ArtWatch International is a non-profit 501(c)3 incorporated in the state of New York in 1992 as an international advocate for the voice of art in the conservation and stewardship of historically significant works. It was founded by Columbia University art historian Professor James Beck to serve as a watchdog organization in the arena of cultural policy, protecting works of art and the public interest from vested private and institutional interests. We operate on a project by project basis, establishing task forces to determine the levels and methods of engagement in specific conservation, restoration and cultural policy issues and problems. Some problems have been addressed through scholarly work and publications, other through advisory and consulting arrangements, still others by symposia, debate, lecture forums, and intensive work with the media.
For more from our partner organization, ArtWatch UK, click here:
The Future of the Museum: In the war between Directors and Boards, it’s the Art that Pays.
Ruth Osborne To the long list of stripped gallery walls will now unfortunately be added those of the Delaware Art Museum. Though the state it represents is small, its collection boasts one of the largest selections of Pre-Raphaelite art (outside of the U.K.), important pieces from Brandywine River School artists Howard Pyle and N.C. Wyeth, […]
Sistine Ceiling 2.0: Restoration of the Carracci Gallery Frescoes.
Ruth Osborne This past February, announcements were made concerning the restoration project planned for the frescoes adorning the Carracci Gallery at the Palazzo Farnese in Rome. This is no new thing for Annibale Carracci’s monumental cycle The Love of the Gods (1597-1606), which had already undergone “consolidation” only a few decades after completion under Baroque […]
Corcoran Fiasco: Troublesome Plans for the Capitol’s Oldest Art Museum
Ruth Osborne It seems there will be no end to the ravaging of great collections by museum boards without any other hope in sight. Just as the financial distress with the Barnes yanked this famous collection from its roots in Merion, PA, to a pretentiously zen warehouse in Philadelphia in 2012, so too does impending […]
Review of Art Law in 2013: Forgeries, Greed, and 70 year-old Wrongs to be Set Right
Ruth Osborne Several interesting issues in the realm of art law came up in the last year. These will carry over new precedents into 2014 that will impact the field’s future. The following is a brief review of what 2013 brought under the ever –alert ArtWatch, and what this might mean for artistic and cultural […]
Vermeer Interrupted: A Study of Johannes Vermeer’s “Girl Interrupted at Her Music” at The Frick Collection
Ruth Osborne In October, ArtWatch opened a discussion on the state of Vermeer paintings in New York collections, with the aim of establishing a greater understanding of each work in its multiple layers of conservation. Unsettling examination of a Vermeer in the Royal Collection at St. James’ Palace by ArtWatch UK has energized our study of […]
The Isenheim Altarpiece: Yet Another Tale of Unauthorized Restoration in Colmar, France.
Ruth Osborne In 2011, the sixteenth-century Isenheim Altarpiece by German artist Mathis Gothart-Nithart underwent restoration. However, a report last month in The Art Newspaper describes the treatment as both unauthorized and performed in an “unorthodox” manner.[1] This, as well as the events leading up to the altarpiece’s restoration, have recently revealed controversy and division […]
The Dismemberment of the Louvre: Travels to Louvre Abu Dhabi promise damages and leave Parisian Museum-goers in the Lurch
Ruth Osborne This week, French culture minister Aurélie Filippetti, Louvre Director Jean-Luc Martinez, and several other directors of French museums gathered at the Abu Dhabi Art festival to announce the official opening day for the Louvre’s new international arm, to be called “Louvre Abu Dhabi.” This museum is set to open on December 2, 2015, […]
American Patronage at the Vatican Museums
Ruth Osborne “ ‘If you want to present’ the different pieces of art, ‘you have to present them in the best condition noted you can.’ ”[1] This is a recent statement on the importance of restoration by an official of the Vatican Museum Arnold Nesselrath (Deputy to the Director of the Vatican Museums for the […]
Qing Fresco “Restoration” Yields Disastrous Results
Ruth Osborne Following last year’s famous botched restoration of the nineteenth-century Ecce Homo fresco by Cecilia Gimenez (Read the ArtWatch UK article here), this month brings an interesting, and equally disturbing, development in the Chinese province of Liaoning. Earlier in October, images leaked online revealing the destructive outcome of an unauthorized “restoration” of 270 […]
Old Dutch Masters in New York: Mottled Vermeers in Manhattan Collections
Ruth Osborne Vermeer, Rembrandt, and Hals: Masterpieces of Dutch Paintingfrom the Mauritshuis (Oct. 22, 2013 – Jan. 19, 2014) This week, The Frick Collection in New York is set to open their exhibition of Dutch master paintings from the Mauritshuis collection. For the final leg of its American tour these objects will now have traveled over […]