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Rothko, Diebenkorn and Degas join Obama in the White House

Filed under: Art, Celebrity Design

The world's latest Nobel Peace Prize winner also has excellent taste in art. President Barack Obama has skipped the staid portraits that are usually pulled to adorn White House walls and instead opted for three dozen pieces with a bit more of an edge. Works have been pulled from the National Gallery of Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden and the Smithsonian American Art Museum to decorate the building the symbolizes executive authority in the United States.

The Obama family is definitely leaning modern, with Rothko, Degas and Diebenkorn among the artists represented. They've also included a word painting by Ed Ruscha. Not wanting to deprive the public of the opportunity to view works on display, the Obamas limited their choices to artwork in museum storage.

There's now a lot of money hanging from those White House walls. "Red Band" by Rothko, "Berkeley No. 52" by Diebenkorn and "White Line" by Sam Francis together are estimated to be worth between $20 million and $30 million. Throw a piece by Jasper Johns into the mix – specifically "Numerals, 0 through 9" – and you get a sense of the collection the Obamas have assembled.

Even with access to a collection of that caliber, though, I'd still never take Obama's job. And, there aren't enough Rothkos out there to change my mind.

Museum of Latin American Art Gets Big Endowment

Filed under: Art

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One museum that has gotten a bit of financial help this week is the Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach, California. It has received a $25 million endowment from the estate of its founder. Dr. Robert Gumbiner. According to the Los Angeles Times, Dr. Gumbiner was a pioneer in managed healthcare, who died in January at 85. He had established the museum in 1996 and was an avid collector of Latin American art. He left his substantial collection to the museum. Only the earnings of the endowment may be used to pay the museum's operating expenses and ten percent of the earnings have to be reinvested in the endowment in order to help keep the museum going for a long time. The museum will also get additional support from a gift of the Robert Gumbiner Foundation. Both endowments will generate money to pay less than half of the museum's operating costs and so fundraising is still essential. A gala is planned for April 25 and will be the first of a series of events to raise money for the museum.

The museum is located in the former home of the Balboa Amusement Producing Company, a silent film studio between 1913 and 1918. It is currently showing a solo exhibition by the Puerto Rican artist, Arnaldo Roche, titled Arnaldo Roche: Brotherhood/Hermandad which is comprised of 19 large-scale works created between 2002 and 2007.

Las Vegas Art Museum Is Closing

Filed under: Art

las vegas museum of artIt looks like art will be increasingly hard to find in Las Vegas. I wrote last April about the closing of the Guggenheim Hermitage Museum in the Venetian. Now the Las Vegas Sun reports that the Las Vegas Art Museum is closing its doors. The museum will close on February 28th. It will keep its name and remain an entity with the hope of opening up its doors again in better times. Like many other museums, the LVAM has been suffering from a lack of donations. The museum cut spending and jobs less than three months ago in an effort to keep the museum viable. The museum began 59 years ago as an art league and became a fine art museum in 1974. It specializes in contemporary art and is currently showing an exhibit featuring 20 emerging artists who live and work in Los Angeles, California.

Eli Broad Plans His Own Art Museum

Filed under: Art

So maybe now we know why billionaire art collector Eli Broad was so busy at the contemporary art shows in New York last week. Bloomberg reports that Broad is interested in building a public museum in Beverly Hills, California. The news comes after a year in which he got his own building at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art but then decided not to give his collection to the museum. Broad's new museum would display works from his charitable foundation and personal collection and would hopefully open in about three years. It would be located near the corner of Santa Monica and Wilshire boulevards and unseat a Starbucks. The foundation already has a headquarters and private museum in Santa Monica.

Broad's foundation is heavily contemporary with photographs by Cindy Sherman, paintings by Jasper Johns, Andy Warhol's 1986 silkscreen of the Statue of Liberty, Damien Hirst's 1994 lamb in formaldehyde, and Charles Ray's 1973 collection of 16 Kodachrome self-portraits called ``All My Clothes.'' Last week he picked up Ed Ruscha's 1969 mustard-hued ``Desire'' for $2.4 million, Donald Judd aluminum and Plexiglas sculpture for $1.1 million, a small Robert Rauschenberg painting for $2.6 million, and a Jeff Koons sculpture for $2.2 million.


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