Lucas Is Mystery Buyer of a Notorious Rockwell
The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art has announced it was the buyer of Norman Rockwell's Shuffleton's Barbershop (1950), a painting sold by the Berkshire Museum in a controversial deaccession.
Lee Rosenbaum, who has followed the Berkshire Museum case on her CultureGrrl blog, observes: "This means that Don Bacigalupi, president of the deep-pocketed museum, now has the dubious distinction of being the enabler of not one but two transactions bankrolled by megabucks patrons (here’s the other one) that have been deplored by museums’ professional organizations."
Lee Rosenbaum, who has followed the Berkshire Museum case on her CultureGrrl blog, observes: "This means that Don Bacigalupi, president of the deep-pocketed museum, now has the dubious distinction of being the enabler of not one but two transactions bankrolled by megabucks patrons (here’s the other one) that have been deplored by museums’ professional organizations."
Comments
Looking at contemporary art displayed in Westwood or at the Broad in downtown, or MOCA across the street, or in mid-Wilshire, or in the Arts District, etc, after awhile becomes somewhat of a giant blur. It also takes less time to scrutinize canvases of mainly large fields of plain color compared with more detailed, figurative artworks.
The Lucas won't be to everyone's tastes. But it will certainly help create greater balance in the local scene between the figurative and non-figurative.
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newyorker.com/magazine/1964/03/21/hartfords-gallery
amazon.com/Paintings-Huntington-Hartford-Collection-Gallery/dp/B000HTVHNI