Posts Tagged ‘Cezanne’

Sao Paulo Museum of Art cries for help

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

Masp2 © Eric Matsumoto Okawa, 2010

By Elka Okawa

The Sao Paulo Museum of Art Assis Chateubriant (MASP) is the most important museum of Western art not only in Brazil but also in Latin America. The museum’s permanent exhibition has more than 8,000 artworks with innumerous works by some of the best known artists in the European canon – mostly Italian and French including Rafael, Mantegna, Botticelli, Delacroix, Renoir, Monet, Cezanne, Picasso, Modigliani, Toulouse-Lautrec, Van Gogh, Matisse, Chagall, Diego Rivera, Cândido Portinari, Di Cavalcanti, Anita Malfatti and Almeida Junior. It is possible to also appreciate photographs, drawings and sculptures by Degas, Rodin, Ernesto di Fior, Victor Brecheret. MASP is a member of the Musée D’Orsay’s 19th-century club and in 1982 it was named a heritage site by the Historical Asset Defence Council of the state. This important museum was the first Brazilian museum to be recognised for the great historical importance of its collection. MASP’s founder Pietro Maria Bardi managed it for many years, and only left the management post in 1996, three years before his death.

In addition to being an important tourist destination, for both national and international visitors, MASP is also a cultural centre offering different activities. These include the art school, the atelier, dance and music festivals, theatres, debates, lectures and courses for art teachers. It is the most visited museum in Sao Paulo with an average of 50,000 visitors per month (Folha de Sao Paulo, April 5, 2009).

However, in the last decade, the museum has faced some serious management problems that are directly affecting its financial situation. In 2004, a major Sao Paulo newspaper, Folha de Sao Paulo, released the first article to the wider public calling attention to the museum’s situation.

Although MASP assets are valuated in US$1 billion, just the labour debt is more than US$2 million (…) MASP is facing a serious financial crisis.

How can an important museum like MASP be facing financial problems? Is nobody looking after the museum’s interest? It is not a small art institution where people can pretend as though nothing is happening. It is the biggest museum in Latin America! There are many successful museums all over the world and those who are managing them have no secrets. A comparison of MASP with other museums brings to light the value of this important Brazilian institution.

The Sao Paulo Museum of Art Assis Chateubriant

Sao Paulo is the fourth biggest city in the world and the largest in South Hemisphere with 1,530 km² and more than 11 million people (CENSUS, 2010). As in all big cities, the metropolitan area also includes another 39 cities and more than 20 million people.

At the beginning of the 20th Century Sao Paulo experienced a massive population growth due to immigration, the development of industry and the improvement of the coffee economy. The need for leisure and free spaces immediately increased. As a result, parks, picnic areas, leisure societies, cinemas and theatres emerged (PIRES, 2001). The city has created various cultural spaces including the Sao Paulo Museum of Art Assis Chateubriand (MASP), the Sao Paulo Town Hall, the Museum of the Portuguese Language, the State Art Gallery, the Brazilian Art Museum, the Afro-Brazilian Museum, the Cultural Centre and the Modern Art Museum. In 1922, Sao Paulo hosted Modern Art Week, which featured important local artists such as Anita Malfatti, Mario de Andrade, Oswald de Andrade. At that time, it was not well understood by the population, but it was this event that afterwards raised cultural consciousness in the country and ultimately led to the creation of MASP. 18 years later, in 1940, journalist Assis Chateaubriand collaborated with art critic Pietro Maria Bardi to create an art museum with a brief of being revolutionary. The intention was to create not only a space to appreciate art, but also a centre to disseminate culture and art by teaching and by offering courses to the audience. Chateaubriand’s intention was to create “a house of painting and sculpture to constitute the interest of our (Brazilian) people in arts” (BARDI, 1992). MASP was founded in this context, and opened on October 2nd 1947.

In 1983 a convention called First City and Culture was hosted in Sao Paulo to discuss the future of cultural spaces, as well as their fundraising issues. At that time MASP did not attend the forum for it was self-funded. The quality of its permanent collection meant that works rented to other countries, including Japan, were enough to maintain the institution. Unfortunately, the museum situation has since changed.

In 1995, the architect Julio Neves was elected the new president of MASP. His controversial management style included a US$12 million reform of the building from March 1996 to September 2001.  In the first years of his management, he organised big exhibitions that attracted hundreds of thousands of visitors and inserted Brazil in the mega-exhibition circuit. The museum exhibited The Italian Art in Brazilian Collection in 1996, Monet and Michelangelo in Italian Art History in 1997 and Egypt – Gods’ Land in 2001, which featured more than 120 pieces from Louvre’s collection. This was the turning point.

The management of the museum did not realise that they were constructing a model that tended to concentrate on a visiting public and consequently began to only receive sponsorship for these blockbuster events. With no funds to compete with other institutions, there was a drop in the number of visitors. In 2004, Retrato de Camões, a painting from Portuguese artist José de Guimarães, was deaccessioned to pay a debt of US$1.8 millions. In 2006 the museum had its electricity cut due to another US$2 million debt — this time with the state electricity company. The museum crisis was growing and becoming a big problem with a difficult solution. In 2007, their debt was estimated to be US$6 million.

Museum Management

As with any private company, it is essential for museums to define strategies and products to be offered to customers. For Silberberg (1994), product quality perception, originality, customer service, sustainability, product perception, facilities, community engagement and support and management compromise are key factors to attracting visitors to museums or cultural attractions.

Analysing from Silberberg’s perspective, MASP situation is not bad. Despite the crisis and the fact that there are no new acquisitions, MASP holds Latin America’s biggest collection. The diversity of the works talk for themselves in terms of originality. Service to the client and the sustainability of the institution are points that can always be improved. Despite the problems that the museum is facing, the perception of the museum’s artworks has not changed. The Museum’s building was designed by Lina Bo Bardi, an Italian modernist architect. It is located in one of the city’s most important financial avenues and it is the only construction in the world where the main body rests in four lateral pillars over a 74 meters freestanding space. The MASP problem is clearly related to the quality of its management.

Some Solutions for MASP

The most important museum in Latin America is facing some management shortcoming and solutions will be proposed here.

Firstly, MASP should hire a professional manager.

Good management is about vision. However, museum management is unique.  According to Timothy Ambrose, “museums are for people” (1993).  Besides possessing the usual qualities of a good manager, a museum manager should always keep that point in mind. When Elizabeth Ann Macgregor took up the Directorship of the Sydney’s Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) in 1999, she knew she had to take the museum’s work out to new audiences. She also knew that the MCA at that point was the only museum in Australia dedicated to contemporary art, so she used this knowledge to create a national profile for the space. Visitor attendance at the MCA increased to over 578,900 in 2010 and came out of a difficult financial position.

Tate Gallery in London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art (MET) in New York and the Guggenheim are managed by specialists in the field, executives and professional cultural fundraisers. Besides that, those institutions publish a public balance sheet annually.

Secondly, the marketing and advertising strategy should improve.

The museum should have its own brand product. MASP’s souvenir shop only sells products with the exhibition content as notebooks, pencils and calendars. No products with the museum brand are sold. The Modern Museum of Art (MAM) has many MAM stores located in the biggest Shopping Malls of the city, selling designer and new artist works like necklaces, scarves and earrings.

Tourism has an important economic role in Sao Paulo.  In 2009, 11.3 million people visited Sao Paulo, a 37.8% increase compared to 2004. Domestic tourists stay 3.3 days on average in the city and spend US$1,700 during that period. International tourists stay longer, 5.3 days and spend an average of US$2,400 in the same period. MASP is a major tourist point for both local and international visitors that stay in the city. Unfortunately, there are no incentive policies such as flyers or booklets in Portuguese, English or in any other language.

The museum could also think about making a cultural partnership or connections with other national or international institutions to promote art.

Thirdly, the museum should create groups to maintain the institution.

The Modern Museum of Art (MAM) has 1,000 members. The contribution varies from US$75 to US$5,000 per year and offers discounts in shops, restaurants and courses offered by the museum. In France there is a National Museum Group that manages funds for the acquisition and conservation of art collections at 34 museums and two exposition centres. This takes place under the supervision of the France Ministry of Culture. The tickets for the museums and the commercialisation of their brands guarantee the financial health of all institutions. In the United States, where the Government does not play such an important role in funding, the museums are maintained by the population. The MET in New York has more than 120,000 members that contribute from US$45 to US$20,000 per year. One successful case is Andrew Mellon from a banker’s family. He donated 900 artworks to create the National Gallery in the 1930s and also started a group with some of his wealthy friends to help the gallery. Interestingly, another group was created from this first one — their wives, otherwise known as bored ‘ladies who lunch’, started volunteering as museum guides. The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and the MET in New York have some of the oldest guide programs. The Art Gallery of New South Wales (AGNSW) in Sydney started theirs in 1972. In addition to guiding the public through the artworks, these ladies or their families may also become benefactors. Mollie Gowing, originally a guide, recently left a large bequest to AGNSW of almost 400 paintings, sculptures, photographs, ceramics and fibre works.

And lastly, MASP should be thought as a cultural space.

When it was founded, Chateaubriand’s ideal was to create an integrated art space. Plenty of people visited MASP because of the courses of art history, photography, music and cinema. In the latest years those activities were almost abandoned. The museum has a great space and is located in the heart of Sao Paulo’s commercial area and is currently not being cleverly used.

Again, none of the solutions proposed above are new. Being able to propose some viable solutions just emphasises that hiring the right professionals to manage the museum would improve this never ending nightmare. Despite all problems the museum is facing, in 2011, Indian Ambassador Fausto Godoy donated Asian art and crafts to MASP, placing the museum under the same category as the MET in New York. This might be the light in the end of the tunnel, or it might be an alert saying that such an important museum should not be facing such a sad situation.

References

Ambrose, Timothy, Museum basics, (Taylor & Francis, 1993)

Art Gallery of New South Wales

Bardi, Pietro Maria, A História do MASP (Quadrante, 1992)

Bergamo, Marlene and Daniel Bergamasco, ‘Teto do MASP tem placas de alumínio quebradas, e museu culpa pássaros’, Folha de São Paulo, 19 June 2007

Boyayan, Miguel, ‘MASP pede socorro’, Veja São Paulo, 28 June 2004

Canal Contemporâneo, ‘MASP pede socorro!’

CENSO 2010

Dumazeidier, Jofre, ‘Lazer e Cultura Popular’ (1979) FFLCH/ USP

Lamarca, ‘O Museu Paulista como Atrativo Turístico da cidade de Sao Paulo’ (2001) ECA/ USP

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo MAM

The Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney

The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Pires, Mário J, Lazer e Turismo Cultural (Manole, 2nd ed, 2002)

São Paulo Turismo

Silberberg, Ted, ‘Cultural Tourism and Business Opportunities for Museums and Heritage Sites’ (1994) University of Victoria

TASSINARI, Alberto, Pequeno Guia Berlendis de Hitória da Arte – do Renascimento ao Impressionismo Através das Obras do MASP (Berlendis & Vertecchia, 1995)

Issue 42 Letters

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Letters to the Editor

In the following letters to the editor, the authors address a variety of concerns and issues as they relate to the current Australian arts scene. The authors critically comment on what has piqued their interest, infuriated or inspired them.

Art Prizes: Artists’s cash cow?

Does Australia have too many art prizes? Are these awards too irresistible for cash strapped artists to ignore? Is a $100,000 prize too alluring when, according to David Throsby in his article “Don’t Give Up Your Day Job”, the mean creative income for visual artists is approximately $3,100 annually? Is the Australian desire for competition and sport pushing our artists to race and perform? Do art awards limit the scope, production and controversial nature of an artists potential? Can the desire for public recognition and a cash payout encourage artists to surrender their artistic integrity? How can we then, make art available to the public without the spectacle of blockbuster exhibitions and awards?

Tegan Sullivan

The AGNSW’s most recent gaff

Of the numerous regrettable decisions made by Australian collecting institutions, paying $16 million for a second-rate Cezanne is just the latest. Is the Australian passion for French Post-Impressionism so overwhelming that a leading institution willingly perpetuates the myth of Australian art inferiority? Auctioning off major Australian artists to pay the record price is irresponsible and damaging to the domestic market. The Cezanne has its merits and can be cited as a jewel in the AGNSW collection, but only for an institution that perceives the value is in the artist’s reputation and not the quality of the work itself.

Yasmin Green

The lingering connection between art and politics

Artworks usually are related to propaganda, whether political or individual. The Art and China’s Revolution exhibition was on at the Asia Society in New York City. It could show the aesthetic merit of the artworks which were largely produced during the period of China’s Cultural Revolution (1966-76). However, most of these artworks received great critical attention in the art market because of their political sensitivity, rather than their aesthetic value. As a Chinese art student, I wonder when Chinese artworks could be valued with less political intention.

Zhisheng Sa

Re-figure: A contemporary perspective on figurative representation in art

The suggestion that twentieth century representational figures, which exist as a testament of “traditional skill and idealism”, should be perceived as the pinnacle of contemporary public art is beyond my understanding. Surely Librado’s problem with our multicultural society is his failure to grasp its ability to inspire – the very same traditional ideal that appears in contemporary public art, but with less didactic purposes.

Neil Brandhorst

The (non)issue with public art

“Outdoor art isn’t what it used to be” – thank goodness! Ken Johnson (New York Times, 25th July 2009) mourns the decline of monolithic, neo-Classical heroic sculpture in favour of contemporary public art that offers “relatively empty experiences”, reflecting “the absence of any consensus of values in our pluralistic, multicultural society”. Contemporary outdoor art will not be to everyone’s taste, precisely because it does reflect our “pluralistic, multicultural society”, rather than a colonial, militant culture where conformity is the key to success. Give me giant flowers over generals any day.

Judith Thomas-Meulman

Culture for the dinky-di Aussie

“Aussie! Aussie! Aussie!” Ken Oath. During my four years overseas, I cringed every time I heard the cry. I returned home to see Shane Warne: the Musical advertised above a urinal. Bloody awesome. Is this what we’re into now? Perhaps the lowest common denominator is the key to attracting a paying audience? I can’t wait for the exhibition of “Memorable Moments of Merv Hughes’ Mo.” There’s got to be a better way of bringing people to the arts.

Michael Wilton

Hope and graffiti

The news that American artist, Shephard Fairey was arrested for graffiti while travelling to Boston for his first solo exhibition is disheartening (ABC news, 7 July 2009). Fairey created the image of Obama for the immensely successful Hope campaign, which now hangs in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington. The ‘Zero Tolerance’ policy is an outdated response to graffiti. Melbourne has a better idea: the City Lights Project – a changing exhibition held in Melbourne’s laneways. The exhibition celebrates street art and recognizes that graffiti adds to the city’s heartbeat. When will law enforcers realise that graffiti has moved beyond vandalism and consider exercising some discretion?

Adela Zverina

The crumbling attention spans of the Twitter Generation

Anthony Gormley’s One & Other public project on the fourth plinth at the Triangular Square is debilitating. Gormley argues that the living effigy becomes a metaphor to reflect the diversity and vulnerability of our multifaceted society. Unfortunately, such frivolous and whimsical conduct sadly reiterates how obsessive we are with “Britain’s Got Talent”. Gormley underestimates the length of an hour and how short-lived people’s attention spans are. Andy Warhol has cracked the conundrum 40 years ago; Gormley’s plinth watch deflates before the 15 minutes, shorter if you Tweet.

Ricky Lau

Low-brow cabaret

Tim Maybury, I’m afraid your recent presentation at the MCA’s Creative Sydney 2009 was more lowbrow than Lo-Fi And Loving It! What a mish-mash of random, disjointed performances. It quickly degenerated from a choir of sweet old ladies, to a bizarre cabaret of black PVC leotard clad gimps, stimulating anal sex with power tools upon a pink Chewbacca; that is, before I walked out. I was told by the event’s media release to expect the unexpected. I just didn’t anticipate being embarrassed for the state of contemporary art.

Alison Van Der Linden