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When, If Ever, Can Museums Sell Their Works?The director of the art-rich yet cash-poor Nat

When, If Ever, Can Museums Sell Their Works?

The director of the art-rich yet cash-poor National Academy Museum in New York expected strong opposition when its board decided to sell two Hudson River School paintings for around $15 million.

The director, Carmine Branagan, had already approached leaders of two groups to which the academy belonged about the prospect. She knew that both the American Association of Museums (AAM) and Association of Art Museum Directors (AAMD) had firm policies against museums' selling off artworks because of financial hardship and were not going to make an exception.

Even so, she said, she was not prepared for the directors group's immediate response to the sale. In an e-mail message on Dec. 5 to its 190 members, it condemned the academy, founded in 1825, for "breaching one of the most basic and important AAMD's principles" and called on members "to suspend any loans of works of art to and any collaboration on exhibitions with the National Academy."

Branagan, who had by that time withdrawn her membership from both groups, said she "was shocked by the tone of the letter, like we had committed some crimes." She called the withdrawal of loans "a death knell (丧钟声)" for the museum, adding, "What the AAMD have done is basically shoot us while we're wounded."

Beyond shaping the fate of any one museum, this exchange has sparked larger questions over a principle that has long seemed sacred. Why, several experts ask, is it so wrong for a museum to sell art from its collection to raise badly-needed funds and now that many institutions are facing financial hardship, should the ban on selling art to cover operating costs be eased?

Lending urgency to the discussion are the efforts of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, which has one of the world's best collections of contemporary art but whose funds is said to have shriveled(萎缩) to $6 million from more than $40 million over the last nine years. Wouldn't it be preferable, some people asked this month, to sell a Mark Rothko painting or a couple of Robert Rauschenberg's legendary "combines" -- the museum owns 11 -- than to risk closing its doors. Finally, the museum announced $30 million donations by the billionaire Eli Broad last week that would prevent the sales of any artworks.

Yet defenders of the prohibition warn that such sales can irreparably (不能挽回地) damage an institution. "Selling an object is a knee-jerk (下意识的)act, and it undermines core principles of a museum," said Michael Conforti, president of the directors' association and director of the Clark Art Institute in Williams-town, Massachusetts. "There are always other options."

The sale of artwork from a museum's permanent collection, known as deaccessioning(博物馆收藏品等出售), is not illegal in the United States, provided that any terms accompanying the original donation of artwork are respected. In Europe, by contrast, many museums are state-financed and prevented by national law from deaccessioning.

But under the code of ethics of the American Association of Museums, the proceeds should be "used only for the acquisition, preservation, protection or care of collections." The code of the Association of Art Museum Directors is even stricter, specifying that funds should not be used "for purposes other than acquisitions of works of art for the collection."

Dorm Zaretsky, a New York lawyer who specializes in art cases, has sympathized with the National Academy, asking why a museum can sell art to buy more art but not to cover overhead costs or a much-needed education center. "Why should we automatically assume that buying art always justifies a deaccessioning, but that no other use of proceeds -- no matter how important to an institution's mission--ever can" he wrote.

Even Patty Gerstenblith, a law professor at DePaul University in Chicago kno

A.abundant in artworks

B.expecting strong resistance

C.abundant in money

D.selling three paintings

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更多“When, If Ever, Can Museums Sell Their Works?The director of the art-rich yet cash-poor Nat”相关的问题

第1题

听力原文:W: Your mom is a mess. When is the last time you tidied your room?M: It was when

听力原文:W: Your mom is a mess. When is the last time you tidied your room?

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A.He's been too busy to clean his room.

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第2题

听力原文:W: Your room is a mess. When is the last time you tidied your room?M: It was when

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A.He hasn't cleaned his room since Linda visited him.

B.Linda is the only person who ever comes to see him.

C.He's been too busy to clean his room.

D.Cleaning is the last thing he wants to do.

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第3题

听力原文:W: Your room is a mess. When is the last time you tidied your room? M: It was whe

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A.He's been too busy to clean his room.

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D.Linda is the only person who ever comes to see him.

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第4题

听力原文:W: Your room is a mess. When is the last time you cleaned your room?M: It was whe

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Q: What does the man mean?

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A.He hasn't cleaned his room since Linda visited him.

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C.He's been too busy to clean his room.

D.Cleaning is the last thing he wants to do.

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第5题

It is ______ one can ever receive when he/she hears someone else expressing love to him/he
r.

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第6题

听力原文:M: Whew. The disco wasn't bad but I'm glad to escape from the noise. Aren't you?W

听力原文:M: Whew. The disco wasn't bad but I'm glad to escape from the noise. Aren't you?

W: Ummmmm.

M: Mary, I'd forgotten. You've got a letter. Now where did I put it? There it is. Under the gas bill.

W: Oh, from my brother.

M: Good. How many brothers have you got?

W: Only one.

M: Name?

W: Mark.

M: Older or younger?

W: Much older.

M: How much?

W: Five years.

M: Get on all right?

W: Yes, all right.

M: Tell me about Mark. You must have a lot in common. Such as problems.

W: Well, when I have a real problem I usually discuss it with Mark.

M: And what is a real problem?

W: Money is one. But Mark never minds helping me out.

M: You say money is one problem. I suppose you mean there are others.

W. Well, yes. Of course there are. Friends and possessions. He knows who my friends are and I know who his friends are. But when we meet we hardly ever speak. His friends aren't interested in talking to my friends. And my friends think his friends are boring and patronising.

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W: Mark, of course.

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A.A lecture.

B.His office.

C.A party.

D.A meeting.

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第7题

When you are small, all ambitions fall into one grand category: when I'm grown up. When I'
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None of it ever happens, of course, or very little; but the fantasies give you the idea that there is something to grow up for. Indeed one of the saddest things about golden youth is the feeling that from eighteen on, it is all downhill; a determination to be better adults than the present job-takers is fine, but to refuse to grow up at all is just plain unrealism.

Right, so then you get some of what you want, or something like it, or something that will do all right, and for years you are too busy to do more than live in the present and put one foot in front of the other; your goals stretching little beyond the day when the boss has a stroke or the moment when the children can bring you tea in bed and the later moment when they actually bring you hot tea, not mostly slopped in the saucer. However, I have now discovered an even sweeter category of ambition. When my children are grown up...

When my children are grown up, I'll learn to fly a plane. I will career round the sky, knowing that if I do "go pop" there will be at least no little ones to suffer shock and grief; that even if the worst does come, I'll at least escape a long stay in hospital and all that looking for your glasses in order to see where you've left your teeth. When the children are grown up I'll actually be able to do a day's work in a day, instead of spreading over three, and go away for a weekend without planning as if for a trip to the moon. When I'm grown up--when they're grown up--I'll be free.

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What interests the writer about the young is that they ______.

A.have so many unselfish ambitions

B.have such long-term ambitions

C.don't all want to be spacemen

D.all long for adult pleasures

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第8题

听力原文:W: Now, uh...may I ask you a few personal questions, say, about your health and y
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M: Sure. Go ahead.

W: Here's a list of common illnesses. Can you tell me which of them you've ever suffered from'?

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A.His family

B.His health and family

C.His health

D.Its health and income

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第9题

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M: First, you take off your shoes before you enter.

W: Okay.

M: Then, you pay an entrance fee to the man or woman at the front counter. Next, you get undressed in the dressing room.

W: Wow. And do you wear a bathing suit or something?

M: Oh no! You don't wear anything. Then you go into the main bathing area and wash your body while sitting on a small stool about 40 centimeters high.

W: On a stool !

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M: Well, after you've rinsed off all the soap, they usually have two or three large baths where you can soak for a while.

W: De you actually share the bath with other people?

M: Yeah. Traditionally, the bath played an important role in the community. It gave neighbors an opportunity to socialize while bathing.

W: Huh. Interesting.

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A.Pay the entrance fee.

B.Take off your shoes.

C.Put your clothes in a locker.

D.Change clothes.

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第10题

听力原文:M: Hi, Cathy. I am here because I visited caves all over North America. Since you
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W: Hi, Bill. So wonderful! I can't wait to hear about it!

M: Recently, I visited the La Chagire Cave in New Mexico, my dream has always been to discover a new passage way. I had a chance there, because La Chagire is so large that discoveries are frequently made there.

W: Was it newly discovered?

M: The cave was not even discovered until 1986.

However, people in that area had figured that there must be a cave nearby, because of the strong wind that blew from behind the huge rock that covered the entrance. Enormous amount of air enter and exit the cave in order to maintain balance of the pressure with the inside air.

W: You must have had to fight heavy wind when you were in the cave.

M: Exactly, I had to fight 45 mile per hour winds. After all that effort, I had to be extremely careful maintaining my energy level. People who are tired tend to be careless, and may be more concerned about getting out of the cave than taking care of it.

W: Anything interesting or thrilling in the cave?

M: There are formations in La Chagire that look like ocean waves, Christmas trees and other stuff no one has ever seen before.

W: Caves are normally created by carbonic acid, right?

M: But this cave sculpted out by very powerful sulfuric acid that swells up from below.

(23)

A.He was asked to leads group of inexperienced carets there.

B.It was the first cave that he had ever visited.

C.Clearly marked trails made it easy to explore.

D.lie hoped to make a discovery.

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第11题

听力原文:M: What's Neil going to do when he leaves school?W: Until a few months ago he was

听力原文:M: What's Neil going to do when he leaves school?

W: Until a few months ago he was going to go to university, but he's changed his mind. Now he reckons he's going to make it in the pop world.

M: And how do you parents feel about that?

W: We think he's making an enormous mistake.

M: But surely he can go back to his studies if his music career fails.

W: That's true, but once he gets a taste of freedom, he'll find it more difficult to go back to college. I just think it's such a waste m in three years' time, he'll have got his degree and he'll still be young enough to try out the music business. At least if it doesn't work out he'll have a qualification behind him.

M: Have you discussed this with him?

W: Of course, but he's made up his mind. We're just hoping that he'll get out of his system and then come to his sense and go back to his studies. When I left school I didn't go on to university, and I've regretted it ever since. I just don't want him to make the same mistake as I did.

M: Will you support him while he's trying to be a pop singer?

W: You mean financially? No. He won't be living at home, and we can't afford to pay for him to live in London, so it's up to him to make it work.

(20)

A.Go to university.

B.Go t6 a music school.

C.Start his music career as a pop singer.

D.Start a business in the music world.

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