Page 4-Thursday, march 23, 1978-The Michigan Daily Art migrates to the Sunbelt By Terry Trucco Businesses in Boston go bankrupt because of it. Steel mills in Ohio shutdown, and :Michigan and New York lose seats in =Congress because of it. Now "Sunbelt Tilt" - the shift of money, people and power out of the frosty North to the booming South and .West - is becoming a multi-million-dollar force in the art world as well. Just recently, John D. Rockefeller III an- nounced he would leave his impressive collec- tion of historical American art, currently in :New York, to the fine arts museums of San Francisco. The Rockefellers always have been synonymous with lavish patronage of the arts in New 'York. But Rockefeller's decision to bequeathe his important collection to faraway California only added one more wave to a westward flood of art treasures that already is challenging the historic preeminence of East Coast dowager museums like the Boston Museum of Fine Ar- ts and the Metropolitan Museum in New York. WHILE MILLIONS of Americans have been moving west, art has been migrating too - to museums that now house collections of world importance in Dallas, Los Angeles, Pasadena and Santa Barbara. The Boston-New York-Washington art elite may sniff at the nouveaux riches of California and Texas, just as cultivated Europeans once scorned brash New Yorkers; but when vast sums of new money are spent on important art works, even areas once scorned as cultural backwaters become capitals of the art world. The Norton Simon Museum, formerly the Pasadena Museum of Contemporary Art, is one example of a rich westerner turning a California suburb almost overnight into an important art center.4 But the event that shook the art world most was the late J. Paul Getty's decision to turn his private California museum - a copy of an Italian villa perched on a cliff above the Pacific in Malibu, near Los Angeles - into the most financially powerful art center in the world. When the-oil billionaire died in 1976, he left not only his extraordinary art collection, but the bulk of his immense fortune to his museum. THE GETTY bequest totally shook the foundations of the art world because it totally disrupted the balance of buying power in the art world. While esthetics no doubt play a role in art, the Getty bequest once again demon- strated that hard, cold cash - and lots of it - is a force with which even the most cultivated of sensibilities must reckon. With an endowment of nearly $800 million - almost six times that of the Met in New York, hitherto America's richest'museum - Getty's little beachside palace now makes museum directors around the world tremble. With its annual income of $50 million, the Get- ty museum easily could afford simply to buy every major piece of art on sale everywhere each season, and still have plenty of loose change. The Getty is already off to a rousing start. It recently acquired a statue attributed to the fourth century B.C. Greek sculptor Lysippus. If the tall, bronze statue of a Greek athlete, rescued from the Adriatic in 1963 by a pair of Italian fishermen, is indeed a Lysippus, the Getty would own the only known work by the classic Greek sculptor in the world. Not even Greece has one. The museum paid a reported $3.9 million, the highest price ever for a statue by an American museum. MUSEUM OBSERVERS, nonetheless, find all that money chilling. Much ,of the world's great art is not for sale; the bequest won't cast a shadow on Paris' Louvre or Lon- don's Tate. But for younger, developing museums such as Dallas' Kimball or even European museums like Amsterdam's famous Rijksmuseum, the Getty's buying power is ominous. Says one auction authority, "If someone dies and leaves a museum a nice little bequest, say $25,000 a year, that won't even be a drop." The real cause for alarm, though, is that art prices will skyrocket. Getty spokesmen promise they will be prudent buyers and point to the fact that they negotiated the price of the Lysippus for nearly five years. The Getty has also indicated that it is willing to share its wealth and its art - even with those East Coast museums which, in the past, thumbed their noses, at the nouveau riche interloper from the West. Already, the Getty has lent its Lysippus to both the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and the Denver Art Museum. WHY ARE SO MANY major art collectors choosing to bequeathe their collections to the Sunbelt - especially men like Rockefeller and Getty who spend their lives far away, in places like New York and London? More and more collectors have discovered, as Rockefeller did, that their money and their art can have a stronger im- pact on places like San Francisco's fine arts museums that still have gaps to fill in their collections than in museums like the Metropolitan, where masterpieces already crowd the walls. The gift also can make a genuine differen- ce in the community's art climate. "There has been an interest out here in American art for years, but we've never had the collection to support it," says Wanda Corn, an American art historian at Mills College in Oakland. "The Rockefeller collec- tion should be a tremendous boost to the possibilities of American art scholarship in this area." The Getty bequest, for example, already has had a major impact on the Los Angeles area. Southern Californians love their odd- looking museum with its unusual collection of ancient art and Frenchy decorative objects. The museum is always full of visitors, and art enthusiasts in the area hope the Getty will serve as a catalyst for scholarly research. ...----' _----' ._---- . Gf tjS ,.. low ,I - 1 I l~l ik ANOTHER REASON so much art is moving west is that art centers like Boston and New York seem to have become jaded af- ter living for so long among their treasures. While museums in Texas and California hustle for important bequests, East Coast art scholars and museum people - content and secure with their own vast holdings - have tended until now to look with benevolence, not alarm, on most of the recent bequests they didn't get. At the time of the Rockefeller announ- cement, Philippe de Montebello, acting direc- tor of the Metropolitan, said, "Obviously, there are major items we'd like, but so large a gift for us would be redundant. It's good for the country to have a distribution of treasures. Added one art market observer, "The great institutions of the East have taken themselves out of the competition because. they don't need bequests like the. Rockefeller." Other museum authorities insist there is little to be concerned about. All the important art will not end up in California, they contend, simply because other museums have cultivated dealers through the years have have their own methods of scouting new art. This demeanor of indulgent superiority, however, is showing signs of cracking, and what seems to disturb established art leaders most is not losing a few artifacts to the Sun- belt, but seeing all that money slip away. - "It was a wicked thing for Getty to do," sniffs one New Yorker. Most of the art world would probably agree. Terry Trucco is arts correspondent for the Pacific News Service. "h Mt tgan atig Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, M1 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 136 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan City Council joins the Regents LETTERS TO THE DAILY Samoff decision should be reversed C ITY COUNCIL proved Monday night that it could follow the Regents' footsteps and keep its in- vestments in banks and firms connec- ted with the South African apartheid government. I -Council defeated two amendments to a general investment policy which would have forbidden the city from in- vesting money in banks which loan 1noney -to South Africa and prohibited it from making investments in firms which do not adhere to the Sullivan principles, nationally-recognized anti- discrimination guidelines. However, Council rejection of the proposals, in light of the recent passage~pf the Human Rights Ordinan- ce to prevent city residents from discrimination for reasons which in- elude race, is nothing less than hypocrisy. In short, Council members seem to be saying protection from racism is O.K. for persons living within the boundaries of this city, but council can't be bothered with other persons - in this case, South African blacks. At Monday night's meeting, mem- bers reiterated much of the stand adopted by the Regents, saying that they felt that removing their invest- ments would have little, if any, effect on the situation in Africa. But, as the University Regents already have, City Council seems to be looking at the divestment issuelfrom a closed perspective. No one can be cer- tain of the effects divestment would have on the South African minority government. What these represen- tatives can be sure of, however, is the symbolic value of divestment, and the fact that divestment is in harmony with, not contradictory to, existing legislation approved by Council. What points are affirmative action policies, anti-discrimination programs, and Human Rights Or- dinances, if their spirit cannot be reflected in other decisions? At the conclusion of Monday's Coun- cil session, member Ken Latta (D- First Ward), who introduced the two South African amendments, stated that he would propose similar amen- dments following the city's April 3 election. Let's hope he sticks by his word, and that voters elect Council members who will follow through with what other city programs begin to ac- complish. To The Daily: On February 21, 1978 the tenured faculty of the Political Science department voted a second time against granting a tenured position to Professor Joel Samoff. The LS&A Student Government joins with many students and University groups in strong objection to this decision. Through our contact with the student body and in our work on College Committees one problem continually aired is the need for dynamic and effective teaching in the classroom and lecture hall. The quality of academic training in the classroom and lecture hall. The quality of academic training and the total "undergraduate ex- perience" in the College greatly depends on the professor's willingness to involve him/her- self in'the course, give of his/her time, share an enthusiasm for his/her discipline, and take an in- terest in his/her students. The denial of tenure to Professor Samoff is a blatant rejection of these values. Professor Samoff's course on South Africa is widely recognized by students as a challenging and stimulating course in political science. But even more, Professor Sarmoff has shown the rare ability to carry his academic role beyond the classroom. Last fall when the world news carried stories daily concerning the events in South Africa - the death of Steven Biko, the ensuing political crackdowns, and the related situation in Rhodesia - Professor Samoff's office was open to students seeking historical background and clarification of the news. When the LS&A Student Government began discussion of the issues involving South Africa, Professor Samoff helped several members gain information and tools- to learn about a topic so crucial to an understanding of the modern world. . Lastly, Professor Samoff's in- volvement in the question of the University's corporate holdings has given us a better knowledge of facts and a greater awareness of the University itself. The in- sight and reason Professor Samoff brought to the recent Forum on Corporate Investment lies deeper than politics, in the most respected traditions of the liberal arts and humanistic scholarship. In the best interest of the University and the College towards insuring a high quality of teaching, and for future students who might be denied the oppor- tunity of benefitting as we have from Professor Samoff, we urge a reversal of the tenure decision and ask that whatever means towards its reconsideration be employed. - Rachel Rosenthal, On behalf of LS&A Student Government outright deceit To The Daily: A major obstacle in resolving the Middle East dispute between the Arabs and Israelis was clearly presented in the after- math of the Palestinian demon- stration in the Diag Monday. This problem involves distinguishing between the actual events occurring in the Middle East and fallicious claims made by the disputants. Both Arabs' and Jews confronted each other, on the Diag presenting their side to the heated issue involving the recent events of the P.L.O. attack in Israel and the retalitory foray into Lebanon by the Israelis. The several debates between the "two sides" involved accusations thrown upon the other, yet this is hardly unusual. What shocked me, though, was a statement made by one of the Arabs' who led the demon- stration. He claimed, with utmost conviction, that the P.L.O. did not blow up the bus in Israel killing over 30 Israelis. He continued by saying that the Israeli gover- nment, when they witnessed that the P.L.O. was 'only going to kid- nap Israelis,' performed the bombing to show to the world the barbaric acts of the P.L.O. This act of deception must make all wary that some, to fur- ther their cause, must do so by outright deceit. - Steve Shaer enis/er 'flea market' To The Daily: I have been attending the Michigan High School Basketball tournament for the past 30 years. Michigan State always ran a first class operation and the Univer- sity of Michigan did also until this year. What I am refering to are two things. First of all Crisler Arena is now a Flea Market. I could not believe all the mickey mouse booths selling "T" shirts, jewelry, hats, etc, It is my opinion that Don Canham and the U. of M. are not so hard ,up that they had to revert to this type of operation. It was almost im- possible at times between games and at half times to walk around due to the confusion as a result of the booths being in the aisle ways. I wonder where the fire marshal was and why he would permit an unsafe situation like this to exist. The, second concern was the parking around the stadium. This too was a so-called mickey- mouse operation in that they did not have attendants to direct the cars where to park. As a result isles were again blocked, cars were parked on the nice grass surrounding the stadium and only one exit was wide open after each session. The charge for parking was $2.00 per session. I do not object to the feeevendthough it cost me $6.00 for the day but the lack of supervision was horrible. You would think the U of M could af- ford to pay some students the minimum wage to supervise the parking arrangements. In the opinion of many people whom I heard complaining, the U of M has definitely lost the first class image that it had at the Arena due to seeking the almighty dollar. I ambnot an, M.S.U. alumnus, but the x operation at East - Lansing -in"- year's past and on Friday of the Semi-Finals was a much better operation. -Bob Wagner Royal Oak correction A couple of errors appeared in the printed version of a letter from Maceo Powell in Wed- nesday's Daily. The sentences in which the -mistakes appeared should have read as follows: "Only a body like the Regents of the University of Michigan and their corporate collaborators, which insist upon financially propping up and morally legitimizing a regime which en- murders thousands of Steve Bikos, would care to call it a- 'government.' The Regents' in- transigence with respect to op- posing divestiture, while the University community has am- biguously demonstrated its desire to relinquish support of the apartheid regime, can only be The coal industry' S second try S TRIKING MINERS will vote tomorrow on the latest proposed contract with mine operators, and reports from coal communities say United Mine Workers (UMW) mem- bers will grudgingly approve the pact. : This contract, the second one arrived at by negotiators, is a significant im- provement over the first proposal, which was overwhelmingly rejected by miners on March 5. Advances were scored in the area of pages, retirement pensions and health tare, and workers won valuable con- ; essions with the elimination of "wild- cat strike" penalty provisions from the nnTt+ iha nPPCt nrnnngal ia as their need to start making a steady salary once again. Only Friday's vote can answer that question. One question which will not necessarily be answered Friday, even if the contract is ratified as expected, is the fate of UMW President Arthur Miller. Miller does not sit very well in the eyes of his constituents as a result of the first contract proposal. Many of the miners, upset that he would have agreed to such capital losses on the part of labor, feel now that Miller is in- competent. Whenever the miners do return to work, there will be doubt be a serious challenge to, Miller's leader- shin 51 WlIUK" dWIAMM U4y -, o