Paul McGuinness not happy with the hippy

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Yesterday the Guardian carried a fairly hilarious piece on U2 manager Paul McGuinness– who claimed during a music conference in Cannes that the entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley (namely Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, and their hippy kinfolk) should be Public Enemy #1 in the fight against illegal music downloads. As McGuinness informs us:

“Embedded deep down in the brilliance of those entrepreneurial, hippy values seems to be a disregard for the true value of music.”

Eh? Hippy slurs aside, this sounds like simply another episode of record company hand-wringing… publications like The Word magazine (see their February 2008 issue, unfortunately not available online) have more astutely (sorry Paul) captured the essential disconnect between the profit models of the industry, unstoppable technology, and the values of the music-loving public…

Arts 2 Business

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The New York Times today reviewed the new Center for Curatorial Leadership in New York, a fellowship programme affiliated with Columbia Business School that offers advanced business training to museum curators. The programme seeks to bridge the gap between curators and director positions they may aspire to, responding to the fact that

… candidates for the top jobs need not only the skills of an art historian, but also those of a chief executive, investment banker, motivational speaker, political infighter and veteran diplomat.

The Center also seeks to ensure that museums will continue to be run by those from a curatorial (and not simply business) background, by equipping curators with the skills of arts managers:

They learned about endowment management and conflict resolution. They heard from executive-search specialists, the kind who could someday help determine the fates of the curators in the room. And they listened to an expert in the booming business of museum marketing — a field many museum leaders view with suspicion — talk about focus groups, audience expectations and branding (“the B word,” as the expert, Arthur Cohen, delicately described it).

The programme’s aimed at experienced curators (8+ years of experience required to apply), as the current fellow list demonstrates. It’s interesting how the training of museum curators has changed little over the past few decades, and remains solidly the domain of the scholar– quite different from the expectations of orchestra and theatre managers, where artform experience may not command the pole position. The question to what extent this type of training will trickle down the curator food-chain is an interesting one…

Minister Brennan seeks late nights out

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Speaking at the launch of IMMA’s new programme last Thursday (as reported in the Irish Times), Minister for the Arts Séamus Brennan called on Irish museums to extend their opening hours, in order to enhance access and respond to visitor demand:

“We need to get away from the traditional and often rigid nine-to-five opening times and build in a degree of flexibility that reflects our changed lifestyles and use of leisure time.”

Certainly nothing new here to anyone who’s ever tried to navigate the bizarre opening policies of many of the national institutions, and early closing hours of many cultural resources throughout the country– something Culture Night in Dublin has tried to rectify, with an amazing public response and success. The new Science Gallery may be on to something here, with opening hours until 8.30 during its upcoming festival.

If you open, they will come, seems to be the message…

New Science Gallery launches with ‘Lightwave’ festival

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The long-anticipated new Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin will be launching in early February with the fantastic programme Lightwave (click here to download a programme pdf), running from 2-9 February. The festival offers a wide range of exhibitions and event on the theme of light, blurring the boundaries of science and art. Offerings include a fashion show, interactive games, films, a Volkswagon beetle covered with thousands of lights that will be patrolling Dublin city centre, and other happenings.. too many to list here! DO check out the schedule– this is something very unique that hasn’t been done in Ireland before, and it’s sure to be fantastic!

Mary Mac and Simon Wiesenthal Center spar over Nazi claims

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During a visit on Monday to the Hunt Museum in Limerick, President Mary MacAleese criticised claims made by the Simon Wiesenthal Center concerning the provenance of the collection, and the description of the late Hunts as “notorious dealers in art looted by the Nazis”. Today the Irish Times reported on the SWC’s response to the president:

President Mary McAleese has been criticised by the Simon Wiesenthal Centre (SWC) for censuring it over allegations it made about the Hunt Museum. The centre said it would be publishing a report in five or six weeks’ time which would vindicate its stance on the issue.

The centre’s European director, Dr Shimon Samuels, said he was “quite shocked” at Mrs McAleese’s remarks, which were uncalled for and were “not very presidential and were very unstatesmanlike”.

(…)

Mrs McAleese said the allegations were “baseless . . . unfounded . . . a tissue of lies” and had hurt many people.

Last October, an independent report by Lynn Nicholas, a world authority on Nazi looted art, found that “the presently available information and research provides no proof whatsoever that the Hunts were Nazis, that they were involved in any kind of espionage, or that they were traffickers in looted art”. (more…)

UPDATE: Fintan O’Toole gives the President an earful on the issue in Saturday’s Irish Times