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  • July 22, 2024 1:27 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from Artnet News

    MoMA owns four Monets. Three are on view in the permanent collection galleries on the fifth floor, the largest of which is a sprawling, curved display from the French Impressionist’s Water Lilies series. But the famous canvas wasn’t the museum’s first choice. In 1955, MoMA became the first U.S. institution to acquire one of Monet’s Water Lilies, a sprawling 18.5-foot-long example. It had been eight years since Abstract Expressionist Jackson Pollock hit the scene flinging paints, and Monet’s Impressionist work was a clear precursor. Alas, MoMA only had their Water Lillies until 1958, when an historic fire incinerated the artwork. The reason the fire broke out was once again because MoMA was an early adopter—in this case of air conditioning. At noon on April 15, crews renovating the system took a smoke break during their lunch hour. A spark from one of their cigarettes fluttered into a nearby pile of sawdust, which went up in flames. The fire spread to paint cans, which ignited even more violently, filling the building with thick black smoke in minutes, endangering both people and paintings. As the New York Times reported the next day, crowds of workers in Midtown gaped at the hellish scene unfolding: a three-alarm fire blackening and busting out the building’s sleek glass facade. Firefighters swarmed the scene, and the museum’s 500 visitors and staff were evacuated. Most escaped through adjoining buildings, like MoMA’s offices and the Whitney Museum of Art, but 200 had to wait on the roof garden for an hour before they could be rescued. One of the repairmen perished in the fire, and 28 firefighters and three employees sustained injuries. Publications recounted the chaos, despair, and eventual relief at the scene with a flourish.

    Upon reaching the street, staff members including board chairman Nelson Rockefeller caught their breath and returned inside to save as many of the museum’s 2,000 artworks on view as they could. Handing the pieces down a bucket brigade–style chain lining a stairwell, they rescued a whopping $4 million in art ($43 million today) while firefighters spent an hour dousing the blaze. The estimated damages amounted to under $300,000 ($3.2 million today).

    MoMA’s building recovered easily, but the smoke and hoses damaged half a dozen artworks, including Umberto Boccioni’s The City Rises (1910), Larry Rivers’s Washington Crossing the Delaware (1953), Candido Portinari’s 1939 World’s Fair mural Festival of St. John’s Eve, and Pawel Tchelitchew’s Hide-and-Seek (1940-42)—one of the museum’s most popular offerings, according to Time—along with a seven-foot rendition from Monet’s Water Lilies that came out looking like a “burnt marshmallow.” Monet’s larger Water Lilies also proved unsalvageable, all but crushed by firefighters who had to force their way into the gallery put out the blaze. Jean Volkner, who studied under the nation’s leading conservators, managed to restore the smoke-ridden facade of Jackson Pollock’s Number 1A (1948).

    Meanwhile, Georges Seurat’s A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte (1884–86) was at MoMA for its only-ever loan from the Art Institute of Chicago. Eleven people assisted in evacuating the 500-pound display, which was reinstalled in the New York museum in May`1—then returned home to Chicago under armed guard two weeks later.

    In the end, MoMA paired their $100,000 insurance payout from the fire with funds from the Mrs. Simon Guggenheim fund to buy another Monet — this time the triptych we know today — that the New York Times swore was even better. MoMA heeded the Fire Commissioner’s admonitions and re-built the gallery walls from cinder blocks rather than wood, and Volkmer went on to find the museum’s first in-house conservation department. The oft-forgotten fire’s mark still remains today.

    See Original Post


  • July 22, 2024 1:17 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from CISA

    CISA is aware of the widespread outage affecting Microsoft Windows hosts due to an issue with a recent CrowdStrike update and is working closely with CrowdStrike and federal, state, local, tribal and territorial (SLTT) partners, as well as critical infrastructure and international partners to assess impacts and support remediation efforts. CrowdStrike has confirmed the outage:

    • Impacts Windows 10 and later systems.
    • Does not impact Mac and Linux hosts.
    • Is due to the CrowdStrike Falcon content update and not to malicious cyber activity.

    According to CrowdStrike, the issue has been identified, isolated and a fix has been deployed. CrowdStrike customer organizations should reference CrowdStrike guidance and their customer portal to resolve the issue.

    See Original Post

  • July 22, 2024 12:56 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from MPMA

     

     

    Registration

    See Original Post

  • July 11, 2024 9:23 AM | Anonymous

    Reposted from DHS/CISA

    Contact Commercial Facilities Sector Management at CommercialFacilitiesSector@cisa.dhs.gov or learn more at https://www.cisa.gov/topics/critical-infrastructure-security-and-resilience/critical-infrastructure-sectors/commercial-facilities-sector.

    See Original Post

     


  • July 11, 2024 9:20 AM | Anonymous

    Reposted from DHS/CISA

    All organizations should share information on incidents and anomalous activity to CISA 24/7 Operations Center at report@cisa.gov or Report | CISA and/or to the FBI via your local FBI field office or the FBI’s 24/7 CyWatch at (855) 292-3937 or CyWatch@fbi.gov. State, local, tribal, and territorial (SLTT) organizations should report incidents to MS-ISAC (866-787-4722 or SOC@cisecurity.org.

    See Original Post


  • July 11, 2024 9:16 AM | Anonymous

    Reposted from DHS/CISA

    CISA provides secure means for constituents and partners to report incidents, phishing attempts, malware, and vulnerabilities.

    Report a Cybersecurity Incident: Report anomalous cyber activity and/or cyber incidents 24/7 to report@cisa.gov or (888) 282-0870. Contact Us: Central@CISA.dhs.gov

    • Report an Incident

    • Report Phishing

    • Report a Vulnerability

    See Original Post


  • July 11, 2024 9:12 AM | Anonymous

    Reposted from DHC/CISA

    The CISA Services Catalog is all CISA in one place – a single resource that provides users with access to information on services across CISA’s mission areas that are available to Federal Government, State, Local, Tribal, and Territorial Government Private Industry Academia, and NGO and Non-Profit stakeholders.

    The Catalog is interactive, allowing users to filter and quickly access applicable services with just a few clicks: CISA Services Catalog | CISA

    See Original Post

  • July 11, 2024 9:04 AM | Anonymous

    Reposted from DHS/CISA

    Weather CISA Cyber Essentials guides leaders of small businesses, as well as leaders of small and local government agencies, as they work to develop an actionable understanding of where to start implementing organizational cybersecurity practices.

    Consistent with the NIST Cybersecurity Framework and other standards, the Cyber Essentials are the starting point to cyber readiness.

    See Original Post



  • July 11, 2024 8:59 AM | Anonymous

    Reposted from DHA/CISA

    The Commercial Facilities Sector Risk Management Agency (SRMA) Community of Interest (COI) site enables users to easily access relevant and current information specific to the Commercial Facilities Sector.

    If you need a HSIN account, please contact HSIN@HQ.DHS.GOV and request access to the HSIN-CI and the Commercial Facilities Community of Interest.

    • Provide your name, business email address, company, and reason for the request (access information pertinent to your job as your organization’s security director, cybersecurity officer, etc.)

    See Original Post


  • July 10, 2024 2:14 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from DHS/CISA

    October 2024 marks the 21st Cybersecurity Awareness Month, and CISA needs your help to amplify messaging, not only throughout the month, but also year-round. The enduring Cybersecurity Awareness Month theme, Secure Our World, reminds us that there are simple behavior changes that will make us all MUCH SAFER while online or using connected devices:

     Using strong passwords and a password manager

    • Turning on MFA
    • Recognizing and reporting phishing
    • Updating software

    Join CISA and the National Cybersecurity Alliance for a webinar on July 16th from 2-3pm ET to learn how you and your organization can get involved. To register, click hereAlso, if you would like to request a CISA speaker for your Cybersecurity Awareness Month event, please complete a CISA Speaker Request Form and then email it as an attachment to cisa.speakers@cisa.dhs.gov no later than August 30, 2024.

    See Original Post


  
 

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