AP - TENN. GOVERNOR OPPOSES FISK'S SALE OF O'KEEFFE COLLECTION TO MUSEUM
AP - TENN. GOVERNOR OPPOSES FISKâS SALE OF OâKEEFFE COLLECTION TO MUSEUM
AVV 11-30 #721109
By Erik Schelzig
Associated Press Writer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) â Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen thinks Fisk University has entered into a bad deal by agreeing to sell half its ownership of an art collection donated by Georgia OâKeeffe for $30 million.
The cash-strapped historically black university has asked a Nashville judge to approve the arrangement to sell a 50 percent stake in the 101-piece collection to an Arkansas museum founded by Wal-Mart heiress Alice Walton. The collection would be shared on an equal-time basis.
âAs a businessperson, I would be very concerned at the deal Fisk has cut with the museum in Arkansas,ââ said Bredesen, who founded a publicly traded health care company before entering politics.
A trial is scheduled for February to decide whether Fiskâs agreement to share the collection with the Crystal Bridges Museum in Bentonville, Ark., is close enough to OâKeeffeâs wishes to be approved. OâKeeffe died in 1986.
Bredesen, a Democrat, said estimates from art experts and insurers indicate the collection âcould easily be worth $150 million.ââ
âAnd $30 million for half of it is not a very good deal,ââ he said.
Bob Workman, executive director of Crystal Bridges Museum, said that the agreed-upon price reflects restrictions placed on the collection by OâKeeffe when she gave it to the school.
âThis is a creative, long-term way to satisfy Ms OâKeeffeâs demand that the collection remain intact, to provide needed funds for Fisk University and to keep this historic collection in the public domain,ââ Workman said in a statement.
A Fisk spokesman did not immediately return a phone message.
As a former Nashville mayor, Bredesen also said he would also like to see the collection stay in the city and state.
The artworks given to Fisk in 1949 include OâKeeffeâs own 1927 oil painting, âRadiator Building â Night, New York,ââ and works by Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Marsden Hartley, Charles Demuth and Alfred Maurer.
The artworks were part of the nearly 1,000-piece collection of OâKeeffeâs husband, photographer and art promoter Alfred Stieglitz, that she gave away after he died in 1946.
Fisk earlier tried to sell the âRadiator Buildingââ and Hartleyâs âPainting No. 3ââ on the open market, but was blocked by a Santa Fe, N.M., museum that represents OâKeeffeâs estate.
A judge rejected a later settlement agreement that would have sent the âRadiator Buildingââ painting to the New Mexico museum for $7.5 million and allowed the school to sell the Hartley painting on the open market.
Bredesen said heâs unhappy with the latest proposal.
âUltimately the court and Fisk have got to decide, are you going to sell this thing or not?ââ Bredesen said. âAnd if not, fine. Put it aside and get on with other ways of solving the Fisk problem.ââ
âIf youâre going to sell it, Iâd rather they go out and sell it properly and take the money and put it in the bank and secure Fiskâs long-term future,ââ he said.