Monster Mash: Whitney Museum’s expansion; art theft gets complicated; Artes Mundi prize
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-- Expanding: The Whitney Museum of American Art (left) is moving ahead with plans to build a new museum near New York’s High Line. (The New York Times)
-- Plot thickens: The recent $80-million art theft case in Pebble Beach gets weirder as police investigate whether one of the victims was trying to swindle his partner. (The Boston Globe)
-- And the nominees are: Eight artists have been named finalists for the Artes Mundi, Britain’s biggest visual-arts prize. (BBC News)
-- What goes up...: China’s contemporary art market is experiencing a plunge in prices. (Reuters)
-- Ultimatum: Iran has given the British Museum a two-month deadline to loan an ancient artifact called the Cyrus Cylinders. (Bloomberg)
-- Unconventional parking: A planned automobile museum in China will allow visitors to drive through the building. (Daily Telegraph)
-- High culture: Not everyone is happy about efforts by Henri Loyrette, the director of the Louvre Museum in Paris, to loosen up the institution. (The New York Times)
-- Eureka: Santa Fe Opera upsets locals after it gives permission for oil drilling on some of its property. (Associated Press)
-- Blackout: Esa-Pekka Salonen runs into electrical problems during a recent performance in London. (The Guardian)
-- Flat note: Contract negotiations at the New Mexico Symphony have hit a wall. (KRQE)
-- Soldiering on: Lynn Redgrave is still scheduled to open in the New York run of her solo show despite a recent undisclosed medical diagnosis. (Variety)
-- Le divorce?: Opera star Roberto Alagna confirms that he has separated from his wife, soprano Angela Gheorghiu. (Le Figaro)
-- And from the L.A. Times: Tim Robbins discusses the latest initiative by his theater company, the Actors’ Gang. (Los Angeles Times)
-- David Ng