INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION FORCULTURAL PROPERTY PROTECTION
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Reposted from Artnet News
In the wake of George Floyd’s murder and the subsequent protests, museums across the country began making pledges to initiate change within their walls. In emails and social media posts, institutions impugned racism and acknowledged their own complacency in systems that perpetuate it. They preached solidarity and inclusivity. They vowed to take a good hard look in the mirror, to reject silence, and to listen and learn.
Important though those statements were, many wanted even more to see action. Some institutions offered concrete plans, including, for example, staff trainings, inclusivity committees, and more diverse programming goals. But many also appeared content to rely on platitudes, or only delivered tangible plans after being called out for their passivity.
Below, we’ve collected various institutional pledges and checked in with them to see what progress they’ve made so far.
In late June, an open letter penned by six former employees of the New Orleans Museum of Art accused the institution of propagating “a plantation-like culture behind its facade” and for having a homogenous, mostly white staff. The letter, which began with the words “DISMANTLE NOMA,” cited a permanent installation called “The Greenwood Parlor” as an example of the museum’s insensitivity to racism. In response to the letter and public outcry, the museum posted a statement with both short- and long-term goals.
Commitments:
Where things stand: The museum has brought on an organization to facilitate diversity and equity training with staff that began this month and launched new systems for visitors to share questions and feedback. The institution is currently reaching out to community stakeholders and partners for “broader input on ‘The Greenwood Parlor,’” and implementing a new process for employees and individuals in the community to provide input on museum projects through an external group of advisors.
Former employee Taylor Brandon accused the museum of deleting a critical comment she made on an Instagram post that pictured the artwork of Glenn Ligon. In her comment, Brandon called out the museum for not supporting Black employees and mentioned specific names of upper managers, which SFMOMA claims violated Instagram’s terms of service. After a public outcry, the museum re-enabled posts to the original image and apologized. Following the incident, Nan Keeton, deputy director for external relations, left the museum, as did the recruitment staffing manager, and the director of human resources.
A month later, senior curator Gary Garrels resigned from his position after a former employee complained on social media that Garrels had said that, despite a recent push toward collecting work by artists of color, SFMOMA would continue to acquire works by white men, because not doing so would amount to reverse discrimination. Former employees created a petition calling for his resignation, and Garrels stepped down shortly thereafter.
Where things stand: The museum is currently interviewing candidates for the two director positions and, this week, is speaking with consultants to oversee anti-racist and implicit bias training for staff. Administration has begun investigating complaints of discrimination and harassment, past and present, and is in the process of revising its exhibition review system. The staff’s administrative bathrooms are now gender neutral. Two paid interns from historically Black colleges and universities are working remotely with the curatorial team this summer.
When the Met’s new director, Max Hollein, sent a letter declaring the museum’s commitment to diversity and support of Black Lives Matter, it was accompanied by a reproduction of Glenn Ligon’s artwork Untitled (I Do Not Always Feel Colored). In an Instagram post, Ligon called out the museum for not asking his permission to use the work, writing, “could y’all just stop, or ask me first?” Hollein apologized personally to the artist.
The Met’s chairman of European paintings, Keith Christiansen, was also the subject of public criticism after he posted an image of a French archaeologist on Juneteenth with a caption decrying “revolutionary zealots” who tore down monuments during the French Revolution. The underlying message—that contemporary protesters dismantling monuments to racist historical figures are comparable zealots—prompted outcry from staff and the public. In response to internal demands, the museum issued an institution-wide 13-prong anti-racism and diversity plan, including a $3 million fund to support the effort.
Where things stand: The Met has completed anti-racism training for department heads. Thanks to a recent gift from Adrienne Arsht, all Met internships will also now be paid. According to a spokesperson, “many other activities are in progress as reflected in our Commitments.”
In late June, 70 former staff members at MOCAD wrote a letter to the board calling for the removal of chief curator and executive director Elysia Borowy-Reeder, citing multiple instances of racist behavior. The writers of the letter, who chose to remain anonymous, claim that they had seen Borowy-Reeder commit “various racist micro-aggressions, mis-gendering, violent verbal outbursts, and the tokenization of marginalized artists, teen council members, and staff.”
The letter followed the departure of three Black curators from the museum in the previous eight months. Borowy-Reeder was suspended by the board before being fired outright on July 29. “We have no tolerance for harassment, discrimination, or abuse in any form,” the museum’s board wrote in a letter following the move.
Where things stand: Elyse Foltyn, the chair of MOCAD’s board, said in a statement to Artnet News that the museum has established a special review committee to propose ways to enhance diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. It is “pursuing immediate and necessary actions to increase the diversity of the nominating committee, executive committee, and board,” and “assessing how the employee voice can best be heard by the board.” The institution is also in the process of updating the MOCAD bylaws to revisit all protocols, including those that say employees can render complaints “related to the museum and its management.” It is also amending its employee handbook and benefits to assure employees are treated equitably. The museum has recently begun offering its employees parental leave.
The Whitney is no stranger to controversy. In 2017, a firestorm of criticism ensnared its biennial for its inclusion of Dana Schutz’s painting of lynched teenager Emmett Till in his coffin. At the next biennial, in 2019, protesters and participating artists boycotted the show in opposition to board member Warren Kanders, who owns Safariland, a producer of tear gas. (He eventually resigned.) Then, when the George Floyd protests engulfed New York streets, the Whitney boarded up its High Line-adjacent building, at a time when other local museums were offering their lobbies to aid protesters.
To celebrate Juneteenth, assistant curator Rujeko Hockley partnered with Instagram for a virtual exhibition celebrating Black artists, telling The Cut, “Art and protest, both, help us do this ‘freedom dreaming.’” In late July, the museum commissioned American Artistto create a digital work, part of an ongoing series titled “Looted,” which virtually “boarded up” the very artworks posted online.
Where things stand: “A process is underway to develop a plan that looks at all areas of our work (staff, program, audience/community, and patrons/board),” a representative for the museum told Artnet News. “The plan will highlight important steps already taken over the past few years and set a path forward for the institution to achieve the goals outlined by [director] Adam Weinberg in his letter. Over the next 14 months we will debut 10 exhibitions largely devoted to the work of BIPOC artists. In addition, we’ve made progress in working to identify and engage the best partners to facilitate anti-racism and unconscious bias training sessions for 100 percent of our staff, which we expect will begin by early fall.”
After the museum posted a vague message on social media stating its support for “equity and fairness,” followers quickly sounded off on the lack of a more meaningful statement that explicitly mentioned George Floyd or Black Lives Matter. In the wake of the criticism, Getty CEO James Cuno issued an apology that expressed remorse for its previously bland words, and promised a more responsible stance in the future. An open letter to the Getty’s board addressed the systemic racism and underlying inequities that exist within the institution, describing the newly created DEI council and task forces as lacking funding or support. Signatories also noted the overwhelming majority of white people holding senior positions and asked that the Getty ensure its own community adheres to the values it claims to espouse.
Where things stand: The institution had no updates on progress made, noting that the “Getty board of trustees meets in mid-September” and they “anticipate having something to share around that time.”
LACMA was one of the few institutions that participated in the #blackouttuesday social media initiative on its website, and went dark for a week to show solidarity with Black Lives Matter. The message was posted on Unframed, LACMA’s blog, and echoed broad sentiments opposing historical injustices and standing against violence.
Where things stand: “For LACMA, there is a renewed urgency to our efforts to move quickly to diversify the collection—and to make those efforts visible,” a representative from the museum told Artnet News. The institution has held two programs in its ongoing “Racism is a Public Health Issue” series so far: “Addressing Prejudices Against Asian Americans During the COVID-19 Pandemic” on May 7 and “Examining the Impact of Police Brutality on Black Communities in the Age of COVID-19” on July 21. The next program is set for September. The institution is planning a year-long series of programs showcasing recent acquisitions, with a “majority of the works shown created by BIPOC artists.” The programs will be accompanied by “discussions among curators and guest speakers,” the representative added. “The Black Lives Matter movement and efforts to end structural racism are sure to be recurring themes.”
In June, 22 members of the Guggenheim’s 23-person curatorial team sent a letter to the institution’s leadership demanding action in addressing what they called an “inequitable work environment that enables racism, white supremacy, and other discriminatory practices.” They also asked leaders to apologize to Chaédria LaBouvier, who in 2019 became the first Black curator to organize a solo show at the Guggenheim. “Working at the Guggenheim w/ Nancy Spector & the leadership was the most racist professional experience of my life,” LaBouvier wrote on Twitter. (Spector is currently taking a three-month sabbatical.) The curator’s letter goes on to castigate the museum for failing to “respond adequately—whether through statements or programming—to the global protests triggered by the murder of George Floyd.”
“We recognize the importance of developing inclusive programming, deepening community engagement, and diversifying our collection and exhibitions, staff, and board of trustees,” the museum’s director Richard Armstrong said in a statement on June 9—two weeks after Floyd’s murder. Armstrong pledged to create “paths that lead to a more inclusive and diverse museum and workplace,” but was otherwise largely devoid of concrete goals. Since then, the museum has made its full Diversity, Equity, Access and Inclusion (DEAI) plan publically available.
Where things stand: The museum has established a DEAI committee and created and shared its DEAI plan with the public.
“We are proud of the progress we’ve made while acknowledging that we have much work to do,” Armstrong said in a statement to Artnet. “The board of trustees has expressed their support of and commitment to working together with me and our staff to realize the plan.
See Original Post
After months of lockdown that have resulted in severe cutbacks, museums in New York can plan to reopen once more according to a statement today by governor Andrew Cuomo.
“Low-risk cultural activities, museums, aquariums, [and] other low risk cultural arts can reopen in New York City Aug. 24 so they can get their protocols in place,” Cuomo said on a conference call with reporters, according to CNBC.
Operations will be far from normal: strict social distancing measures, such as operating at 25 percent capacity, will be enforced. In his Tweet about the reopening, Cuomo also mandated timed ticketing and “pre-set staggered entry.”
Still, the news was a relief for beleaguered institutions.
“I’m walking on air! We’ve been waiting for weeks with bated breath,” Whitney Museum director Adam Weinberg told the New York Times, following the news.
In a statement to Artnet News, the Whitney gave a picture of its post-lockdown procedures: “The Museum also announced that pay-what-you-wish admission will be offered to all through September 28, 2020. Due to limited capacity and to facilitate contactless entry into the Museum, all visitors and members will need to reserve timed-entry tickets in advance on whitney.org.”
Museum directors and staffers were caught off guard last month when Cuomo announced that museums would not be allowed to open as part of part of the Phase 4 comeback that started July 20. Now, with New York state seeing less than one percent of all coronavirus tests come back positive for seven consecutive days, lockdown is finally being eased.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art had previously announced a reopening date of August 29, though it said it was awaiting further instruction from state authorities.
Now other museums are rolling out their planned reopen dates. The Whitney plans to open on September 3. Members will get earlier access, starting August 27 and continuing through August 31, according to the Times.
Meanwhile the Museum of the City of New York is planning to open August 27. The American Museum of Natural History had already announced a September 2 opening for members, followed by a September 9 opening for the general public.
In addition to timed ticketing and limited occupancy rules, temperature checks and face masks will also be mandated by the state.
Reposted from AAM
Watching people of all ages, races, religions, and nationalities stand up for equality in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, my thoughts have drifted back to my time at the Cincinnati Museum Center. In 2001, just after I joined the CMC as Vice President of Museums, civil protests broke out in the city over the police shooting of Timothy Thomas, an unarmed Black teenager, and the number of African American men who had been shot by the Cincinnati police in the past six years. “Fifteen Black men!” was the rallying cry of the protestors, who were fed up with the perceived indifference of the Cincinnati Police Department to the multiple deaths of African American men by their hands.
Cincinnati has a long history of segregation and poor race relations, and the municipal government has done little to effectively address the problem over the years. For example, after protests and riots broke out in 1968 over the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the city made only a few cosmetic changes before going back to things as usual. After the protests of 2001, many Cincinnati residents felt that more had to change in order for the city to heal and come together. The city had to address the root of the problems, not just gloss over systemic racism because the subject was uncomfortable. But few institutions at the time were stepping up to respond to the community discord, including the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, a place built for racial reconciliation. The Cincinnati Museum Center (CMC) decided to fill that void, making a conscious decision to become a place where people could come, meet, and become active participants in finding solutions to racism and its impact on the community.
When the protests broke out, the president of the center, Douglas McDonald, saw an opportunity for the museum to take a leadership role in our community by providing a safe place for community dialogue to help the city heal, and asked me to develop an exhibition on the protests. I assumed I would have a year or two to create it, but McDonald insisted that if we were going to be relevant to the current crisis we would have to develop and open the exhibition in only ninety days. The project consisted of mapping out a thematic approach to the exhibition, researching the history of race relations in Cincinnati, collecting oral histories from protestors and residents, acquiring images and artifacts, creating graphics and video, and writing the exhibition narrative. To make things even more daunting, we had to design and fabricate the 2,500-square-foot exhibition space while raising the funds to pay for it in just ninety days. The board quickly voted to approve the plans for the exhibition, with the exception of one member who thought such an exhibition would glorify the destruction and violence that had broken out in a few areas.
The exhibition had to address several issues that Cincinnati was facing. First, we needed to address the reasons for the protest—the killing of an unarmed Black teenager by the police. Second, we had to look at the history of police brutality in the city and the effects of systemic racism on people of color in Cincinnati. One of our main goals with the exhibition was giving voice to Cincinnatians who had not been able to articulate their grievances and who felt that their problems were not being heard or addressed. We saw this as the first step in helping to bring about racial reconciliation.
My team purposely designed the exhibit to get people to think and to react. To this end, we developed a “whisper tunnel,” a partially enclosed area where recordings played of stereotypes and racist comments people of the same race say to each other but would never say to a person of another race. We had monitors where community individuals could voice their opinions on race relations in the city and the causes of the protests. We created “graffiti” boards so visitors could write their views of race relations and suggestions for improving them. We worked with the National Conference of Christians and Jews to train facilitators to help guide group discussion and provided space for any group that felt the need to talk following their visit to the exhibition. We also provided each visitor with a postcard to write down their personal commitment to bring about change, which we mailed to them six months later as a reminder of their commitment. In publicizing the exhibition, we made sure people understood that it was about them and their place in this city. We wanted to make everyone feel like they had a voice, not only to express their feelings but also to suggest solutions.
In the exhibition, we worked to dispel some of the myths that circulated following the protests. One of these was the idea that only African American people are known to riot. Through research, we were able to establish that people of all races have historically protested and rioted when they felt like their voices had not been heard. As early as 1794, during the Whisky Rebellion, white Americans protested what they felt was an unjust tax, and the protest quickly became a riot characterized by violence and destruction of property. In 1829 and 1845, white Cincinnatians protested the number of African Americans living in the city and fired a cannon down the middle of the Black section of the city, causing mass destruction and injuries. In 1884 in Cincinnati, ten thousand people rioted against corruption in the criminal justice system and local government, and some protesters ended up burning down the courthouse. When African Americans began to riot in the 1960s, it was to protest decades of oppression, segregation, discrimination, inequity, and finally the killing of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The city responded by establishing a commission to examine the causes of the riots and make recommendations for change. The resulting report was sent to the mayor’s office and eventually shelved. No systemic changes were implemented, and the city returned to business as usual while racial tensions and inequality continued unchecked.
The protests of 2001 were different. Three decades after the end of the Civil Rights Movement, African Americans realized that few things had changed. The city was more segregated than ever, poverty in the downtown Over-the-Rhine district was rampant, and police brutality against African Americans continued unabated. But unlike the 1960s, the 2001 protests ended with hope for a real change in city governance and in the police departments. All over the city, churches, community groups, and civic organizations were coming together to talk about the protests and what they could do to improve life for all residents in the city. The local media not only reported on the protests and riots, but also what could be done to resolve the racial inequity problem. Again, a commission was established to make recommendations for improving community and police relations. A corporation called 3CDC (Cincinnati City Center Development Corporation) was formed to develop the Over-the-Rhine area, including market-priced housing, a school for the performing arts, new restaurants, and renovations and expansion to the Cincinnati Arts Institute and Music Hall. In the midst of this, the Cincinnati Museum Center seized the opportunity to play an active role in promoting change in the community and within the museum itself.
The museum changed for the better. The community had long valued the museum primarily because it was housed in Union Terminal, a beautiful historic art deco building. Now, people who had weddings and other events in the museum, or just visited with their children for a fun afternoon, came to value the center as a real resource for community dialogue and social change. The board and staff recognized that the museum could be nimble in its response to a crisis situation and that it could be objective in presenting disparate points of view while encouraging dialogue and racial healing. In turn, CMC changed and became bolder in its approach. It redirected its youth program to make membership more representative of the racial makeup of the city. It secured funding so that teachers could bring students to the center free of charge with transportation provided. It hired African American women to direct the Natural History Museum (whose first curator was James Audubon) and the Children’s Museum. The residents of Cincinnati came to view the museum in a different light: no longer as just a museum but an active member of the community. A few years later, when a multi-million dollar levy was placed on the ballot to restore and renovate the building, the people of the community passed it by 65 percent, a high vote of confidence in CMC.
Now, many museums are in the same position CMC was almost twenty years ago, and have the same opportunity for reinvention. If museums in the twenty-first century are to be agents of change, they must go beyond merely issuing statements of solidarity with Black Lives Matter and look within. Internally, museums must seriously examine their commitment to social change and equality and how that is reflected in their own staffing, programming, and collections. Then they can turn to examining how they can promote change in the larger society. They must reach out to their communities and provide them with opportunities and spaces to come together and create meaningful social dialogue, healing, and solutions. This is the difference between being merely a museum or being an active institution that cares about the community it serves. The Cincinnati Museum chose change from within, and that change reverberated throughout Cincinnati in 2001.
Reposted from Forbes
The Covid-19 pandemic is triggering layoffs in nearly every business sector. More than 1 million Americans continue to apply for jobless benefits every week. Call it realism or pessimism, but many businesses won't survive, and not just because of the mass shutdowns. As companies lay off thousands of people, they put themselves at risk of losing critical data because former employees can walk out the door with sensitive customer information and private records.
Tough times require tough measures, and layoffs are one of them. Yet many companies make matters even worse by handling layoffs poorly. Let’s take a look at what companies risk with improper offboarding and how your organization can make proper employee offboarding a priority.
What do companies risk with improper offboarding processes?
1. Data loss: When employees are laid off, the relationship between the employee and the organization can be soured. This could lead to former employees, who still have access to data, intentionally or unintentionally deleting or damaging files they know to be critical to the business.
If access to your organization’s critical data isn’t properly revoked, data breach events are a real possibility. This can also lead to the next major risk to your business. As an example, a former IT administrator at boot manufacturing company Lucchese was fired and took his frustration out on the system. He shut down servers, deleted files and caused immense damage to the company network.
2. Compliance violations: Regulatory compliance frameworks are an extremely important part of the overall security posture of your organization. Former employees who still have access to sensitive data can leak or destroy it, which can lead to major compliance violations. When you look at HIPAA or GDPR as examples, the cost to your business for a violation can be substantial. For instance, GDPR fines can range up to 20 million euros or up to 4% of your global turnover.
3. Breaches of confidentiality: In the highly competitive world of business, companies can unscrupulously poach employees from competitors to get access to confidential contracts, business agreements and other proprietary knowledge. A former employee who still has access to the company’s confidential information can take it with them to a new employer. The consequences can be devastating.
A real-world example played out in a job jump in the case of an automation engineer who left his position with a clean-energy company in the U.S. to work for a Chinese wind-turbine company. The engineer took the intellectual property in the form of automation code to the competing company and essentially ruined his former employer.
To protect an employer’s confidential information, there should be clear obligations in the employment contract with regard to how confidential information is to be treated during employment and after employment.
4. Data breach: The example given above details the real threat of another risk that comes from improperly offboarding an employee: stolen data. More than half of the employees surveyed by a Ponemon Institute study admitted to taking information from a former employer, and 40% admitted they intended to use it in a new job. Stolen data is a real security breach that has to be addressed by proper offboarding procedures and steps to prevent data exfiltration.
5. Ruined reputation: The reputation cost due to either data loss or a data breach resulting from a former employee can be significant. Customers can quickly find your competitor for the same goods or services if their confidence in your business’s reputation is lost. According to IBM’s Cost of a Data Breach Report 2019, the average total cost of a data breach is $3.92 million. The seemingly minor action of improperly offboarding an employee can lead to major consequences to your business.
6. Wasted spend: Compared to many of the costs I have detailed already, this particular risk is one that may fly under the radar in terms of costs to your business. Wasted spend can happen for your business with former employees who may be consuming licenses or other services in your G Suite or Office 365 environment, for example.
Without a proper offboarding process, services may be left consumed by the former employee, and license costs may continue to be charged for unused services, software and cloud applications. Proper offboarding of employees will allow deprovisioning these services, licenses and overall costs for the former employee.
Make employee offboarding a priority.
How do you mitigate the cybersecurity risks associated with proper employee offboarding? Make sure your process includes the following:
1. Conduct an exit interview: Aside from the employee being able to leave on a good note, the exit interview provides an opportunity for key security processes to take place. These include discussing company devices the employee has in their possession, company account access and credit cards, as well as getting contact information from them so they can be reached if needed after their last day.
2. Prevent email forwarding and file sharing: As part of the offboarding process, disable methods of data exfiltration. Data leakage could easily happen if former employees are able to access and forward emails and share files outside of the organization.
3. Revoke access to all applications and services: The majority of the risks to your business can be prevented by properly revoking access to applications and services.
4. Reset shared passwords: Passwords shared between groups or for services in the cloud should be reset as soon as possible.
5. Reassign suspended licenses to another employee: To eliminate wasted spend, reassign suspended licenses to another employee who will be assuming the former employee’s roles.
6. End things on a good note: Take a note from Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky, who handled the delicate situation of mass layoffs in the company due to Covid-19, by ending things on a good note. Express the value that employees brought to the company, and recognize them for those contributions in a positive way.
Reposted from The New York Times
The Guggenheim Museum has approved a plan to address complaints of entrenched racism within its walls. It is one of the first major cultural organizations to provide details of an expanded diversity effort.
On Monday, the museum announced to its staff a two-year initiative to create policies for reporting discrimination and developing diversity programs, according to Richard Armstrong, the museum’s director. New measures include paid internship opportunities for students from underrepresented backgrounds, a partnership with historically Black colleges and universities to promote job openings, and the creation of an industrywide professional network for people of color working at arts organizations. The road map also calls for a top management-level position to oversee diversity initiatives and the establishment of a committee to examine the institution’s exhibitions and acquisitions through the lens of equity and diversity.
“This plan shows a greater sensitivity toward respect,” Mr. Armstrong said in an interview. “It means there will be a bigger front door, providing more opportunities for a variety of people to imagine working in museums as a sustainable career path.”
The diversity plan comes more than a month after the Guggenheim hired a lawyer to independently investigate the circumstances surrounding its 2019 exhibition of the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat. In June, nearly 100 current and 100 former employees, under the name “A Better Guggenheim,” sent trustees a letter claiming that executives had created a “culture of institutional racism” at the museum and mistreated Chaédria LaBouvier, a guest curator of the Basquiat show. The investigation is expected to conclude in the fall.
Along with their recommendations, the writers of the finalized initiative, who include eight employees and an outside consultant, also discussed the Guggenheim’s recent failures to diversify itself. The authors, at least four of whom identify as Black, claim that the demographic makeup of visitors to the museum does not reflect the racial diversity of New York City, citing a 2018 study conducted by the marketing firm Morey Group. It found that nearly 73 percent of museum visitors identified as white; by comparison, the city’s population is about 43 percent white. To better reflect the city’s population, they recommend, for instance, expanding pay-what-you-wish hours beyond Saturday evenings.
They added, “The current moment demands that we reconsider the fundamental role that art museums play within society at large: whom are these institutions for, what are they responsible for, and to whom should they be accountable?”
In June, Ms. LaBouvier tweeted that working with Nancy Spector, the museum’s artistic director and chief curator, “was the most racist professional experience of my life.”
Ms. Spector is on sabbatical from the museum and has declined to comment on the matter.
“What happened six weeks ago brought things to a boiling point,” Mr. Armstrong said about the inclusion plan. “We looked at each other collectively to say, ‘We will accomplish this.’”
“Furloughed staff make up the majority of the museums BIPOC employees” — Black, Indigenous and people of color — “yet they were excluded from the development of this diversity plan,” said Cassandra Dagostino, a furloughed member of the communications staff and of A Better Guggenheim.
Another member of the group, Indira Abiskaroon, who is a curatorial assistant, said that the Guggenheim’s plan “feels insufficient without reimagining and rebuilding the museum from its foundation. That means acknowledging the museum’s anti-Blackness and holding leadership accountable.”
In a joint statement to The New York Times about the plan, nearly 30 part-time Guggenheim educators said they were not consulted and they were concerned that 60 percent of the next steps to expand programming and outreach would fall on their shoulders.
The Guggenheim’s reckoning comes at a time of financial difficulties because of the coronavirus pandemic. The museum currently projects it will have a $15 million deficit this year, and has relied on contributions from trustees and reallocated money from its current budget to fund its diversity initiatives. Administrators said the museum will not reopen until at least October.
“We look with empathy and some trepidation at what’s going on inside the museum industry,” Mr. Armstrong told employees in a meeting last month, describing the projected financial losses at the Guggenheim as “quite crippling.”
Reposted from The Art Newspaper
A coalition of international museums and heritage organisations are co-ordinating “cultural first aid” for Beirut institutions affected by the devastating explosions of 4 August.
In a statement of solidarity released on 11 August, 27 signatories including Unesco, the International Council of Museums (Icom), World Monuments Fund, the National Museum of China and the Louvre in Paris pledged to “do all that we can to contribute to the complete recovery of the heritage that has been damaged in Beirut by this blast”.
An initial assessment found that at least 8,000 buildings concentrated in the historic districts of Gemmayzeh and Mar Mikhael were affected by the explosions, of which 640 have heritage status, according to Unesco. Around 60 of these historic buildings are estimated to be at risk of collapse. Unesco says it is working with Lebanon’s directorate-general of antiquities to lead the cultural response to the disaster.
The Lebanese national committee of Blue Shield International is now co-ordinating experts on the ground to survey the damage sustained by the city’s museums, libraries, archives and historic buildings, says Elsa Urtizverea, Icom’s heritage protection co-ordinator, who visited Beirut last week. Blue Shield will give the international partners an overview of the priorities for reconstruction as they plan longer-term relief efforts.
According to Suzy Hakimian, the chair of Icom Lebanon and the director of the Museum of Minerals at Saint Joseph University, eight museums were damaged by the blast.
Located close to the epicentre of the explosions at the port, the Sursock Museum suffered “unbelievable” destruction, Urtizverea says. All the stained-glass windows on the villa’s façade were obliterated and the roof was damaged, leaving the museum exposed to the elements. The architects responsible for the museum’s $15m renovation in 2015 are advising on securing the building. A team of volunteers—museum staff and young cultural professionals—have moved the art works into storage, cleared away the glass debris and covered the broken windows with plastic sheets.
The Museum of Lebanese Prehistory at Saint Joseph University, 1km away, also requires urgent structural attention. Urtizverea says the “major threat” is a glass ceiling on the brink of collapse, which has been temporarily reinforced with wood to protect the collection.
The doors and windows were “completely blown off” at the archaeological museum of the American University of Beirut, 4km west of the port. There was “some damage” to the collection, including a toppled vitrine containing mostly glass artefacts, which awaits examination by restorers.
Fortunately, Lebanon’s leading archaeology collection is “apparently intact” at the National Museum, although the windows, doors and lifts were all damaged in the blast. The ground floor displays of sarcophagi, statues and mosaics from the third millennium BC to the Byzantine era “will just need cleaning”, Urtizverea says.
“It’s a miracle the collections were preserved”, Hakimian says. The minerals and precious stones of her own museum are “safe” on a separate campus of Saint Joseph University.
But the challenge for all custodians of damaged historic buildings will be sourcing the materials to rebuild before the autumn season. “I’m sure we don’t have enough glass to replace all the windows and doors” through the local market, Hakimian says. Amid Lebanon’s currency crisis, “the cost will be very high,” she adds, noting that museums must also meet stringent technical specifications.
The recovery of Beirut’s cultural institutions will depend not only on international expertise and raw materials, but also on financial support. Grant-making bodies including the Geneva-based Aliph foundation (International alliance for the protection of heritage in conflict areas) and the Prince Claus Fund in Amsterdam are “trying to identify the most transparent and reliable operators on the ground” to establish a fundraising platform, Urtizverea says.
“We are an ambulance for cultural heritage,” says the Prince Claus Fund’s director, Joumana El Zein Khoury. Its aim is to assist organisations that may be overlooked, such as important private collections and artist residency centres. “We are working with the Arab Image Foundation, whose storage area in the Gemmayzeh neighbourhood was affected, and are helping to protect the [photographic] works against the acid rain that has recently fallen on Beirut,” El Zein Khoury says.
Hakimian, who worked on the restoration of the National Museum after the Lebanese civil war, acknowledges that reconstruction is going to be a “long process”. The cultural world is “trying to unify… to do our best”, she says. “Thank God everybody is helping. We hope to be able to bring back what was.”
Essential Evaluators seeks to gather evaluators in a common space to dialogue, reflect, and support each other in a world upended by COVID-19 and the Black Lives Matter protest movement. This is a time of uncertain and unknown expectations in our professions, in our institutions, and in our communities. We invite you to join us as we rethink, revision, and ultimately redefine our roles as evaluators and our place in museums.
This week, it is our great pleasure to welcome Michelle Moon, a highly respected leader in museum education and community resilience, as guest blogger. Michelle has spearheaded an important grassroots movement documenting the economic impact COVID-19 poses for museums, particularly as it affects employment and staffing. This work highlights the essential role of evaluators.
COVID-19 surrounded museums with something like the fog of war. Within weeks from its first rumblings, museum workers were engulfed in disorientation, navigating an unclear field of conflicting directives, unknown risks, uncertain timeframes, and invisible guideposts. At first one by one, then in swaths, museums began to shutter—but where? How many? For how long? And what was happening to staff and programs? There was a dearth of comprehensive information. We lacked the situational awareness needed to act with intention and strategy. Never has the essential role of evaluation been more evident.
As the fog dissipated, it became clear that closures would not be short-term and that most museum budgets would be unable to carry the same staffing levels as they had before the disease spread throughout the US. After losing my own job to a COVID closure on March 13, I joined an informal network collaborating to identify strategies for institutional survival. As we sought to benchmark what peer organizations were doing, and found only spotty information, I turned to a tool increasingly used by grassroots organizers: the online crowd-sourced spreadsheet.
The lineage of Google Sheets as collaborative data-gathering tools dates at least as far back as the #MeToo exposures of 2017, and extends right up to tabulations of police violence in Spring 2020. Thanks to an open structure—which allows unlimited collaborators 24/7 access on any operating system and anonymous contribution—they’ve been called “a familiar way station on the road to collective political action” and “the social media of the resistance.” These data dumps have played dramatic roles in the public sphere and are proving no less important in our own field.
Following the precedents of museum activism spreadsheets like Arts + All Museums Salary Transparency 2019, Indebted Cultural Workers’ Calculate Your Salary spreadsheet, and MASS Action’s Accountability Spreadsheet, I created a new sheet: Museum Staff Impact of COVID-19. In its earliest days, the sheet grew hourly, day and night, with updates of people fired, laid off, or furloughed from closed museums. In the absence of any other single source of comprehensive data on COVID’s impact on the field, journalists began citing the sheet in their work.
Experienced evaluators can readily identify these spreadsheets as imperfect. Anonymous, user-contributed data is only as accurate and complete as the knowledge of the person who enters it. Bias, from various points of view, plays a role in ways of counting, qualitative notes and the design of the sheets themselves. Cross-tabulation is nearly impossible—meaning we can’t, say, sort out the effects of geography or work experience or museum type on salaries, or make connections between museum budget size and number of COVID furloughs. The data is messy and inconsistent, often incomplete or estimated. To all that, we say “Yes.” These spreadsheets don’t offer us high confidence in accuracy. They’re not an ideal way to collect data. But in the fog of war, they are necessary to developing situational awareness.
These efforts are best seen as indicators of the need for further, deeper research. Each new sheet highlights an area of concern and offers new evidence of patterns and problems. Their creators are working to offer early evidence that may lead toward the more robust insights museum professionals need to develop budgets; solicit funding through grants, federal subsidies, and individual philanthropy; serve their communities; increase equity; or plan their careers. They hold space where not enough formal evaluation with the imprimatur of a leading organization has yet to be done.
The COVID-19 sheet, for example, has revealed patterns not clearly visible elsewhere. It was because of its user-contributed data that we were able, early on, to perceive the disproportionate loss of jobs in education and front-of-house functions as opposed to back-of-house and administrative roles, a finding that implies a potentially disproportionate loss of people of color who are more likely to work in those roles. We were also able to affirm the effects of PPP loans in stanching some of the bleeding, permitting a long hiatus between the first wave of reductions (March and April) and the second wave (beginning at the end of June). Finally, we were able to identify and share best practices in crisis management, such as deploying rolling furloughs, wage and hiring freezes, and salary reductions to help preserve jobs and continue delivering services.
This stopgap method, focused closely on impact to museum employment, worked alongside the excellent evaluation work initiated by AAM and other advocacy entities. Partnering with AAM, Wilkening Consulting connected directly with museum audiences about their responses to COVID-19. Some of that data, along with research from LaPlaca Cohen and SloverLinett, also informed a special edition of Culture Track, Culture and Community in a Time of Crisis. Americans for the Arts developed a tool for tracking ongoing economic impact of COVID in the arts and culture sector. And in July, AAM released the results of a study performed by Benchmarking Dynamics, including the warning that “without near-term assistance from governments and private donors, hundreds of directors reported their museums may not survive the financial crisis brought on by the pandemic.”
All of these efforts are vital—but they are not enough. To perform at our best, make good decisions, solicit funding, and position our museums to survive this crisis, we need the kind of robust data and sophisticated insights already taken for granted in parallel industries. We need more thorough audience data. We need more internal data about the nature, function, and composition of the museum field, and more comparative data that allows us to observe and learn from different institutional models. Without acting on real insights, we risk making poor strategic choices. An informal poll of directors and consultants resulted in the following list of needs:
As we reposition ourselves to move through a years-long COVID transition, we call upon AAM to commit to a comprehensive, ongoing research agenda that tabulates the force of COVID in reshaping our field and offers regular insights and analysis for ongoing management. In this challenging and competitive environment, we can no longer afford to make decisions on gut instinct, ad hoc databases, or anecdotal experiences. A new era has emerged, and we need our professional organizations to help us step out of the fog.
Thanks to the many professionals from AAM member organizations across the nation who contributed evaluation needs and ideas to this post.
Reposted from The U.S. Department of State
Today, Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs Marie Royce and Williams Director of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology Dr. Julian Siggers signed a Memorandum of Understanding to establish a new public-private partnership. Under this partnership, the Department of State and the Penn Cultural Heritage Center will cooperate to combat international cultural property trafficking.
The United States is unwavering in its commitment to protect and preserve cultural heritage around the world and to combat the trafficking in cultural property that funds criminal and terrorist networks. This new partnership will facilitate consultations between U.S. law enforcement officials from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Homeland Security Investigations, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection and experts in archaeology and art history when expertise is needed during the course of investigations. Experts from the faculty and staff of the University of Pennsylvania and other relevant universities, museums, libraries, archives, and nonprofit organizations will also participate.
The U.S. Government’s Cultural Heritage Coordinating Committee member agencies have repatriated more than 20,000 cultural objects to more than 45 different countries, and supported nearly 100 training programs in the United States and overseas. For more information, please visit the Cultural Heritage Center website at https://eca.state.gov/cultural-heritage-center/ and the Penn Cultural Heritage Center at https://www.penn.museum/sites/chc.
Reposted from Hypoallergenic
A devastating blast ripped through the Lebanese capital of Beirut, August 4, killing at least 135 people and injuring approximately 5,000 according to the latest reports. The massive explosion, thought to be caused by a fire that broke out at a storage facility containing explosive materials at the port of Beirut, has decimated large parts of the city, including many of the Beirut’s galleries, museums, and art centers. Gallery director Gaia Foudolian and prominent architect Jean-Marc Bonfils both died in the blast.
The explosion flattened much of the port district and sent shockwaves that shattered windows and ceilings of buildings across the city. Beirut’s city governor Marwan Abboud said that up to 300,000 people have lost their homes because of the devastation.
Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun said that a fire detonated 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, a chemical component used in fertilizers and bombs. The chemical had been stored at the port unsafely since 2014, according to officials. The explosion is now under investigation.
This calamity comes after months of political unrest in Lebanon and a crippling economic crisis exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic.
Many of the city’s leading art venues were damaged in the blast. Marfa’ Gallery and Galerie Tanit, both located close to Beirut’s Port, were hit hardest.
Sfeir Semler Gallery, a gallery in the Karantina district north of the port, was also damaged. The gallery, a staple in Beirut’s art scene, represents world-renowned Lebanese artists like Etel Adnan, Walid Raad, and Akram Zaatari.
Gaia Foudolian, the director of Letitia Gallery in the Hamra district, died in the explosion, her colleagues confirmed to Hyperallergic.
Architect Jean-Marc Bonfils, who designed the East Village building which houses Galerie Tanit in the Mar Mikhael neighborhood, also died from the blast. A gallery employee was seriously wounded, according to her colleagues.
The blast also hit major art institutions in the city like the Sursock Museum, Ashkal Alwan, the Arab Image Foundation, and the Beirut Art Center, among others.
Zeina Arida, the director of the Sursock Museum, was at her office when the explosion shook the building shortly after 6pm on Tuesday.
“Luckily, the museum closed 15 minutes before the blast,” Arida told Hyperallergic in a phone conversation from Beirut, adding that no visitors or staff were hurt. The blast, she said, was “incomparable to anything we have ever witnessed.”
The explosion shattered the museum’s doors, windows, skylights, and collapsed the ceilings of some of its rooms. It also damaged a large number of artworks in its permanent collection, including a valuable 1930 portrait of the museum’s founder Nicolas Sursock by Dutch painter Kees van Dongen. Two ceramics by the Lebanese-American artist Simone Fattal were completely destroyed, among many other items in the collection.
“At first, we feared it was bombing, and that there would be more to follow, so we stayed in the building,” Arida described the moments after the explosion. “We quickly realized how great the damage is.”
In the face of this massive destruction, art institutions in Beirut are helping each other to protect their collections. The Arab Image Foundation, which suffered significant damage, relocated its servers to safe storage at the Sursock Museum, by Arida’s invitation.
“Our storage rooms are still sound and they are open to any organization that needs to store its collection,” Arida said.
Arida, who estimates the damage to the museum to be in the millions of dollars, expects restoration efforts to be hampered by the country’s economic crisis.
“The banks have confiscated our funds,” she said. “I don’t how we’re going to do it. It will take years to restore the museum.”
Reposted from The Telegraph
The British Museum has been battling invasive insects amid fears marauding pests helped by the absence of visitors during lockdown could damage priceless exhibits.
Experts at the institution which houses delicate historical artefacts have warned that without the usual crowds of tourists browsing displays due to Covid-19, settling dust can make an inviting environment for problem creatures.
Birds can enter the building and rodents gnaw their way into the Bloomsbury museum, but the greater threat comes from woodworms, moths, and carpet beetles which can devour irreplaceable items.
These insects can make a meal of precious fabrics and textiles such as the Native American clothing and ceremonial masks displayed in the galleries, or nibble through wooden creations like totem poles.
Dust which has settled in the absence of visitors allows the creation of an ecosystem in which pests can flourish, and in turn become inviting prey for other animals which are among the major threats to collections.
The British Museum told the Telegraph that it is tackling the problem of increasing insect numbers in the galleries to defend fragile treasures, and a specialist “Integrated Pest Manager” is keeping the bugs at bay.
The old and complex 19th century building presents problems for thorough pest control, and the prevention of infestation is done in a “holistic” way without the use of pesticides or poisons.
Displays in the museum also offer perfect food for invasive insects, with skin, fur, feathers, and wood all ideal sustenance for the most common problem creatures.
Those on open display in spaces like the Great Court are more susceptible to damage.
Museum staff have been monitoring the bug population in the building, conducting risk assessments for historical items which could come under threat, and pest-proofing the site.
A spokeswoman for the institution explained the issues presented by a lack of footfall: “The collection is housed in a splendid, but old and complex, building and our visitors play their part in controlling humidity and dust levels that create environments for pests to thrive.”
Roosting birds and nesting rodents can make their way into the museum, damaging and dirtying the building in the process.
Woodworm can also bore into prized objects in the collection of treasures from around the world, including delicate fabrics in the New Zealand, Aboriginal, African, and Native American sections.
But Integrated Pest Manager Adrian Doyle has explained that the larvae webbing moths, which are commonly found chewing through clothing, can be a major threat to the museum’s collection.
The larvae of carpet beetles, often an issue in people’s homes, also feed on organic material. Often a problem in natural history museums where bird and insect displays can be consumed, the British Museum is guarding against the creatures devouring fabrics. Afghan dresses, African masks, Alaskan parkas, and Asante wooden thrones could all come under threat from these common bugs, and more everyday pieces like the museum’s wooden floorboards could also become a feast.
Action is being taken to mitigate the risks, and the museum’s pest manager and expert curators have “been able to undertake increased deep cleaning and additional pest-proofing”.
Measures include blocking access for pests, removing food sources and breeding grounds, purging dust from the galleries, and treating objects if insects have reached them.
Rodent poison has been abandoned to prevent mice and rats dying in unreachable spaces.
A spokeswoman for the institution said: “During lockdown, the British Museum’s Integrated Pest Manager with assistance from world-renowned conservation and collection care team have been monitoring Museum objects and their environment.”
She added: “We are continuing to monitor all sites for insects and rodents using an IPM risk assessment process.
“The care of the collection is of utmost importance to the British Museum.”
Thanks to this work experts have “not seen any overall increase in pest activity across the museum in stores or galleries”.
While a lack of visitors has helped create a potentially more welcome environment for insects, the absence of diners eating in the main hall of the museum has removed a key draw for rodents.
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