scientific essays made in ignorance of actual historical artistic practices.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • The Demise of the National Gallery’s “made just like Rubens” Samson and Delilah with inexplicably cropped toes

    Dalya Alberge reports a negative result on Artificial Intelligence comparisons of the Samson and Delilah’s brushwork with that on 148 uncontested Rubens paintings.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Peter Freeth R. A. – 40 Years of Aquatints

    There are no fewer than seventy-six works of constant, unsettling power in this show – every one of which is monumental in its effect regardless of size.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • An Appliance of Science in Art Historical Studies

    “The thrilling focus put by Ann Pizzorusso’s research on the geology of Leonardo’s landscapes in works such as the Virgin of the Rocks and the Louvre’s The Virgin and Child with St. Anne is of foremost importance…”

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • With the Sistine Chapel ceiling we know, but who wrecked Gustav Klimt’s Helene and Sonja portraits?

    A century on from Klimt’s death scarcely a single picture has survived restorations true to its original self.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • A National Gallery restoration that repudiates earlier National Gallery restorations

    Museum staffs invariably and hubristically claim that their expert and state-of-the-art picture restorations render all earlier studies obsolete.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • The Disappeared Salvator Mundi’s endgame: Part I: Altered States and a Disappeared Book

    The notoriously disappeared picture is set to become a musical in 2022 in which “artistic liberties will be freely taken to make an enlightening and entertaining experience”. Amazon is offering T-Shirts showing the Salvator Mundi as it had looked in 2011 when part-restored.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Further thoughts about the ex-Cook Collection Salvator Mundi

    The Leonardo Salvator Mundi controversy turns on which artist’s hand is – or which artists’ hands are – present on the painting. While many scholars agree that more than one hand is present, as is demonstrated here, neither belongs to Leonardo.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • The Saviour and a Stealth-Attribution

    After a dozen art historians had bet the art historical farm on a “from-nowhere” Salvator Mundi being an autograph Leonardo painting, it first fetched $450m in 2017 and then disappeared.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Situating La Bella Principessa’s Eye

    Showing how the drawn construction of “La Bella Principessa’s” eye bears stylistic affinities with of eyes encountered in Cubist artists like Juan Gris and is anatomically incompatible with Leonardo’s own drawn and painted eyes.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Hollow Gods and Dangerous Beauty

    The unsung – and free – delights of London’s non-museum, private art gallery network, as encountered in two memorable exhibitions on one street in St James’.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • From Guido to Boccioni – The Liberation and Repudiation of Classicism

    The Estorick Collection’s ground-breaking Anders Rådén and Matt Smith show Umberto Boccioni: Recreating the Lost Sculptures

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Books on No-Hope Attributions

    Recent additions to the fast-growing and least-estimable art-book publishing genre – The Partisan Book of Art Attribution Advocacy.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • The non-appearing, disappeared, $450million, now officially not-Leonardo, Salvator Mundi

    The downgrading of the $450million, supposedly long-lost, Leonardo-painted prototype Salvator Mundi by the Louvre Museum in its catalogue for the blockbuster exhibition “Léonard de Vinci”.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Notre-Dame: A Tale of Two Pathologies

    An indecent, inferno-facilitated rush by the French State to rebuild “anew” a long-neglected and disparaged Gothic Cathedral as a “contemporary art gesture”.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Notre-Dame Cathedral: Another restoration, another fire – and more unanswered questions

    The Notre-Dame Cathedral inferno was not an act of God. It arose within a particular restoration programme under a singular (ambivalent) French heritage ethos that has spawned many fires.

    Read the Artwatch UK article here.
  • $450 Million Salvator Mundi: Dead in the Water

    The attribution of the world’s most expensive painting – the $450 million Louvre Abu Dhabi Salvator Mundi – has collapsed under the combined weights of two scholars’ findings and the picture’s own artistic and art historical implausibility.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here
  • The pear-shaped Salvatore Mundi

    New revelations send the Louvre Abu Dhabi Salvatore Mundi towards a pear-shaped fate.

    Read the Artwatch UK Article Here
  • Two Developments in Abu Dhabi Louvre Leonardo Saga

    At left, a previous “Leonardo” Salvator Mundi contender. At right, the Louvre Abu Dhabi Salvator Mundi as sold in 2017. The seller is now suing Sotheby’s for fraud in connection with the sale to him of the painting.

    Read the ArtWatch UK Article Here
  • Whitewashing of Chartres Cathedral Stonework

    Chartres cathedral stone work in its pre- and post-restoration conditions.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here
  • How the Louvre Abu Dhabi Salvator Mundi became a Leonardo-from-nowhere

    left to right: screenshot of 2005 state; as exhibited as an autograph Leonardo painting in Dec 2011 at the National Gallery; as sold at Christie’s, New York, in Nov 2017

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • The Words of Conservation: Manet, Pastiche, and Authenticity at the Guggenheim

    Édouard Manet, Woman in Striped Dress (before and after treatment – DETAIL), 1877–80. Oil on canvas, 174.3 x 83.5 cm
    Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Thannhauser Collection, Gift, Justin K. Thannhauser, 1978. Photo: Allison Chipak. © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, 2018.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
    2018-08-31 - Manet - Guggenheim - Words of Conservation
  • “Leonardo scholar challenges attribution of $450m painting”

    Image: infra-red reflectogram of Louvre Abu Dhabi “Salvator Mundi”; detail of the London National Gallery’s “Christ among the Doctors” by Leonardo’s assistant, Bernardino Luini

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Deaccession Misperceptions

    Check the facts before critiquing the professionals.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Berkshire Museum Art Goes to Auction

    Image: Art deaccessioned from the Berkshire on view at Sotheby’s. Courtesy: Two Coats of Paint blog.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • In Memoriam: Tom Wolfe (1930-2018)

    Image: Tom Wolfe as photographed in New York in 1968 by Sam Falk for The New York Times.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Rodin & Ancient Greek Art: A Personal View of a Magnificent Show


    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • What is a Library without its Books? The Battle to Save the UT Austin Fine Arts Library.

    Image Courtesy: Abigail Sharp.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • The Leonardo "Salvator Mundi" Saga: Three Developments

    Image Courtesy: Drew Angerer / Getty Images – as published 2 Apr 2018 in “Buffalo News”.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • In Celebration: Paul Anthony Harford, Draughtsman

    On view at Focal Point Gallery through April 22nd (Southend-on-Sea, England).

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Startling Disclosures on the re-re-restored Leonardo Salvator Mundi

    Image: The two Arab princes who settled into a bidding war for the work. Courtesy: Getty Images.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • In Their Own Words Pt. 3: The Reception of the First Leonardo ‘Salvator Mundi’

    Image Courtesy: The Sunday Times Magazine (Oct 2011)

    Read the ArtWatchUK article here.
  • In Their Own Words Pt 2: The Curse of (revenue-generating, thought-precluding) Audio-Guides

    Image: Clay Cofer, an Art Team member at the Barnes Foundation, does a pop-up gallery talk for visitors. Courtesy: SYDNEY SCHAEFER, Barnes Foundation Staff Photographer.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • In Their Own Words Pt 1: Civilisations & Burrell Loans

    Image: Simon Schama fronting the scathingly-received 2018 multi-voiced Civilisations outside Itimad-ud-Daulah’s Tomb in Agra, Uttar Pradesh. Courtesy: BBC.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Holding the Public’s Interest: The Show of Art Conservation

    Image: Jackson Pollock Number 1, 1949 (1949). Enamel and metallic paint on canvas. Courtesy: MOCA LA.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • A day in the life of the new Louvre Abu Dhabi Annexe’s pricey new Leonardo Salvator Mundi

    Image: French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe with Shiekh Hamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, CEO of Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, during inauguration of BNP paribas Abu Dhabi Global market Branch on February 10, 2018. Courtesy: Karim Sahib for AFP / Art Daily.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
    2018-02-13 ArtWatch UK - Salvator Mundi Louvre Abu Dhabi
  • Nouveau riche? Welcome to the Club!

    Michael Daley considers Georgina Adams’ new book “The Dark Side of the Boom”.
    Image Courtesy: Amazon

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
    2018-02-27 -Dark-Side-Of-The-Boom-Art-Market-ArtWatchUK
  • Who Gets the Conservation Dollars??

    Image Courtesy: Bank of America Art Conservation Project.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • The $450m New York Leonardo Salvator Mundi Part II: It Restores, It Sells, therefore It Is

    The painting being examined in the National Gallery in 2011. Courtesy: CNBC.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
    2018-02-05 - ArtWatch UK - Salvator Mundi Part II
  • Another Loss for Arts Stewardship: La Salle’s Sale

    Image Courtesy: La Salle University (Philadelphia, PA).

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Museums & the Public Interest: More Questions for the Berkshire Museum

    Image Courtesy: artnet News.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Fragonard’s Layers & the Promotion of Conservation Treatments

    Image courtesy: Mandel Ngan / AFP.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Problems with the New York Leonardo Salvator Mundi Part I: Provenance and Presentation

    Images: Heydenreich’s 1964 study “Leonardo’s ‘Salvator Mundi’”.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Museum Mismanagement on Trial: The Berkshire Museum Taken to Court.


    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Satellite Museum Dreams and Misgivings in Abu Dhabi

    Image courtesy: Saadiyat Cultural District website.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Degas and the Problem of Finish

    AWUK Feature by Alexander Adams.

    Image: Dance Examination (Examen de Danse), 1880. Courtesy: Denver Art Museum.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Leonardo, Salvator Mundi, and an “unusual lapse”

    Image: Salvator Mundi (detail)

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • THE ANNUAL JAMES BECK MEMORIAL LECTURE: ‘Never trust the teller trust the tale’

    A memorial lecture, two journals and an assault on scholarship.

    Image: Bartolomeo Manfredi, Mars Chastising Cupid, 1613. Courtesy: Art Institute of Chicago.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • The (not so-new) latest New Leonardo Discovery.

    Image: detail of “Joconde nue” (as published showing prick marks when the design was transferred for use on panel). Courtesy: Musée Condé, Chantilly.

    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Mondrian, Schmondrian – another lapse of museum expertise.


    Read the ArtWatch UK article here.
  • Master Plan? Or Master Disaster? The Nation’s Arts Community Reacts to the Berkshire Museum’s Plan to Sell 40 Works.

    Image: Berkshire Museum in Pittsfield, MA.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • UPDATE: Mucha’s “Slav Epic” in Transit

    Image: Mucha installation in 2011, which will now be shifted across two more continents. Courtesy: The Art Newspaper.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Review: Center for Art Law Event “F for Fake”.

    Image: Orson Wells in “F for Fake” (1973).

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Where There’s a Will, There’s a Way: Rodin’s Fragile “L’Absolution” Treated for Display & Travel?

    Image: Auguste Rodin’s “L’Absolution” on display. Courtesy: Musée Rodin Paris.

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
  • Mucha’s “Slav Epic” On Tour: What Story Will the Canvases Tell after Two Years of Traveling?

    Image: “The-Slavs in Their Original Homeland” (1912). Courtesy: Mucha Foundation

    Read the ArtWatch article here.
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ArtWatch International is a non-profit 501(c)3 incorporated in the state of New York in 1992 as an international advocate for the voice of art in the conservation and stewardship of historically significant works. It was founded by Columbia University art historian Professor James Beck to serve as a watchdog organization in the arena of cultural policy, protecting works of art and the public interest from vested private and institutional interests. We operate on a project by project basis, establishing task forces to determine the levels and methods of engagement in specific conservation, restoration and cultural policy issues and problems. Some problems have been addressed through scholarly work and publications, other through advisory and consulting arrangements, still others by symposia, debate, lecture forums, and intensive work with the media.

For more from our partner organization, ArtWatch UK, click here:

2015-11-10 - broadway James McCreery & Co
Article, Position Statement

Overwhelming Support as Landmarks Works Through the Backlog of Proposed Sites.

Ruth Osborne Last Thursday morning at the Municipal Building at No. 1 Centre Street. dozens more supporters of landmark designations in New York City demonstrated their care for historic preservation in the city as well as their respect for the Landmarks Preservation Commission’s noble mission. This was another in a series of public hearings and viewings begun […]

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November 10, 2015/0 Comments/by Nick
https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/2015-11-10-broadway-James-McCreery-Co.jpg 1133 1000 Nick https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Artwatch-International-300x138.jpg Nick2015-11-10 12:08:102017-09-26 16:06:11Overwhelming Support as Landmarks Works Through the Backlog of Proposed Sites.
2015-11-04 - de Young Museum San Francisco facade
Article, Position Statement

The Business of Museums: Mismanagement at the de Young in San Francisco.

Ruth Osborne We often forget that museums are a big business. They draw in millions annually, contribute billions to the national economy, transport major works of priceless artistic value miles around the globe, and provide jobs for hundreds of thousands in the U.S. alone.   Most of this work is done behind gallery walls – […]

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November 4, 2015/0 Comments/by Nick
https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/2015-11-04-de-Young-Museum-San-Francisco-facade.jpg 286 460 Nick https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Artwatch-International-300x138.jpg Nick2015-11-04 09:05:392017-09-26 16:15:10The Business of Museums: Mismanagement at the de Young in San Francisco.
2015-09-25 - Palmyra Giovanni Battista Borra
Article

The Battle to Remember Palmyra: Daniel Johnson Speaks Out For the Artistic Heritage Lost in Its Destruction.

Ruth Osborne Earlier this month, news of the destruction of the ancient Temple of Bel at Palmyra by ISIS militants was confirmed. Satellite imagery showed the area had been laid completely to rubble, only a few months after satellite footage recorded the Temple of Baal Shamin as the first architectural casualty under ISIS at Palmyra. […]

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September 25, 2015/0 Comments/by Nick
https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/2015-09-25-Palmyra-Giovanni-Battista-Borra.jpg 300 160 Nick https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Artwatch-International-300x138.jpg Nick2015-09-25 17:56:222017-09-28 11:48:58The Battle to Remember Palmyra: Daniel Johnson Speaks Out For the Artistic Heritage Lost in Its Destruction.
2015-09-04 - Grand Central Station Chrysler Building
Article, Position Statement

Punishing Preservationists for their Lack of Resources? The Dangers of the Proposed “Intro 775” Landmarks Legislation.

Ruth Osborne   I recently attended a lecture on the survival of one of New York City’s landmarked sites (now a professionally-staffed museum), and the speaker was very reluctant to answer mine and others’ questions about the politics behind historic preservation and the Landmarks Preservation Commission’s authority. He did, however, acknowledge that public opinion and […]

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September 4, 2015/0 Comments/by Nick
https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/2015-09-04-Grand-Central-Station-Chrysler-Building.jpg 2112 2112 Nick https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Artwatch-International-300x138.jpg Nick2015-09-04 15:19:512017-09-28 17:08:31Punishing Preservationists for their Lack of Resources? The Dangers of the Proposed "Intro 775" Landmarks Legislation.
Article, Position Statement

Betraying Bequests and Selling Art to Pay…Nonexistent Bills?: Thomas Cole’s “Portage Falls” Still at Risk.

Ruth Osborne An important Thomas Cole painting (valued recently at appr. $20 million) owned by the Seward House Historic Museum in Auburn, NY is still under risk at being sold against the donor’s bequest. The culprit is the Emerson Foundation, a private family charitable trust whose philanthropy focuses on education, arts cultural institutions, health and […]

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August 27, 2015/0 Comments/by Nick
https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/2015-08-27-Seward-House-Museum.jpg 360 550 Nick https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Artwatch-International-300x138.jpg Nick2015-08-27 13:03:192017-09-28 17:07:28Betraying Bequests and Selling Art to Pay...Nonexistent Bills?: Thomas Cole's "Portage Falls" Still at Risk.
2015-08-17 - Vatican Patrum App
Article

Fundraising for Art Restoration? There’s an App for That!

Ruth Osborne ArtWatch spoke out concerning the fundraising schemes at the Vatican back in November 2013. But now it seems they have gone beyond their annual five-day VIP tour of the Vatican’s historic buildings and collection to appeal to donors for big conservation projects, and have thought up an enterprising new way to generate support via social media. The Vatican just came […]

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August 17, 2015/0 Comments/by Nick
https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/2015-08-17-Vatican-Patrum-App.jpg 572 322 Nick https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Artwatch-International-300x138.jpg Nick2015-08-17 14:46:502017-09-28 17:25:55Fundraising for Art Restoration? There's an App for That!
2015-07-20 - Penn Station demolition
Article, Event

To Protect and Preserve: A Discussion on the Ethics of Caring for Art & Historic Landmarks.

Ruth Osborne Last Wednesday evening, I had the opportunity to present on past, present, and future wrongs done to art, before an engaged and impassioned audience at The Coffee House Club in midtown Manhattan. Historic preservation and issues of transparency and careful stewardship of the arts are inherently linked with the original aims of ArtWatch International, an […]

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July 20, 2015/0 Comments/by Nick
https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/2015-07-20-Penn-Station-demolition.jpg 640 964 Nick https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Artwatch-International-300x138.jpg Nick2015-07-20 21:29:402017-09-28 17:31:18To Protect and Preserve: A Discussion on the Ethics of Caring for Art & Historic Landmarks.
2015-07-10 - Delaware Art Museum
Article

Disasters of Deaccessioning: Delaware Art Museum’s Final Blow to its Collection.

Ruth Osborne Just last week, the Trustees of the Delaware Art Museum announced the private sales of two paintings from its permanent collection as they closed “one of the most difficult chapters in the story of the Delaware Art Museum,” according to its CEO Mike Miller. He asserted in the Press Statement that the goal […]

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July 10, 2015/0 Comments/by Nick
https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/2015-07-10-Delaware-Art-Museum.jpg 932 1564 Nick https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Artwatch-International-300x138.jpg Nick2015-07-10 10:50:232017-09-28 17:40:41Disasters of Deaccessioning: Delaware Art Museum's Final Blow to its Collection.
2015-06-18 - New York Landmarks Conservancy panel
Article

NYLC Panel: Is There Room for Both Historic Preservation & New Development in NYC?

Ruth Osborne The New York Landmarks Conservancy recently hosted a panel with a title that posed the question: “Preservation and Development: Is there room in this town for both?” The discussion that followed was informative about the current opinions towards the importance of historic preservation and the hope to strike an understanding balance with new development in New […]

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June 18, 2015/0 Comments/by Nick
https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/2015-06-18-New-York-Landmarks-Conservancy-panel.jpg 2448 3264 Nick https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Artwatch-International-300x138.jpg Nick2015-06-18 14:30:422017-09-28 17:49:00NYLC Panel: Is There Room for Both Historic Preservation & New Development in NYC?
2015-06-04 - Frick Collection
Article

Support for Landmarks in New York Prevails: Frick Decides Against Proposed Massive Expansion

Ruth Osborne It appears the Board of The Frick Collection in New York has decided against its 2014 proposed expansion plans to build the equivalent of a ten-story tower atop their original 1911 landmarked museum building on 5th Avenue. Culture reporter at The New York Times, Robin Pogrebin, has reported that the Board decided it […]

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June 4, 2015/0 Comments/by Nick
https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/2015-06-04-Frick-Collection.jpg 1536 2048 Nick https://www.artwatchinternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Artwatch-International-300x138.jpg Nick2015-06-04 18:53:222017-09-28 17:52:56Support for Landmarks in New York Prevails: Frick Decides Against Proposed Massive Expansion
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