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Whose Art is It Anyway?

By | Social Enterprise, The Thagomizer | No Comments

Over the past few weeks I have been following the debate about the sale of the Detroit Institute of Art (DIA) not only because it an institution dear to me but because it reveals a fascinating look at the difference in opinions of who owns art and what its value is. Among logical points that visitors of the museum bring in more money than what would be gained by selling the pieces or that the sale of the art would not relieve Detroit’s debt, was one argument that shocked me: Detroit should sell its art because the city doesn’t deserve it.

This was the central point of “Detroit’s Van Gogh Would Be Better Off in L.A.” where Virginia Postrel argues art does not belong to the people of Detroit but the world at large.  “Great artworks shouldn’t be held hostage by a relatively unpopular museum in a declining region,” she wrote, “The cause of art would be better served if they were sold to institutions in growing cities where museum attendance is more substantial and the visual arts are more appreciated than they’ve ever been in Detroit.” In the end she believes the sale of Detroit’s artwork would allow more people to see it and better serve the cause of art.

Postrel seems to owe an intellectual debt to Richard Florida, that apostle of urbanism whose 2010 book, The Great Reset, appalled critics by arguing, in so many words, that some cities deserve high culture more than others,” Nora Caplan-Briker points out in her rebuff of the article, “Essentially, cities where the arts are already blooming deserve them, and all those other gloomy, faded backwaters don’t, as evidenced by their failure to nourish them thus far.”

Virginia Postrel’s inflammatory piece also hints at a part of the debate that has not been talked about in the open. Over 80 percent of Detroit’s population is African American while attendance at art institutions like the Detroit Institute of Art has remained primarily white. Only 5.9 percent of art museum attendees are African American even though they make up 11.9 percent of the U.S. population. The debate around the sale of the DIA, seems to me to spring at least in part from the division that still exists between historic institutions of high culture and communities of African American, Hispanic, and other minority artists that have developed separately and often times remain separate from these institutions.

Ethnic and cultural arts institutions are the fastest growing category of cultural institutions in the country. Beginning in the 1970s in Detroit, there was declining funding for the DIA while funding was being increased to other cultural institutions, namely the Museum of African American History. This was partly seen as a symptom of Detroit’s evolving demographics.

So do Van Gogh, Rembrandt, and the other European treasures at threat of being sold off have more value to the people of Detroit then the money gained from the sale?  My opinion is best summed up in this quote from Ben Davis’ piece on diversity in the art world:

“It would represent a huge failure of vision, however, if art were to remain confined to just the cultural group that originated it.”

While a young African-American student might not identify with Van Gogh, it doesn’t mean he can’t connect with his work. While there are huge historic cultural barriers that prevent the Detroit Institute from being accessible to a wider population, that doesn’t mean that these barriers can’t be torn down. However, if we follow Postrel’s advice and move the works of the DIA to a city where they are “better appreciated,” we deny the people of Detroit even the possibility of experiencing these works.

Avant-Garde Femmes

By | Art & Social Change, Art That Counts | One Comment

When I opened my copy of The Baltimore Sun last week and saw the front-page headline “Walters Art Museum names new director,” I may have been the only subscriber to skip inside her home and announce a new wave of grrrl power.

The Walters, you see, has selected Julia Marciari-Alexander to replace Gary Vikan as its new executive director. When she starts on April 1st, she will be joining Charm City’s art sisterhood of Doreen Bolger (who has been the Baltimore Museum of Art’s director since 1998) and Rebecca A. Hoffberger (founder and director of the city’s American Visionary Art Museum). Which is to say, Baltimore’s three major art museums will be run by women, which I found to be rather remarkable. As in so many other fields and leadership roles, it’s not always been so.

It’s not even been two decades since art critic Christopher Knight wrote in the Los Angeles Times, “The glass in the glass ceiling for women in the museum profession remains stubbornly thick.”

Knight was writing in response to the news that Seattle Art Museum had named a female director, Mary Gardner Neill, and noted that she was “one of just three women currently holding the job of director in a major art museum in the United States” in 1994. (The other two were the sorely missed Anne d’Harnoncourt at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the outstanding Kathy Halbreich at Minneapolis’ Walker Art Center; d’Harnoncourt died in 2008 and Halbreich is now an associate director at the Museum of Modern Art. Neill married into the Gates family and resigned from her position at SAM in 2009.)

In 2006, the outlook was significantly more positive and Tyler Green wrote in the same paper,

Although women rarely ascend to the top of corporate America—just 1.9% of Fortune 1000 companies have female chief executives, according to Fortune magazine—female art museum directors have become commonplace.

That’s twelve years to go from a mere three directors at major art institutions to being “commonplace.”

And just earlier this year, the Association of Art Museum Directors announced that 43% of its member directors are now women. (It’s worth noting, however, that AAMD is a membership organization and therefore not representative of all art museums nationwide; it also has a strong women’s group which may inspire women directors, in particular, to seek membership.)

It is, still, however, relatively rare for women to be so strongly represented in a city’s major arts organizations. Seattle and Minneapolis remain avant-garde; in the former, the Seattle Art Museum, Frye Art Museum and Henry Art Gallery are now all run by women and, in the latter, the same is true at the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis Institute of Arts and University of Minnesota’s Weisman Art Museum. Santa Fe’s art and cultural institutions are also strong in this light (New Mexico Museum of Art, Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, Museum of International Folk Art and Palace of the Governors are all run by women, but the city’s museum honoring the work and legacy of Georgia O’Keeffe is not).

I can’t say yet what the addition of Marciari-Alexander to the city’s art scene will mean (although John Lewis has some interesting thoughts on why she is a brave pick for the Walters), but I am inspired given the huge changes Vikan made at the Walters and the impact of Hoffberger (as the founder of AVAM) and Bolger (I can’t be the only one who misses her art blog!). I’m proud to see Baltimore join the ranks of Minneapolis and Seattle; I see the former as particularly inspirational given its innovative and wacky arts scene.

On a final note, I had to cut my grrl power parade short—and not just because the neighbors complained. In Green’s 2006 LAT piece, he also wrote:

That said, not one of the three flagship art museums in the United States—the Met, America’s greatest encyclopedic museum; the National Gallery of Art, the national art museum; or MoMA, the world’s greatest museum of 20th century art—has ever had a woman at the helm.

He wrote those words seven years ago, and they’re still true today.

IMAGE CREDIT. CC photo via Flickr.