Jewish-American, 80-years-old and in enviable physical shape and a widower, Leonard, son and heir of the economic empire founded by Estee Lauder, has always carried out philanthropy and patronage with great care for the public good. In the past, he has donated to the Whitney Museum different works of art by major artists, including Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, Jackson Pollock, Claes Oldenburg, Cy Twombly and Andy Warhol, and has helped to support, along with other billionaires like George Lucas, Bill Gates and Michael Bloomberg, a new research and acquisitions center costing $22 million for modern art at the Met.
We can only congratulate the Met’s Director Thomas P. Campbell for a transaction that transforms the entire face of one of the most important museums in the world — focused mainly on classical art — with a very forward-looking strategy that breaks down the barriers between the ancient and the modern to offer visitors a continually changing and increasingly attractive experience. It is quite the opposite of Italian museums where the historical centers of their collections are cast in stone and incapable of innovation, museums that for decades have discouraged, if not prevented, donations, and are now going begging to sustain a system that is based on waste and scarcity of services, while elsewhere — in the Anglo-American world in particular, but also in emerging countries — art really is a great form of business.
Therefore, in addition to archaeological remains and Impressionist masters, visitors to the Met will find contemporary painting, photography and even works by Damien Hirst, and now the Cubists. Translated into numbers, this means a significant increase in ticket sales, catalogs, merchandising and services of all kinds. When we think of the immense artistic potential of Italy, the failure to apply a similar strategy here leads to a fierce disappointment. While Americans do not have a long past or history and have to buy these by fistfuls of dollars from Europe, we have not succeeded in making our heritage present in museums across our country, which paradoxically constitutes a real cost. Of course, any gentlemen like Lauder in Italy are kept well away from public acts because they would be murdered by the IRS, but the main problem is the excessive sectorization and specialization of our museums: There are too many, and not all of them are keeping up. Optimizing sales in some essential places and providing them with tools to enable a policy of profiting from tourism is key. The modern concept of the museum is that of the Met. Others do not exist and will not survive anyway.
Thomas P. Campbell, il direttore del Met, non può che felicitarsi per un'operazione che cambia completamente il volto a uno dei più importanti musei del mondo fondato soprattutto sull'arte classica, in una strategia decisamente lungimirante che prevede di abbattere gli steccati tra antico e moderno per offrire ai visitatori un percorso in continua trasformazione e sempre più appetibile. Tutto il contrario dei musei italiani, ingessati sui nuclei storici delle loro collezioni e del tutto incapaci di innovarsi. Musei che per decenni hanno scoraggiato, se non impedito, le donazioni e che ora si trovano a batter cassa per sostentare un sistema che si regge sugli sprechi e la scarsità di servizi, mentre altrove, nel mondo angloamericano in particolare ma anche in paesi emergenti, l'arte è davvero una forma strepitosa di business.
Whether George HW Bush or Donald J Trump, Americanimperialism is unabated—the pathetic excuses and the violentshock-and-awe tactics don’t matter; the results do.
If this electoral gridlock [in domestic policy] does occur, it may well result in Trump — like several other reelected presidents of recent decades — increasingly turning to foreign policy.
What happened to this performing arts center is paradigmatic of how Trump’s second presidency ... [is] another front in a war ... to impose an autocratic regime led by a 21st century feudal lord outside of international law.