Politicians Look to Rename Paris’s Musée d’Orsay and More: Morning Links from December 13, 2020

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News

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The Smithsonian has joined forces with Berlin’s museums to create “an international network of provenance researchers” that will focus on Asian art. [The Art Newspaper]

William and Lavina Lim, a noted collecting couple in Hong Kong, have made a substantial donation of 90 works to their hometown’s forthcoming M+ museum. [South China Morning Post]

Avant-garde composer Harold Budd has died of Covid-19 at age 84. [Artforum]

Two French politicians are lobbying to have the Musée d’Orsay renamed to include Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, the former president who helped establish the institution. [The Art Newspaper]

In other Musée d’Orsay–related news, here’s a look at Rosa Bonheur’s work, which will be shown at the Paris institution in 2022. [Smithsonian Magazine]

Art & Artists

Michael J. Lewis reviews the newly reopened Rothko Chapel in Houston after its $30 million restoration. He writes, “The physical fabric of a building is normally the focus of a restoration, but here it was something intangible—the total sensory immersion that Rothko intended.” [The Wall Street Journal]

For an essay reflecting on 2020, critic Salamishah Tillet writes, “Black artists didn’t wait around for institutional change. They are making it happen.” [The New York Times]

Meet Harumichi Shibasaki, who has become a social media sensation and has drawn comparisons to Bob Ross. [CNN]

Critic Sebastian Smee’s latest column is titled “This is the painting I’d take home, if I could,” about Berthe Morisot’s Young Woman Watering a Shrub (1876). [The Washington Post]

Art Market

The Andy Warhol Foundation is selling the artist’s holiday-themed artwork on eBay for charity. [Architectural Digest]

The last known work by French baroque painter Georges de la Tour in private hands set a record when it sold for $5.2 million in Germany this week. [Art Market Monitor]

Sellers of Old Master works talk about their pivot to online sales as a result of the pandemic. [The Art Newspaper]

Earlier this year, ARTnews looked at why the Old Masters category is on the rise with collectors. [ARTnews]

Misc.

Curbed bids adieu to New York institutions that have closed as a result of the pandemic, including gallery Gavin Brown’s Enterprise and art world hangout Lucky Strike. [Curbed]

Columnist Carolina A. Miranda has a list of five things that are more interesting than the monolith. [Los Angeles Times]

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In case you missed it, here’s an essay by Kyle Chayka that looks at the monolith mania and how it became an Instagram trap. [ARTnews]

Source: artnews.com

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