I'm happy to report that Brandeis has backed off of its scheme to close the Rose Art Museum and sell its art, which I talked about here recently. From President Jehuda Reinharz to the Brandeis community:
Dear Members of the Brandeis community:
The past ten days have been extremely difficult for all of us. I have
heard from many of you and listened carefully to your criticisms and
constructive suggestions. I have read every message on the faculty
list serve, and the thoughtful letter sent to me by a group of
faculty last night. I have also heard from students, staff, alumni,
university presidents and complete strangers about my statements
regarding the vote by the Board of Trustees concerning the Rose Art
Museum.
In retrospect, I wish I had handled the initial statements I made in
a far more direct way. Unfortunately, those statements did not
accurately reflect the Board’s decision authorizing the
administration to conduct “an orderly sale or other disposition of
works from the university’s collection.” The statements gave the
misleading impression that we were selling the entire collection
immediately, which is not true. The University may have the option,
subject to applicable legal requirements and procedures, to sell some
artworks if necessary, but I assure you that other options will also
be considered. The Museum will remain open, but in accordance with
the Board’s vote, it will be more fully integrated into the
University’s central educational mission. We will meet with all
affected University constituencies to explore together how this can
best be done.
I regret as well that I did not find a more inclusive and open way to
engage the Brandeis community in the deliberations that led to the
Board’s decision.
I take full responsibility for causing pain and embarrassment in both
of these matters. To quote President Obama, “I screwed up.”
Having learned from this experience, I will do my best, as will the
entire administration, to work together with all of you in a
collaborative manner. We must cooperate as we move forward to
confront our financial crisis. But we also have to take bold steps.
Obviously, we have many tasks ahead of us regarding the curriculum
and the budget.
In meetings with members of the faculty and with students in the past
few days, I have been heartened by the enormous reservoir of good
will, imagination and willingness to work hard to guarantee that
Brandeis will continue to thrive as a first-rate institution of
higher learning.
Sincerely,
Jehuda Reinharz
Translation: whoops. Nothing to see here. Please disperse. I’m glad that President Reinharz apologized for messing up the rollout of this plan, specifically by not including others in the decision, and that he says he will learn from the mistake in the future. We’ll see; I hope so. But what needs to be pointed out here is that this is not the original plan Brandeis rolled out, which absolutely called for the Rose to be closed and the art sold (whether now, next week or next decade is immaterial); this is a frantic walk-back of an ill-considered and badly communicated scheme. I’d like to take credit, but I suspect this had much more to do with the furious reaction from the majority of alumni and donors who made clear how universities who sell priceless collections don’t usually get more, you know, stuff to collect, art or otherwise.
So good for you, Brandeis. Next time, a bit more looking before you leap, please.
About Gregory
Connections
View all »
Causes Gregory Wilson Supports
National Resource Defense Council
National Multiple Sclerosis Society
Breast Cancer Research
Amnesty International







Thank goodness. I have no
Thank goodness. I have no connection to Brandeis and know little about art except that I like it, but this news had hurt. The idea of a carefully gathered art collection being put on the chopping block as if it were just another asset hurt my soul. I'm glad that isn't going to happen, at least not like that and not right now. Susan
Agreed...
...one of the most irritating things about this whole episode was the Brandeis administration's idea that because its collection had value, it was therefore an asset which could be sold as needed. But as you point out, art of this kind isn't a pile of gold bars...and selling the art would also have meant that no one in their right mind would ever have donated ANYTHING to Brandeis again, at least anything not purely monetary. Fortunately the reaction caused everyone to rethink. The Rose isn't out of the woods yet, but at least now everyone will be involved in figuring out what the best option to do--which is what should have been done in the first place.
Thanks for the comment, and please feel free to stop by my regular website (http://www.gregoryawilson.com) in future!
Thanks for the update. As a
Thanks for the update. As a Brandx grad ('64), I was appalled at the original announcement, even though I can't recall ever entering the Rose while I was there. (I later learned, to my eternal regret, that this meant I had missed Marcel Duchamp, who had spoken there, and who became one of my artistic heroes about 20 years thereafter.) I would have threatened to cut off my allmni fund contributions, except I rarely make any.
I understand...
...I have good feelings towards Brandeis for the most part--it treated me well, and I respect its mission. I just felt this was so off the rails from that mission that something needed to be said...I'm glad others said it too. Thanks for the comment--please feel free to stop by my main website, http://www.gregoryawilson.com, as well!