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Coronavirus Crisis

To help inspire hope around the world, artist Yayoi Kusama has issued an optimistic statement about the coronavirus pandemic. [ARTnews]

At a conference, artist Ai Weiwei had some harsh words about how China dealt with the spread of the coronavirus. “This is just a sign of another failure for the Chinese government,” he said. [The Art Newspaper]

Bloomberg reporter James Tarmy may be in quarantine like many of us, but what he really wants to do is wander around Inhotim, a 250-acre sculpture park in Brazil. Here’s why. [Bloomberg]

Related Articles

Yayoi Kusama in her studio, 2017.

While its visitors are in quarantine, the Hastings Contemporary museum in London is offering virtual tours with the feed transmitted by a robot on site. [The New York Times]

Market

Alserkal Avenue, an arts district that’s home to some of Dubai’s top galleries, has waived rent for its residents for the next three months. [The National]

Collectors are reportedly using art as collateral because they view it as being low-risk at a time when the economy is taking a tumble. [Business Insider]

The German Scene

After a fire last week, it is seeming unlikely that the Humboldt Forum, a controversial Berlin museum that will be home to several ethnographic collections, will open in the fall as expected. [Monopol]

The Julia Stoschek Collection, a private museum based in Dusseldorf and Berlin, has appointed Lisa Long as curator. [Artforum]

Germany is helping France restore the stained glass windows at the Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris. Through a fundraising campaign, officials have already brought in €450,000 (around $491,100). [The Art Newspaper]

Lives

Markus Raetz, a Swiss artist who appeared in two editions of Documenta and was known for his spare sculptures, has died at 78. [Le Monde]

Glenna Goodacre, a Santa Fe–based artist who created the Vietnam Women’s Memorial in Washington, D.C., has died at 80. [Albuquerque Journal]

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