Monster Mash: Frank Gehry headed Down Under; Smithsonian settles asbestos suit; James Franco gets chatty
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-- Starchitect’s new job: Frank Gehry is set to work on a project in Australia, where he will transform a building for the University of Technology, Sydney. (Sydney Morning Herald)
-- Moving on: The Smithsonian Institution has settled an asbestos-related lawsuit with a former employee. (The Washington Post)
-- Celebrity chat: Actor James Franco discusses creativity, among other things, with performance artist Marina Abramovic. (The Wall Street Journal)
-- Ethically suspect: A nonprofit museum in New Orleans has given over gallery space -- and curatorial control -- to the Walt Disney Co. (Modern Art Notes)
-- Major acquisition: Russia’s State Hermitage Museum has purchased 92 watercolor paintings valued at an estimated $4.8 million. (Bloomberg)
-- Getting the word out: PETA plans to hand out anti-fur stickers to children outside a staging of ‘The Nutcracker’ in Philadelphia. (The Philadelphia Inquirer)
-- Rebounding: Laurie Metcalf, who recently starred in the short-lived Broadway revival of ‘Brighton Beach Memoirs,’ has been cast in an off-Broadway revival of Sam Shepard’s ‘A Lie of the Mind,’ directed by Ethan Hawke. (Playbill)
-- Big bucks: The final self-portrait by Anthony Van Dyck has sold for about $13.5 million at a Sotheby’s auction. (Bloomberg)
-- For the kids: The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s youth education program receives a $1-million gift. (The Baltimore Sun)
-- And in the L.A. Times: A new NEA report shows declining levels of arts attendance nationwide; details emerge on the county’s $14-million bond issue designed to rescue L.A. Opera; art critic Christopher Knight on Leonardo da Vinci’s ‘Angel’ drawing.
-- David Ng