Bernard Evans Home | Links | CV | Q&A | Privacy | Contact Us
 
click here to view

Breakfast at Windsor: by an artist with inside knowledge 04-Sep
Sweat and breath damaging Sistine Chapel's frescoes 04-Sep
Impressionist Gardens at the National Galleries of Scotland, review 04-Sep
Corinne Day: 'Be proud of holes in your jumper’ 04-Sep
Sir Terence Conran: Modernism’s shining knight 04-Sep
Doll Face at the V&A Museum of Childhood 04-Sep
Romantics at Tate Britain, review 03-Sep
Let there be Sculpture! New Art Centre, Roche Court, review 03-Sep
Damien Hirst faces new plagiarism claims 03-Sep
Christies to exhibit Kazakh art 03-Sep
Romantics, at Tate Britain 29-Aug
Lending works of art to France is a risky business, warns curator 29-Aug
British Museum evacuated in 'gas incident' 29-Aug
Grace Robertson, interview with the 1950s photojournalist 29-Aug
Stanhope Forbes painting saved 26-Aug
The Language of Line at the Royal Academy, review 26-Aug
Martin Creed at the Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh, review 26-Aug
Raphael's Sistine tapestries at the V&A: bring back hanging 26-Aug
Posters that lost the plot 26-Aug
Egypt arrests deputy culture minister over Van Gogh theft 26-Aug
Recession? What recession? 26-Aug
The Language of Line at the Royal Academy, review 23-Aug
Lehman Brothers art auction offers glimpse into the secret world of corporate collecting 23-Aug
Egon Schiele artwork stolen by Nazis returned to Austria 23-Aug
Raphael's Sistine tapestries at the V&A: bring back hanging 23-Aug
Edinburgh Art Festival 2010: Jupiter Artland; William Wegman; Edward Weston 20-Aug
Francis Alÿs at Tate Modern, Seven magazine review 20-Aug
Another World at the Dean Gallery, Edinburgh, review 20-Aug
Robbery's a fine art as $2 million worth of paintings stolen 14-Aug
Famed fine art photographer finds new form 14-Aug
  more news
   
 
 
click here to view

Art News


Notable gaffes involving art and artifacts 2010-Jan-27
   

James Adams

From Tuesday's Globe and Mail

Sometimes saying “sorry” is not only the hardest word, it’s insufficient to make a boo-boo go away.

A New York woman discovered this last Friday when she accidentally lost her balance while attending an art-education class at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and fell into a Pablo Picasso masterpiece. She reportedly was uninjured, but her tumble tore a 15-centimetre vertical gash in The Actor, a large canvas valued by some at $130-million (U.S.).

New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art says a Picasso painting accidentally damaged by a visitor will be repaired in time for its exhibition of the artist's works in April. "The Actor," a painting from Picasso's rose period, has a 15-centimetre tear in the lower right-hand corner.

New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art says a Picasso painting accidentally damaged by a visitor will be repaired in time for its exhibition of the artist's works in April. "The Actor," a painting from Picasso's rose period, has a 15-centimetre tear in the lower right-hand corner.

The museum did not elaborate on why the unidentified woman fell. But it asserted that the tear didn’t affect “the focal point of the composition” and it indicated that it should be repaired before the picture is included in a major Picasso retrospective at the museum in April.

Some other notable gaffes involving art and artifacts:

In the fall of 2006, U.S. casino mogul Steve Wynn inadvertently put his right elbow through Le Rêve, Picasso’s famous 1932 portrait of his mistress Marie-Therese Walter, while showing the painting in Las Vegas to several friends. The action put a five-cm tear in Walter’s left forearm. Wynn had bought the Picasso in 2001 for almost $50-million (U.S.) and hedge-fund billionaire Steven Cohen had agreed to pay him $139-million for it, but after the accident Cohen called the deal off.

In October, 2001, staff at a chic gallery in London were forced to go dumpster-diving after a janitor accidentally swept up an installation by prominent British artist Damien Hirst. Called Untitled, the piece was a tableau consisting, in part, of half-full coffee cups, ashtrays with cigarette butts, empty beer bottles, candy wrappers and an easel.

The James Ossuary, which some believe once contained the remains of Jesus’s brother, arrived at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto from Tel Aviv in the fall of 2002. Although reportedly worth $2-million (U.S.), the limestone container had developed at least five cracks in transit, the result of having been flown to Canada in a cardboard box filled with bubble wrap.

Marc Quinn calls it an “urban myth,” but others insist that it’s true. Reportedly a self-portrait bust that Quinn made from nine frozen pints of his own blood melted in the freezer of legendary London art collector Charles Saatchi after decorators working on his kitchen pulled the plug. Quinn’s blood busts currently sell for $1-million (U.S.) each and it reportedly takes him at least one year to accumulate the necessary blood.

www.theglobeandmail.com

 
London Cityscape
Click on image to view full gallery
 
Cornish Landscapes
Click on image to view full gallery
 
Cornish Life
Click on image to view full gallery
 
Other
Click on image to view full gallery
Home | Links | CV | Q&A | Privacy | Contact Us
Copyright © 2008 BernardEvans.co.uk. All Rights Reserved.