Pegge Howland has donated
more than 500 pieces from her collection of sanded majolica to
The Jones Museum of Glass and Ceramics.
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The Jewish Museum, New York City, has announced a
$25,000 reward for information leading to the recovery of
a missing Marc Chagall painting worth an estimated $1
million. The work, "Study for 'Over Vitebsk,'" is part of
the museum's recently opened "Marc Chagall: Early Works from
Russian Collections" exhibit. The painting was reported missing
by museum officials last week, following a party in the museum
the night before, authorities told the Associated Press. The
eight-inch-by-10-inch oil painting shows a winter scene of
Chagall's home town of Vitebsk, Belarus. The 1914 work features
an old man, carrying a walking stick and beggar's sack, who
floats in the sky as if part of the landscape. Anyone with
information is asked to call the FBI at 212-384-1000 or
718-286-7100 or the New York Police Department's major case squad
at 212-374-3955. The case number is 119.
The Art Museum at Princeton University, N.J., has reached
an agreement with the heirs of Frederico Gentili di
Giuseppe allowing it to keep an Italian Renaissance
painting that was taken from the collection of a Jewish
resident of Nazi-occupied France during World War II, reports AP.
Financial terms were not disclosed. The circa-1500 painting, "St.
Bartholomew," has been in the Princeton collection since 1994.
The university acquired it from New York dealers French and Co.,
which also participated in the compensation agreement with the
family. Gentili di Giuseppe died of natural causes in 1940. In
1941, his art collection was sold at public auction in Paris
under the order of a French court. In 1998, the man's heirs
brought legal action to nullify the auction sale. The Court of
Appeals of Paris held that the then-living heirs of Gentili di
Giuseppe had been prevented from attending to the administration
of his estate and voided the sale of five paintings.
Collectors Henry and Jimmy Weldon, of Amagansett, N.Y. and
New York City, have donated their collection of
mid-Seventeenth to early Nineteenth Century English
pottery to Colonial Williamsburg, Va., officials said
June 12. The collection of more than 725 rare objects is worth
more than $5 million, the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, the
nonprofit organization that operates the living history museum,
told the Associated Press. Henry Weldon, who immigrated to the
United States from the Netherlands, said Colonial Williamsburg is
"America's museum" and that he wanted to "recognize the wonderful
things America has done for me and to repay my debt through this
gift to the nation."
Margaret E. C. "Pegge" Howland of Heath, Mass., has
donated over 500 pieces of her collection of sanded
majolica to The Jones Museum of Glass and Ceramics,
Sebago, Me. Sanded majolica is a form of Victorian pottery made
in Europe and the United States between 1850 and 1900. Many of
the finest examples in her collection were crafted in England,
France, Portugal and Poland. Some of the more famous potters in
England represented in the collection include Samuel Lear (Hanley
1877-1886); Thomas Forester (Longton 1883-1995); and Wardle &
Co. (Hanley 1871-1910).
A Hellenistic Greek bronze, "Head of a God or Hero,"
dating from the Second Century BC, has entered the collection of
the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and is now on view in the
Audrey Jones Beck Building. Called "one of the most significant
examples of sculpture in the Hellenistic Greek tradition
anywhere" by David Gordon Mitten, Harvard University's George
M.A. Hanfman Curator of Ancient Art, "Head of a God or Hero" is a
gift to the museum from Isabel B. and Wallace S. Wilson.
Pieranna Cavalchini has joined the Isabella Stewart
Gardner Museum, Boston, Mass., as Visiting Curator of
Contemporary Art to direct its artist in residence program
and plan contemporary exhibitions. Cavalchini has organized
numerous exhibitions, film series and concerts internationally
and in the US encompassing an impressive range of artists and
venues.
The artist members of the National Academy of Design, New
York City, have announced the selection of Gregory Amenoff as
their new president. A member of the Academy since 1994, Amenoff
is represented by the Salander O'Reilly Gallery in New York, and
is a professor of art at Columbia University. He replaces painter
Raoul Middleman, who has presided over the Academy since 1998.
Phillips Auctioneers North America has announced the
appointment of Dennis J. Scioli as senior international
jewelry specialist. Scioli began his auction career at
Sotheby's in 1965 and in 1969 was named head of the jewelry
department. He left Sotheby's in the fall of 1981 and for the
last 20 years has been a private dealer.
Butterfields Auctioneers, San Francisco, Calif., has made
five new staff appointments, introduced a new specialty
department, and expanded its customer service division. On June
1, the company announced the appointments of Peter
Loughrey as director of Twentieth Century Furniture and
Decorative Arts and Deedy Loftus as director of
the new Arts of the West Department. In addition, Dr
Martin Gammon, has joined the firm as Specialist in Books,
Manuscripts & Entertainment Memorabilia; Burke
Owens has been appointed as Wine Department
Specialist; and Andrew Hudson is the new
representative in Portland Oregon.