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News

The Whitney Museum and New Museum in New York have announced significant lay offs and furloughs of staff members as a result of the economic consequences of the ongoing pandemic. [ARTnews]

Following the theft of Vincent van Gogh’s 1884 painting The Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring from the Singer Laren museum in the Netherlands last week, Bloomberg reports that some institutions and collectors are doubling down on security measures for their artworks. [Bloomberg]

La Biennale Paris, which is scheduled to take place in the French capital from September 18 to 22, will allow exhibitors to pay participation fees over the course of four months so as to ease financial strains brought on by the coronavirus crisis. [The Art Newspaper]

Related Articles

The Phillips house in 1921. After

The Talent

Laura Raicovich, former director of the Queens Museum in New York, has been appointed as interim director of the city’s Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art. Raicovich succeeds Gonzalo Casals, who has been named commissioner of New York City’s Department of Cultural Affairs. [The New York Times]

Serge Lasvignes’s contract for his post as president of the Centre Pompidou in Paris has been renewed by the French Culture Ministry. [The Art Newspaper]

The Market

Here’s a look inside David Zwirner’s online initiative “Platform: New York,” which features works by Josh Kline, Elaine Cameron-Weir, Keegan Monaghan, and others presented by 12 New York-based galleries. [Art Market Monitor]

R.I.P.

Architect Michael McKinnell, who is best known for his design of Boston’s City Hall, has died of the coronavirus at age 84. [The New York Times]

Op-Eds

Dorothy Kosinski, director of the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., writes on how the museum, founded in the wake of the Spanish influenza, has centered “the healing power of art” since its establishment. [ARTnews]

Citing research by Philippe Charlier, a forensic anthropologist and archaeologist at the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris, journalist Kate Murphy penned an essay on why, in the age of coronavirus and beyond, you should “stop using toilet paper.” [The New York Times]

Artists & Institutions

The Times has a piece on the fraught history of the Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C., whose Dead Sea Scrolls collection was recently revealed to be fake. Jeffrey Kloha, chief curator at the museum, said, “All we can do is operate in the most responsible and ethical way going forward.” [The New York Times]

Finally, here are images showing how five Los Angeles-based artists—including Ron Athey, Tanya Aguiñiga, and Monica Majoli—are creating works under quarantine. [Los Angles Times]

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