Month: November 2013

Amulet of Thoth

Amulet of Thoth (in form of an Ibis) and Maat

Amulet of Thoth (in form of an Ibis) and Maat

(Egyptian Ptolemaic period 305–30 BC).

Part of the St. Louis Art Museum Ancient Art Collection since 1940.

Coming Exhibitions: Afghanistan – Hidden Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul

Coming Exhibitions:

Afghanistan – Hidden Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul

Afghanistan was at the heart of the Silk Road, the trading route traveled by Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan and Marco Polo, linking ancient Iran, Central Asia, India and China, and the more distant cultures of Greece and Rome.Visiting Australia for the first time, this exhibition – with more than 230 priceless treasures, some thousands of years old – offers a rare opportunity to discover the surprising, untold story of the long and extraordinarily rich culture that is Afghanistan. . . .”

Date:  March 7, 2014 – June 1, 2014

 
Price:  
  • $10.00 adult
  • $8.00 concession
  • $7.00 member
  • $28.00 family (2 adults + up to 3 children)
Venue: Major exhibition gallery of the Art Gallery of New South Wales.  
 
Address: 
Art Gallery Rd, The Domain 2000
Sydney, Australia
 
You can find more information here.

 

 

Lost Art Internet Database

With the seemingly constant discovery of new artwork looted by the Nazis and lost to time, it is important for the original owners to keep their eyes out for their pieces.  As such, the German government, via the Koordinierungsstelle Magdeburg – Germany’s main office for recording lost/stolen cultural resources, has just set up a new website to record these losses. (And can I just say I love a language that has 20 letters in a word). The Lost Art Internet Database was set up to carefully record/photograph/register all the pieces of cultural property that were looted during WWII.

The are two parts to the database: the “Search Requests” and the “Found-Objects Report.”  The Search Requests is a place where “public institutions or private individuals or institutions” who lost their cultural property because of the “National Socialist rule” or WWII can post a search request on the website. The website will publish this as a world-wide request that people keep an eye out for your property.  The Found-Objects Report is where cultural art/artifacts are listed when it is verified (or where the lack of knowledge about their history suggests) that they are stolen property.  You can go here and skim through the lists to see if your art/cultural piece is on the list.  

Apparently the website was so popular, it’s actually crashed a couple of times due to the vast numbers trying to get on. (1) Do you remember the cultural pieces discovered in Munich recently? Well that’s what triggered the new interest in the site, as the government is posting photos and details of the works in hopes that people who recognize and claim them.  As of the 11th, 25 paintings were listed, and as many as 590 more could be added from that collection over time. Apparently the US State Department (why them, I’m not sure) is urging Germany to “publish the list of works, eliminate the country’s 30-year statute of limitations on stolen art and establish a formal claims process for victims to recover their works.” (2) At least the first part is done; now we’ll see what happens to the second half of that request.  Germany has said that it will arrange a task force with “at least six researchers specializing in [sic] tracing the ownership of artworks.” (3)  Hopefully, careful organization will ensure that these works find their way into the right hands.

Please note that it seems that the website has undergone quite a bit of change recently. A lot of stuff that used to be there isn’t anymore (they might be re-adding it over time). If you are interested, you can plug in the URL to the WayBack Machine” and find earlier versions of the site. Note-worthy is the lack of “Publications” on the new site, as well as a more complex layout. Luckily, there’s been an English version of the site for a while!  So if you are interested in more than the recent publication of the Munich items, then the older version might be worth checking out.

Additional Resources:

“Landscape” by Cho Bang-Won

“Landscape” by Cho Bang-Won

From the Collection of the National Museum of Korea

“Chinese Painting”

“Chinese Painting”

via the Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Chinese way of appreciating a painting is often expressed by the words du hua, “to read a painting.” How does one do that? 

Consider Night-Shining White by Han Gan (1977.78), an image of a horse. Originally little more than a foot square, it is now mounted as a handscroll that is twenty feet long as a result of the myriad inscriptions and seals (marks of ownership) that have been added over the centuries, some directly on the painted surface, so that the horse is all but overwhelmed by this enthusiastic display of appreciation. Miraculously, the animal’s energy shines . . . .”