ReportWire

Tag: art

  • OpenAI’s Smackdown by a German Court Hints at What’s Next for AI and Art

    [ad_1]

    Late last week, a German musicians’ organization scored a pretty crushing legal victory against OpenAI. The court says the training of the GPT 4 and 4o models included copyright infringement, and that some outputs of the models are themselves infringement. A pretty comprehensive win for the “it’s just a plagiarism machine” crowd.

    Seasoned OpenAI haters will agree, I think, with at least some of the recent legal analysis of the ruling by intellectual property law scholar Andres Guadamuz of the University of Sussex. Guadamuz points out that the decision and its implications are a bit messy, but may truly benefit copyright holders in the long term.

    That likely means copyright big fish—pop stars, Hollywood actors, and bestselling authors—should now be getting a sense of how this technology might benefit them monetarily, even if small-time creators might not be so lucky.

    The context: GEMA is a German organization with no American equivalent, a copyright collective representing the interests of composers, lyricists, and publishers. It sued OpenAI on behalf of stakeholders related to nine famous and uncontroversial German songs. This would be like suing on behalf of the composers and lyricists of nine American songs that run the gamut from “Soak Up the Sun” by Sheryl Crow to “Happy” by Pharrell Williams.

    In other words, these aren’t lyrics that OpenAI dug up once from a garage band’s website and turned into training data. Instead, they are inescapable cultural touchstones that would have appeared in training data again and again in multiple, potentially altered, or parodied forms, and as fragments, excerpts, and snippets.

    The basis of the suit was that after turning off ChatGPT’s ability to browse the web, users were able to feed it queries like “What is the second verse of [the German equivalent of “No Scrubs” by TLC]?” And ChatGPT would reply with a sometimes fragmented or flawed, but largely correct answer.

    The ruling is from the Munich Regional Court, and naturally it’s in German, but a Google Translated version gave me the following broad-strokes interpretation of what the court determined:

    The model itself stored illegal reproductions of the lyrics to those songs. When it regurgitated the lyrics in response to prompts, even if it was producing the lyrics in incomplete form, or hallucinating wrong lyrics, that was a further act of infringement. Importantly, some hypothetical ChatGPT user attempting to get lyrics from ChatGPT is not the copyright infringer; OpenAI is. And because ChatGPT outputs have shareable links, OpenAI was making this infringing material available to the public without permission.

    OpenAI must at some point now disclose how often the texts of these lyrics were used as training data, and when, if ever, it made money from them. It also has to stop storing them, and must not output them again. Monetary damages may be determined at some point later.

    Earlier this month, a somewhat similar court case in the UK went precisely the other way: Getty Images lost its case against Stability AI, because, the judge in that case wrote, “An AI model such as Stable Diffusion which does not store or reproduce any copyright works (and has never done so) is not an ‘infringing copy’.”

    Guadamuz’s analysis is interesting on this point, because it gets at what the court was thinking here. The German court, Guadamuz notes, relied on research about machine “memorization,” something a model can more easily and obviously do with lyrics than with, say, a Getty Images photo it was trained on.

    So in contrast to the Getty ruling, this new ruling is consistent with a lot of the existing intellectual property legal thought in the digital era—that the same copyright rules apply to, say, a playable CD and a CD-Rom.

    So as long as the copyrighted material can be made perceptible again, it’s a monetizable copy of the artwork. That’s also the case with lyrics “contained” within an LLM.

    Guadamuz takes issue, however, with how the ruling further treats this “memorization” concept, seemingly attempting to make training without memorization the legal norm by using an EU data-mining law. In a local sense, Guadamuz finds this to be a problem because it assumes a condition that doesn’t match what the law says. But more importantly, it seems to suggest that memorization always occurs when training on a given work, which Guadamuz says isn’t the case.

    That legal sloppiness could be a problem as companies interpret this case in the coming years, but the takeaway for Guadamuz is this: we will most likely “eventually end up with some form of licensing market.”

    Like with Sora 2’s treatment of copyright and likeness, which many actors and copyright holders eventually approved of, a framework is slowly materializing aimed at sharing revenue (theoretical, future AI revenue) with the owners of copyrighted texts. OpenAI shocked all the world’s copyright holders by creating a whole new universe of perceived copyright infringement. Artists and creators understandably felt robbed.

    But slowly, powerful stakeholders are warming up to the idea of generative AI, because they’re starting to envision how they’ll get their beaks wet, and just how wet their beaks might eventually be. You can see this with major U.S. record labels now teaming up with companies they had once sued, like Udio.

    But as for the dry, chapped beaks of powerless copyright stakeholders—small-time artists, writers, and creators—concerned that their work will simply be made redundant or irrelevant in this weird new content universe, it’s still not at all clear how those beaks benefit from any of this.

    [ad_2]

    Mike Pearl

    Source link

  • Young Street Musicians Jailed for Singing Anti-Kremlin Songs Have Fled Russia, Media Report

    [ad_1]

    (Reuters) -Two young street musicians who were jailed for more than a month in Russia for singing anti-Kremlin songs have left the country after being released from detention, according to Russian media reports.

    Vocalist Diana Loginova, 18, and guitarist Alexander Orlov, 22, were detained on October 15 in central St Petersburg after an impromptu street performance by their band Stoptime of the popular song “Swan Lake Cooperative” by exiled Russian rapper Noize MC – a vocal Kremlin critic – went viral on Russian social media. Stoptime’s drummer, Vladislav Leontyev, was also arrested.

    Citing sources, St Petersburg newspaper Fontanka reported that Loginova left Russia after being released from custody on Sunday. Another source told the Kommersant daily both Loginova and Orlov were now outside the country. Neither outlet said where they are now.

    Orlov and Loginova’s lawyer, Maria Zyryanova, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Loginova could not immediately be reached for comment.

    The case against the musical trio garnered significant media attention in Russia, where public expressions of dissent are rare. Authorities have cracked down on any opposition to the Kremlin since Russia went to war in Ukraine in February 2022.

    Singers who are critical of the authorities have fled the country and are cast as traitors by pro-Kremlin politicians. Many have been designated as “foreign agents”, a label which has Soviet-era connotations of espionage.

    The Stoptime trio have cycled in and out of Russian courts since their initial arrest in October, serving short jail stints for minor violations such as blocking access to the metro and petty hooliganism.

    Loginova, a student at a music college, was also found guilty of “discrediting” the Russian army and fined 30,000 roubles ($379) for singing another anti-Kremlin song.

    Rights groups refer to such arrests as “carousel arrests” – multiple busts for minor offences, with suspects being detained anew each time they are released.

    Loginova and Orlov left detention on Sunday after finishing their most recent sentence, St Petersburg media outlets reported. The two got engaged during their cycle of incarceration, they told reporters in October.

    Drummer Leontyev also served multiple short sentences and was released earlier this month.

    Amnesty International had called for the musicians’ release, saying “their only ‘crime’ is singing songs that challenge the suffocating official narrative.”

    Loginova’s mother Irina previously told reporters that she thought her daughter and her bandmates had done nothing wrong and did not know why their concerts had attracted so much attention from the authorities and the media.

    (Reporting by Lucy Papachristou; editing by Mark Trevelyan)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

    [ad_2]

    Reuters

    Source link

  • Australia’s Teen Social Media Ban Pushes Content Creators to Look Abroad

    [ad_1]

    SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australia is home for YouTube star Jordan Barclay, the place where he was born, went to school and built a company worth $50 million by age 23 that produces gaming content for 23 million subscribers.

    Now, with a world-first social media ban on Australian children younger than 16 set to take effect on December 10, he is thinking of leaving his Melbourne studio and moving abroad.

    “We’re going to move overseas because that’s where the money is going to be,” said Barclay, whose seven YouTube channels include EYstreem, Chip and Milo, and Firelight.

    “We can’t afford to keep doing business if advertisers leave Australia.”

    Nine participants interviewed by Reuters in Australia’s social media industry, estimated to generate annual revenue of A$9 billion ($5.82 billion), did not put a dollar figure on the ban’s impact but agreed it could lead to a drop in advertisers and views.

    YouTubers, who get paid 55% of ad revenue and up to 18 Australian cents per 1,000 views, could be hit hardest, said social media researcher Susan Grantham at Griffith University.

    “If it is one clean sweep and all these accounts disappear, then instantaneously, it’s going to be detrimental to the influencer economy.”

    The law requires companies to block the accounts of more than a million people under the cut-off age, punishing “systemic breaches” with penalties of up to A$49.5 million.

    While teenagers can still watch YouTube without an account, the site’s algorithm will fail to drive traffic to popular posts, reducing views.

    Equally, creators on YouTube, TikTok and Meta’s Instagram stand to lose earnings through promotions if the number of their followers fall, Grantham said.

    Advertisers are also on edge about campaigns targeting younger audiences, said Stephanie Scicchitano, general manager at Sydney-based talent agency Born Bred Talent.

    FEWER SPONSORSHIP DEALS AS BAN DEADLINE NEARS

    Barclay’s company Spawnpoint Media sells advertising to companies such as Lego and Microsoft, but clients’ interest in sponsorship deals has declined as the ban approaches, he said.

    “They’re worried about what the ban could mean later,” he said. “If it expands, if it grows … it makes sense for us to invest overseas and not here.”

    The United States could be among his options, he said, pointing to more favourable laws and government support in such markets.

    Some creators are already leaving to avoid the curbs, such as influencers the Empire Family, who told followers in October they were relocating to Britain.

    The careers of those creating content featuring children younger than 16, such as family vloggers and child influencers, were particularly at risk, said Crystal Abidin, the director of the Influencer Ethnography Research Lab.

    “They agree that in order to continue, it’s an easy decision to immigrate,” she said.

    Children’s musicians Tina and Mark Harris, whose Lah-Lah YouTube channel has 1.4 million subscribers, said, “Any negative impact on income is going to hurt.”

    CONCERN ABOUT LASTING REPUTATIONAL HARM

    But their main concern was lasting reputational damage from the government’s description of YouTube’s harm to children.

    “Parents will get the jitters and stay away from YouTube in droves,” Mark Harris said.

    “Maybe that’s hyperbole, we just don’t know.”

    Initially exempted from the ban, Alphabet-owned YouTube was added later at the urging of Australia’s internet regulator, which said 37% of minors reported seeing harmful content on YouTube, the worst showing for a platform.

    The ban “does a disservice” to creators of high-quality content for children, said Shannon Jones, who runs Australia’s largest YouTube channel, Bounce Patrol, with more than 33 million subscribers.

    Byron Bay creator Junpei Zaki, 28, whose output is mostly drawn from interactions with 22 million followers across TikTok and YouTube, expects the ban to cause a “guaranteed drop” in likes and comments from Australia.

    “It … does feel like I’m ignoring my Australian audience that helped get me here, because they can’t interact.”

    HIT MAGNIFIED FOR SMALLER CREATORS

    Zaki estimates he will lose 100,000 followers to the ban, a blip in his global reach, but warned that smaller creators with domestic audiences would be hit harder.

    At the House of Lim food stall in Sydney’s west, 15-year-old owner Dimi Heryxlim has built a following by posting vlogs of his routine running the kitchen after school.

    Losing access to his TikTok and Instagram accounts “will be a bad thing”, he said, as some customers recognise him from his videos, but he plans to return as soon as he turns 16.

    “If I can’t get my account back, I’ll just get a new account and start everything from scratch,” said Heryxlim.

    ($1 = 1.5475 Australian dollars)

    (Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing by Byron Kaye and Clarence Fernandez)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    [ad_2]

    Reuters

    Source link

  • Jeff Goldblum Meets His Match, Literally: His Madame Tussauds Wax Figure

    [ad_1]

    Jimmy Fallon greets me at the door. He looks like I usually picture him, save for the lack of his typical Tonight Show desk: He’s suited and smiling, wearing a cornflower blue tie, right hand mid-gesture. He is also, importantly, made of wax.

    So begins my surreal journey through the Times Square location of Madame Tussauds on Wednesday, in pursuit of Jeff Goldblum and his waxen twin.

    The actor has inspired plenty of memorable works of art, both sanctioned (a 25-foot statue lounging in London in 2018 in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of Jurassic Park) and not (approximately half of Etsy, where one can find Goldblum-themed prayer candles, Goldblum-dinosaur hybrid art, jewelry of Goldblum’s character in The Fly, and much more).

    Just over a year ago, in August 2024, Goldblum waxed indignant about his lack of a statue while filling in as host on Jimmy Kimmel Live!.

    “It just makes me wonder off the top of my head, I don’t know, have I done something to offend the great Madame Tussaud? It’s not that I think I’m entitled to my own figure, of course, I wouldn’t think that, but I don’t want to also think that I’m unwaxable,” he said on the show.

    This week at the unveiling of his beeswax brother, Goldblum’s fears were dispelled and his waxability confirmed.

    The elevator doors open to the 7th floor, and I nod to Chris Hemsworth (wax) dressed as Thor. Very large. Smaller, guarding a portal, is Tom Hiddleston as Loki. From there, the theme of the floor abruptly shifts to New York City: Lou Reed (wax) stands near Andy Warhol (wax), whose bothered expression suggests he’s not thrilled to see me. Marilyn Monroe (wax) stands over a grate and holds her just-billowing skirt down across the room from a seated and expectant Holly Golightly (wax), who doesn’t seem to notice a grinning Selena Gomez (wax) standing just outside the Tiffany’s display window. Drew Barrymore (wax) is there in a flowing rainbow gown, and Whoopi Goldberg (wax) stands guard just before the doorway to my final destination.

    In here, it’s Christmas. There’s Mariah Carey (wax) in a Mrs. Claus getup, and a tuxedoed Leonardo DiCaprio (wax) next to a lit-up tree, not far from F. Scott Fitzgerald (wax) seated on a green leather couch. Swing a left at the mid-axel Michelle Kwan (wax), and there he is: Jeff Goldblum (wax). Later, he’ll be packed into a shipping crate and sent to his permanent home at the Madame Tussaud’s outpost in Orlando, Florida, but for today’s grand unveiling, he stands, clad in all black, on a plush butter yellow carpet in front of a forest green velvet curtain strung with white twinkle lights.

    [ad_2]

    Kase Wickman

    Source link

  • Frida Kahlo self-portrait sells for nearly $55 million, shattering record for female artists

    [ad_1]

    A 1940 self-portrait by famed Mexican artist Frida Kahlo sold Thursday for $54.7 million at a New York art auction, becoming the top sale price for a work by any female artist. 

    The painting of Kahlo asleep in a bed — titled “El sueño (La cama)” or in English, “The Dream (The Bed)” — surpassed the record held by Georgia O’Keeffe’s “Jimson Weed/White Flower No. 1,” which sold for $44.4 million in 2014.

    The sale at Sotheby’s also topped Kahlo’s own auction record for a work by a Latin American artist. The 1949 painting “Diego and I,” depicting the artist and her husband, muralist Diego Rivera, went for $34.9 million in 2021. Her paintings are reported to have sold privately for even more.

    Thursday’s auction for the painting drew bids from two collectors over 5 minutes before selling — at more than 1,000 times the price it sold for 45 years ago, according to Sotheby’s. 

    “When this painting sold at Sotheby’s in 1980 for $51,000, few could have imagined it returning 45 years later to command $55 million. This record-breaking result shows just how far we have come, not only in our appreciation of Frida Kahlo’s genius, but in the recognition of women artists at the very highest level of the market,” Anna Di Stasi, head of Latin American art at Sotheby’s, said in a news release. “In El sueño, Kahlo confronts her own fragility, yet what emerges is a portrait of extraordinary resilience and strength. It is an enduring testament to one of the most admired and sought-after artists of our time.”

    A painting by Frida Kahlo titled “El sueño (La cama)” or “The Dream (The Bed),” is displayed at Sotheby’s auction rooms in London on Sept. 19, 2025.

    Kirsty Wigglesworth / AP


    The self-portrait is among the few Kahlo pieces that have remained in private hands outside Mexico, where her body of work has been declared an artistic monument. Her works in both public and private collections within the country cannot be sold abroad or destroyed.

    The painting comes from a private collection, whose owner has not been disclosed, and is legally eligible for international sale. Some art historians have scrutinized the sale for cultural reasons, while others have raised concern that the painting — last exhibited publicly in the late 1990s — could again disappear from public view after the auction. It has already been requested for upcoming exhibitions in cities including New York, London and Brussels. 

    The buyer’s identity was not disclosed.

    The piece depicts Kahlo asleep in a wooden, colonial-style bed that floats in the clouds. She is draped in a golden blanket and entangled in crawling vines and leaves. Above the bed lies a skeleton figure wrapped in dynamite.

    Kahlo vibrantly and unsparingly depicted herself and events from her life, which was upended by a bus accident at 18. She started to paint while bedridden, underwent a series of painful surgeries on her damaged spine and pelvis, then wore casts until her death in 1954 at age 47.

    During the years Kahlo was confined to her bed, she came to view it as a bridge between worlds as she explored her mortality.

    The painting was the star of a sale of more than 100 surrealist works by artists including Salvador Dalí, René Magritte, Max Ernst and Dorothea Tanning.

    Kahlo resisted being labeled a surrealist, a style of art that’s dreamlike and centers on a fascination with the unconscious mind.

    “I never painted dreams,” she once said. “I painted my own reality.”

    In its catalog note, Sotheby’s said the painting “offers a spectral meditation on the porous boundary between sleep and death.”

    “The suspended skeleton is often interpreted as a visualization of her anxiety about dying in her sleep, a fear all too plausible for an artist whose daily existence was shaped by chronic pain and past trauma,” the catalog notes.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Behind the Scenes of the $236 Million Gustav Klimt Sale at Sotheby’s

    [ad_1]

    But when I was walking through the Breuer lobby, I thought, Who makes the cut? Sotheby’s on York Avenue had space for more than 500 people in the salesroom. In the new salesroom of the Breuer Building, simply due to the size of each floor, there were around 195 seats. It was a tight crew. Not everyone was getting in.

    So who did? I spotted, on an aisle a few rows back, Larry Gagosian, who’s had a gallery a block up on Madison since 1989 and will soon unveil a new space on the ground floor, right next to his still-great sushi joint, Kappo Masa. The adviser Philippe Ségalot was toward the front. The Nahmad family sat in the very front row—Joe Nahmad has a gallery at 980 Madison, and Helly Nahmad has a space at 975 Madison. Dominique Lévy, Brett Gorvy, and Amalia Dayan—they have a gallery off Madison, in the 60s, and were seated toward the center of the action. Emmanuel Di Donna, another local gallerist, was there as well.

    Ryan Murphy was there with his adviser Joe Sheftel, and Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn, the collector who in 2002 founded the Salon 94 gallery a few blocks up, sat toward the back.

    The Mugrabi family, dealers and collectors both, were right in the middle: David Mugrabi, Tico Mugrabi, and the patriarch, Jose Mugrabi. And there was the house diaspora, the alum who left the citadel to set up their own shops. Former Christie’s global chairman Jussi Pylkkänen, now a private dealer, arrived one lot late and hung out in the back until security whisked him to his seat. Former Sotheby’s rainmaker Amy Cappellazzo was in the front row, left flank; former Sotheby’s contemporary art chairman Gabriela Palmieri was seated in the center; and Patti Wong, the house’s former Asia chairman, was in a chair on the aisle. Noah Horowitz, who left Sotheby’s in 2023 to become CEO of Art Basel, was there as well.

    But it was a tight squeeze.

    “You know what I had to do to get a ticket?” said one collector standing by a man serving Champagne, free of course, by the back of the salesroom. “It was extraordinary.

    [ad_2]

    Nate Freeman

    Source link

  • Gustav Klimt portrait painting sells for record $236 million at New York auction

    [ad_1]

    A Gustav Klimt portrait painting sold Tuesday for $236 million, a record for a modern art piece, at an auction where a solid gold, fully functional toilet satirizing the ultrarich also fetched $12.1 million.

    The toilet, by Maurizio Cattelan — the provocative Italian artist known for taping a banana to a wall — went up for auction Tuesday evening at Sotheby’s in New York. The starting bid for the 223-pound, 18-karat-gold work was about $10 million.

    Cattelan has said the piece, titled “America,” satirizes superwealth.

    “Whatever you eat, a $200 lunch or a $2 hot dog, the results are the same, toilet-wise,” he once said. Sotheby’s, for its part, calls the commode an “incisive commentary on the collision of artistic production and commodity value.”

    This image provided by Sotheby’s shows Gustav Klimt’s “Bildnis Elisabeth Lederer” (Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer), which sold for $236.4 million at auction Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025, in New York. 

    Sotheby’s via AP


    Klimt’s “Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer” sold earlier in the night after a 20-minute bidding war, also becoming the most expensive work of art ever sold by Sotheby’s worldwide. The piece attracted bids from at least six collectors before finally selling.

    The portrait was one of the few by the Austrian artist that survived World War II intact. It depicts the young daughter of one of Klimt’s patrons and was kept separate from his other paintings that were burned in a fire at an Austrian castle.

    The piece was part of the collection of billionaire Leonard A. Lauder, heir to cosmetics giant The Estée Lauder Companies. He died earlier this year.

    In 2024, a portrait of a young woman by Klimt that was long believed to be lost was sold at an auction in Vienna for $32 million. The painting, “Portrait of Fräulein Lieser,” was one of Klimt’s last pieces of work before he died in 1918. 

    Klimt worked mainly in Vienna in the early 1900s and he may be best known for “The Kiss.” 

    Glance-Famous Heists

    This Sept. 16, 2016 file image made from a video shows the 18-karat toilet, titled “America,” by Maurizio Cattelan in the restroom of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York. 

    AP file photo


    The toilet, which had been owned by an unnamed collector, was one of two that Cattelan created in 2016. The other one was displayed in 2016 at New York’s Guggenheim Museum, which pointedly offered to lend it to President Trump when he asked to borrow a Van Gogh painting. Then the piece was stolen while on display in England at Blenheim Palace, the country manor where Winston Churchill was born.

    Two men were convicted in the toilet heist, but it’s unclear what they did with the loo. Investigators aren’t privy to its whereabouts but believe it probably was broken up and melted down.

    “America” was exhibited at Sotheby’s New York headquarters in the weeks leading up to the auction.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • California rejoins fight over Nazi-looted painting held by Spanish museum

    [ad_1]

    California is once again fighting in federal court for a Jewish family’s right to have a precious Impressionist painting returned to them by a Spanish museum nearly 90 years after it was looted by the Nazis.

    The state is also defending its own authority to legally require art and other stolen treasures to be returned to other victims with ties to the state, even in disputes that stretch far beyond its borders.

    The state has repeatedly weighed in on the case since the Cassirer family first filed it while living in San Diego in 2005. Last year, California passed a new law designed to bolster the legal rights of the Cassirers and other families in the state to recover valuable property stolen from them in acts of genocide or political persecution.

    On Monday, California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta’s office filed a motion to intervene in the Cassirer case directly in order to defend that law. The Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection Foundation — which is owned by Spain and holds the Camille Pissarro masterpiece — has claimed that the law is unconstitutional and should therefore be ignored.

    Bonta, in a statement to The Times, said the law is “about fairness, moral — and legal — responsibility, and doing what’s right,” and the state will defend it in court.

    “There is nothing that can undo the horrors and loss experienced by individuals during the Holocaust. But there is something we can do — that California has done — to return what was stolen back to survivors and their families and bring them some measure of justice and healing,” Bonta said. “As attorney general, my job is to defend the laws of California, and I intend to do so here.”

    Bonta said his office “has supported the Cassirers’ quest for justice for two decades,” and “will continue to fight with them for the rightful return of this invaluable family heirloom.”

    Thaddeus J. Stauber, an attorney for the museum, did not answer questions from The Times. Bonta’s office said Stauber did not oppose its intervening in the case.

    Sam Dubbin, the Cassirers’ longtime attorney, thanked Bonta’s office for “intervening in this case again to defend California’s interests in protecting the integrity of the art market and the rights of stolen-property victims.”

    “California law has always provided strong protections for the victims of stolen property and stolen art in particular, which the Legislature has consistently reinforced,” Dubbin said.

    The state bucked the powerful U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals by passing the law last year. The appellate court found in a ruling in January 2024 that the painting was lawfully owned by the Spanish museum.

    Bonta’s latest move ratchets up the intrigue surrounding the 20-year-old case, which is being watched around the globe for its potential implications in the high-stakes world of looted art litigation.

    The painting in question — Pissarro’s “Rue Saint-Honoré in the Afternoon. Effect of Rain” — is estimated to be worth tens of millions of dollars. Both sides acknowledge it was stolen from Lilly Cassirer Neubauer by the Nazis in 1939, after she agreed in desperation to surrender it to a Nazi appraiser in exchange for a visa to flee Germany at the dawn of World War II.

    The attention surrounding the case, and its potential to set new precedent in international law, likely makes the painting even more valuable.

    After World War II, Lilly received compensation for the painting from the German government, but the family never relinquished its right to the masterpiece — which at the time was considered lost. What she was paid was a fraction of the current estimated worth.

    In the decades that followed, Lilly’s grandson Claude Cassirer — who had also survived the Holocaust — moved with his family to San Diego.

    In 2000, Claude made the shocking discovery that the painting was not lost to time after all, but part of a vast art collection that Spain had acquired from the late Baron Hans Heinrich von Thyssen-Bornemisza, the scion of a German industrialist family with ties to Adolf Hitler’s regime. Spain restored an early 19th century palace near the Prado Museum in Madrid in order to house the collection as the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza.

    Claude asked the museum to return the painting to his family. It refused. He sued in U.S. federal court in 2005. The case has been moving through the courts ever since.

    California passed its new law in response to the 9th Circuit ruling last year that held state law at the time required it to apply an archaic Spanish law. That measure dictates that the title to stolen goods passes legitimately to a new owner over time, if that owner wasn’t aware the goods were stolen when they acquired them — which the Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection has argued makes its ownership of the painting legally sound.

    In September 2024, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the new law during a small gathering with the families of Holocaust survivors at the Holocaust Museum LA. Lilly’s great-grandson and Claude’s son David Cassirer, who now lives in Colorado, was there, praising the state’s lawmakers for “taking a definitive stand in favor of the true owners of stolen art.”

    In March, the Supreme Court in a brief order ruled that the 9th Circuit must reconsider its ruling in light of California’s new law.

    In September, the Thyssen-Bournemisza Collection filed a motion asking the appellate court to rule in its favor once more. It put forward multiple arguments, but among them was that California’s new law was “constitutionally indefensible” and deprived the museum of its due process rights.

    “Under binding Supreme Court precedent, a State may not, by legislative fiat, reopen time-barred claims and transfer property whose ownership is already vested,” the museum argued.

    It said the U.S., under federal law, “does not seek to impose its property laws or the property laws of its own states on other foreign sovereigns, but rather expressly acknowledges that different legal traditions and systems must be taken into account to facilitate just and fair solutions with regard to Nazi-looted art cases.”

    It said California’s law takes an “aggressive approach” that “disrupts the federal government’s efforts to maintain uniformity and amicable relations with foreign nations,” and “stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of federal policy.”

    David Cassirer, the lead plaintiff in the case since Claude’s death in 2010, argued the opposite in his own filing to the court.

    Cassirer argued that California’s new law requires an outcome in his favor — which he said would also happen to be in line with “moral commitments made by the United States and governments worldwide, including Spain, to Nazi victims and their families.”

    “It is undisputed that California substantive law mandates the award of title here to the Cassirer family, as Lilly’s heirs, of which Plaintiff David Cassirer is the last surviving member,” Cassirer’s attorneys wrote.

    They wrote that California law holds that “a thief cannot convey good title to stolen works of art,” and therefore requires the return of the painting to Cassirer.

    Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel (D-Encino), who sponsored the bill in the Legislature, praised Bonta for stepping in to defend the law — which he called “part of a decades-long quest for justice and is rooted in the belief that California must stand on the right side of history.”

    [ad_2]

    Kevin Rector

    Source link

  • Two Curators Put Gigantic Confederate Monuments in an LA Contemporary Art Museum. How Did They Pull It Off?

    [ad_1]

    “They double-timed that,” Hamza told me. “The conservation of the one in Arlington Cemetery—this has a really high price ticket on it. And I would say the same with the Pike, I didn’t expect it to go back up so quickly—I think obviously it’s to make a statement, to send a message.”

    Simpson explained that it’s not as if we’re about to see any of the statues in “Monuments” go back up, since they were all acquired from local or state governments, unlike the Albert Pike statue and the Confederate Memorial, which are under federal jurisdiction. “I say jurisdiction and I say, Oh, there’s legal distinctions between these things…but you also know that he doesn’t give a fuck about legal distinction,” Simpson said.

    “Yeah, that’s right,” Hamza said, chuckling nervously.

    “So if it’s expedient or useful for him to say something about anything, he’ll do it, whether it’s real or legal,” Simpson said.

    Trump hasn’t weighed in on the show—yet!—but it’s already angered a few of his favorite outlets, with more invective surely to come. In a Fox News article helpfully labeled Opinion, David Marcus called Unmanned Drone “the most grotesque of the works,” and likened the exhibition to a middle finger to the right. The headline? “LA museum’s desecration of Confederate statues is pure barbarism.”

    Simpson noted that, for all his discussion of barbarism, Marcus—the author of Charade: The COVID Lies That Crushed a Nation—did not mention the massacre in Charleston, the origin point of the show.

    “So the idea that, ‘Well, it’s, like, pure barbarism’…I think you might want to save that for that,” Hamza said.

    It’s unclear from the article whether Marcus visited the show in person. If he had, he might have noticed the subtle moments, the more low-key flexes. It plays with scale in an ingenious way. Statues that were once perched high on pedestals are installed on the ground, allowing one to fully grapple with their high-romantic kitsch.

    [ad_2]

    Nate Freeman

    Source link

  • Royalty, Artists, Architects, and More Celebrate the Opening of the Peter Beard Museum Siwa Oasis in Western Egypt

    [ad_1]

    Beard was introduced to Neamatalla, the museum’s founder, by the famed archaeologist Zahi Hawass, the former minister of antiquities for Egypt, and a friend of Nejma’s parents (Hawass is attending the museum’s inauguration). In 2001, Peter, Nejma, and Zara made a trip to Siwa, as well as Luxor, Cairo, and Aswan, and he returned several times.

    As Zara writes in her text for the catalogue, “He did not arrive with conquest in his eyes. He came instead as a witness. As someone who believed that beauty, when glimpsed on the verge of disappearance, becomes a kind of moral imperative. We travelled to Egypt as a family. My father was fascinated by everything: the palimpsest of civilizations, the carved stones still half-buried in sand, the exquisite ruins, the legend of the Oracle, the movement of salt across centuries. To him, beauty was inseparable from time. It was not ornamental but geological, shaped by erosion, intention, and the passage of centuries. Every artifact spoke in echoes.”

    Like the hotel, the museum was hand-built from Siwa mud and is entirely off-grid. Its collection includes Beard’s iconic large-scale photographs, embellished with hand-painted borders by the Hog Ranch Art Department, a collective of Kenyan friends and artists, which was born in Beard’s property near the Ngong Hills. One gallery displays pages from Beard’s famous diaries, each a small collage artwork in itself. Another is filled with his personal family photos.

    Ultimately, the museum is intended to be a “permanent tribute to Peter Beard’s life, his time in Siwa, his work, and as a living testament to the belief that beauty and responsibility to the earth can and must coexist,” as the opening announcement reads. Peter Beard’s legacy may be complex, but there is no doubt of his farsightedness, of his profound understanding of the ways of the world, both natural and human, and of his position as one of the great artists of the 20th century.

    Below, “For the Record of the Living,” a poem by Zara Beard.

    This is not silence—

    It is the desert remembering.

    He gathered what the world chose to forget,

    And laid it down in blood and paper.

    Salt keeps what time cannot

    Love keeps what death cannot.

    Enter as a witness.

    The wild is not gone

    It is only waiting

    To be seen.

    [ad_2]

    Bob Colacello

    Source link

  • Embrace the potter’s wheel and paint your own creations at Dock 6 Pottery

    [ad_1]

    Dock 6 Pottery in St. Anthony, Minnesota, continues to evolve since it first opened in 1995. It’s a classroom, an art gallery and a fun spot to try your hand at something new. 

    It’s all the brainchild of Kerry Brooks.

    “I was a student and a friend of mine and I wanted to do a hobby together, so we took a pottery class. I was the very worst one, the very worst one in my beginning pottery class,” Brooks said. “I just loved it. You get smitten, you get bit by the bug and you can’t turn around.”

    Now she’s helping others, and not just beginners. She’s also giving artists a space to sell their work.

    “Even though our name is Dock 6 Pottery, we sell a lot more than pottery. We sell a lot of jewelry, we sell a lot of bags, we sell scarves, we sell cards,” she said,

    There is something for everyone, and it’s a perfect spot with the holidays right around the corner. It’s also a perfect date night spot or space for quality time with any loved one.

    “We have classes that are like one night where you take like two hours, you make three pieces, then the staff will finish them and fire them, and you come back and pick them up,” she said.

    Their newest program involves painting your own pottery.

    “It’s so fun to watch people just get a lot of joy out of it,” she said. “The world is so full of not pleasant things that when there’s something good to think about and concentrate on, it’s a lovely thing.”

    Click here for more information on Dock 6 Pottery.

    [ad_2]

    Adam Del Rosso

    Source link

  • Four Arrested After Protesters Disrupt Israeli Concert in Paris

    [ad_1]

    PARIS (Reuters) -Four people were arrested after protesters used flares to disrupt a concert by the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra in Paris on Thursday night, the latest in a wave of anti-Israel incidents linked to the Gaza conflict, French officials said on Friday.

    In footage posted on social media, protesters were seen lighting flares and chanting pro-Palestinian slogans in La Philharmonie concert hall in northern Paris as some audience members and security personnel tried to remove them.

    Despite the chaos and several interruptions, the concert went ahead after the protesters were evacuated.

    “I strongly condemn the actions committed last night during a concert at the Philharmonie de Paris. Nothing can justify them,” Interior Minister Laurent Nunez said on X.

    “I thank the personnel from the Paris police who enabled the rapid arrest of several perpetrators of serious disturbances inside the venue and contained the demonstrators outside. Four people have been placed in custody,” he added.

    The Paris prosecutor’s office said three women and a man were in custody, on charges ranging from violence, destruction and organising an unauthorised protest.

    Culture Minister Rachida Dati on X condemned the disruptions as going against the “fundamental rights of our Republic.”

    The Philharmonie said it had filed a criminal complaint.

    (Reporting by Dominique VidalonEditing by Alexandra Hudson)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    [ad_2]

    Reuters

    Source link

  • Inside the Sotheby’s Takeover of the Breuer Building

    [ad_1]

    On Wednesday afternoon, three days before Sotheby’s was set to open its new home in the old Whitney, the auction house’s CEO, Charles Stewart, was standing in the old-new lobby, snapping an iPhone photo of a color-popped Frank Stella painting from the ’60s. Then he took a picture of a giant Jean Arp sculpture, darting around in his typical natty suit, exuding his usual bucket-of-sunshine demeanor, peppering most sentences with, “Isn’t that amazing?”

    Sotheby’s Breuer building lobby, featuring Frank Stella’s Concentric Square (left) and Jean Arp’s Ptolémée III (right).

    Photograph by Max Touhey/Courtesy of Sotheby’s.

    It was, to be fair, kind of amazing: I was about to be one of the first outsiders to enter the iconic Marcel
Breuer building on Madison Avenue, after years of its lying empty. It was the Whitney, then The Met Breuer, then The Frick’s mid-reno waystation, and now the lobby is sporting a perked-up look, with its signature elements all intact: the bluestone floors, the dome lights, the concrete walls. Sotheby’s announced the plan in 2023, paid $100 million for the building in 2024, and waited as Herzog & de Meuron finished its tasteful, mostly imperceptible makeover. The wait is over. The Breuer is back.

    And for the first time, that Stella in the lobby will come equipped with a price tag. There’s been some pearlclutching from those who can’t fathom that all 650 pieces of art on the Breuer building’s walls will be unambiguously for sale. After decades of wrangling over the legacy of Manhattan’s Brutalist fortress—including some wacky proposals from Michael Graves and Rem Koolhaas—the Breuer house won’t be another collecting institution, but rather, the auction house that sold a $6.2 million banana to a crypto billionaire who gave millions to Donald Trump’s crypto venture and then watched as the government’s civil fraud charges against him got dropped (he denied the allegations).

    Others see it as a positive outcome—what if it had become a plutocrat’s mega-mansion, as it easily could have? Instead, there will be art in the Breuer. Lots of art, all year round, and most prominently before the evening sales, when Sotheby’s will install masterpieces consigned from collectors the world over and open the doors to all. No ticket necessary. As I approached on Wednesday, staffers were affixing a sign to the front of the building: “FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC.”

    “It’s going to completely change how we engage with everybody,” Stewart said. “With our consignors, with collectors, with buyers, and people—the people are going to come.”

    [ad_2]

    Nate Freeman

    Source link

  • The U.S. was a leader in cultural heritage investigations. Now those agents are working immigration enforcement.

    [ad_1]

    The Trump administration has disbanded its federal cultural property investigations team and reassigned the agents to immigration enforcement, delivering a blow to one of the world’s leaders in heritage protection and calling into question the future of America’s role in repatriating looted relics, according to multiple people familiar with the changes.

    The U.S. Department of Homeland Security established the Cultural Property, Art and Antiquities program in 2017 to “conduct training on the preservation, protection and investigation of cultural heritage and property; to coordinate and support investigations involving the illicit trafficking of cultural property around the world; and to facilitate the repatriation of illicit cultural items seized as a result of (federal) investigations to the objects and artifacts’ lawful and rightful owners.”

    Looted: Stolen relics, laundered art and a Colorado scholar’s role in the illicit antiquities trade

    Homeland Security Investigations, the department’s investigative arm, once had as many as eight agents in its New York office investigating cultural property cases. A select number of additional agents around the country also worked these cases, including a nationwide investigation into looted Thai objects.

    The Denver Art Museum has previously acknowledged that two relics from Thailand in its collection are part of that federal investigation.

    Since 2007, HSI says it has repatriated over 20,000 items to more than 40 countries.

    But the Trump administration, as part of its unprecedented mass-deportation agenda, earlier this year dissolved the cultural property program and moved the agents to immigration enforcement, multiple people with knowledge of the change told The Denver Post.

    Homeland Security officials did not respond to requests for comment.

    A few months after Trump took office, a Homeland Security staffer with knowledge of the antiquities field told The Post that they received an email from their bosses. The message, according to their recollection: “The way of the world is immigration. Bring your cases to a reasonable conclusion and understand that the priority is immigration operations.”

    This individual, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly, said they were given no time frame for the new assignment. Leadership, though, was clear that there would be no new cultural property cases.

    Instead of conducting these investigations, this individual said they have been driving detainees between detention facilities and the airport for their deportation.

    “I just spent almost a month cuffing guys up, throwing them in a van from one jail to another,” this person said, adding that the work doesn’t take advantage of their specialized training.

    It’s frustrating, the individual said, because cultural property cases don’t require a lot of agents or resources. They don’t need all types of fancy electronic equipment.

    “The juice from the squeeze on these cases is a lot more than people wanna give it credit,” this person said.

    Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post

    The Bunker Gallery section of the Denver Art Museum’s Southeast Asian art galleries at the Martin Building is pictured on Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2022. Emma C. Bunker’s name was removed from the gallery in the wake of an investigation by The Denver Post. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    Thai objects in Denver under investigation

    For years, HSI has been investigating two Thai relics in the Denver Art Museum’s collection after officials in Thailand raised issues with their provenance, or ownership history.

    The pieces — part of the so-called “Prakhon Chai hoard” — were looted in the 1960s from a secret vault at a temple near the Cambodian border, The Post found in a three-part investigation in 2022. Villagers told the newspaper that they recall dredging the vault for these prized objects and selling them to a British collector named Douglas Latchford.

    A federal grand jury decades later indicted Latchford for conspiring to sell plundered Southeast Asian antiquities around the world. He died before he could stand trial.

    Latchford funneled some of his stolen antiquities through the Denver Art Museum due to his close personal relationship with one of the museum’s trustees and volunteers, Emma C. Bunker, The Post found.

    The museum told The Post last week it hasn’t received any communication from the federal government since December, before Trump took office.

    High-profile cases in New York and Denver are proceeding despite the reallocation of resources, one agent said.

    With the federal government mostly out of the game, cultural heritage investigations will be largely left to the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office in New York City, which has an Antiquities Trafficking Unit.

    But the DA’s office relies heavily on its partnership with HSI, which has federal jurisdiction and can serve warrants and issue summonses across the country. The Manhattan DA’s office only has authority over New York.

    “The future for the DA’s office and the (antiquities trafficking) unit is in jeopardy,” said an individual familiar with the Manhattan unit’s dealings, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. “It’s unclear who’s going to be swearing out warrants going forward.”

    A spokesperson for the Manhattan DA declined to comment for this story.

    Department of Homeland Security Investigations agents join Washington Metropolitan Police Department officers as they conduct traffic checks at a checkpoint along 14th Street in northwest Washington, Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
    Department of Homeland Security Investigations agents join Washington Metropolitan Police Department officers as they conduct traffic checks at a checkpoint along 14th Street in northwest Washington, Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    ‘Doing the right thing still has power’

    These changes in enforcement priorities mean countries seeking the repatriation of their cultural items have fewer partners in the U.S. who can help them deal with museums and private collectors.

    “A few years ago, the United States led the world in restoring stolen history — and it mattered,” said Bradley Gordon, an American attorney who for years has represented the Cambodian government in its quest to reclaim its pillaged history from art museums, including Denver’s.

    It’s a shame, he said, that federal agencies have stepped back, even as the Manhattan DA continues its work.

    “This work isn’t just about art; it’s about security, diplomacy and restoring dignity,” Gordon said. “These looted objects were never meant to be hidden in mansions or displayed in museum glass cases far from their origins. When they are returned, entire communities celebrate with sincere happiness. It’s a reminder that doing the right thing still has power in the world.”

    Representatives from Thailand’s government, meanwhile, said they haven’t gotten an update on the Prakhon Chai investigation since Trump returned to office this year.

    Cultural heritage experts say these investigations can serve as an important diplomatic tool and use of soft power — a way for the U.S. to strengthen connections to allies or thaw fraught relations with longtime adversaries.

    In 2013, for example, President Barack Obama’s administration returned a ceremonial drinking vessel from the seventh century B.C. to Iran. For years, American officials said they couldn’t return the million-dollar relic until relations between the two countries normalized. The move — which NBC News titled “archaeo-diplomacy” — represented a small but important gesture as the U.S. sought a nuclear deal with the Middle Eastern power.

    “The return of the artifact reflects the strong respect the United States has for cultural heritage property — in this case, cultural heritage property that was likely looted from Iran and is important to the patrimony of the Iranian people,” the U.S. State Department said at the time. “It also reflects the strong respect the United States has for the Iranian people.”

    A lack of law enforcement activity in this space could also mean that museums and private collectors will be less inclined to return stolen pieces, said Erin Thompson, an art crime professor at New York’s John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Museums, instead, will maintain the status quo.

    [ad_2]

    Sam Tabachnik

    Source link

  • Louvre Skimped on Security to Spend on Art in Years Before Heist, Says Auditor

    [ad_1]

    PARIS—France’s state auditor issued a searing assessment of the Louvre Museum’s finances on Thursday, alleging its management prioritized the acquisition of new artworks over the maintenance and security of its existing collection.

    The auditor released its 153-page report after a team of thieves used low-tech methods to break into the museum last month and steal France’s crown jewels, drawing attention to the Louvre’s porous security.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    [ad_2]

    Noemie Bisserbe

    Source link

  • Inside Rosalía’s Secret ‘Lux’ Listening Session

    [ad_1]

    Fellow pop star Dua Lipa and her fiancé, actor Callum Turner, were in attendance in the VIP section, with the “Physical” singer wearing a floor length snake print coat and the actor in a black leather shearling jacket. Other artists including Emily Ratajkowski, playwright Jeremy O. Harris, and photographer Tyler Mitchell were also present to experience Rosalía’s highly anticipated new body of work.

    Around 7:30 p.m., fans were ushered from the cocktail hour to their seats, on white benches in front of a massive white sheet. All recording devices including phones were confiscated and placed in Yondr pouches, so the attendees could be fully present when the album began. “When was the last time you were in complete darkness,” read text projected onto the sheet before the album listening began. “Sometimes being in complete darkness is the best way to find the light.”

    Dua Lipa and Callum Turner

    Bryan Bedder/Getty Images

    And with that, the Lux listening commenced, with the hundred or so attendees sitting in silence as Rosalia’s powerful voice enveloped the space, with the lyrics of the Lux album projected at the head of the room. The orchestral, genre-bending album finds Rosalía singing in 13 different languages over 18 tracks, from her native Spanish to English, as well as Catalan, Hebrew, Mandarin, Italian, Arabic, Latin, and more.

    “Berghain,” Rosalía’s lead single in which she sings in German, features Bjork and Yves Tumor, and received a roar from the audience. The spicy, anti-fuck boy anthem “La Perla” also got the audience going with its incessant jabs at a former lover. “The local disappointment /National heartbreaker /An emotional terrorist /The biggest global disaster,” she sings of her ex.

    [ad_2]

    Chris Murphy

    Source link

  • At the LACMA Art+Film Gala, Demna Hosts Hollywood

    [ad_1]

    Claudia Sulewski, Finneas and Alex Israel

    Zach Hilty/BFA.com

    This mix of celebrity and art royalty aside, the gala is a bellwether for the world-conquering ambitions of LACMA, and raised a record-breaking $6.8 million to centralize film in the museum’s programming, and fund its mission at large. LACMA has long wanted to go toe-to-toe with its East Coast counterparts—namely the Metropolitan Museum of Art—and now it has a showstopper of a building, designed by Swiss architect Peter Zumthor, set to open in April of next year. And LACMA, with this gala, has real showbiz leverage, the support of Hollywood power players. Just look at the host committee, comprised of co-chairs Eva Chow and Leonardo DiCaprio, who were joined by Gucci Artistic Director Demna and Gucci President and CEO Francesca Bellettini.

    But Demna is perhaps is most telling. One of the most influential and controversial fashion designers in the last decade, he reimagined the idea of zeitgeist while at Balenciaga. The Pinault family—who also own Christie’s, and CAA—moved him to Gucci, which is a genius move on a lot of levels but, for our specific purposes here, quite wonderful for this particular event. Demna really likes hanging out with artists. At one point, sculptor and photographer Paul Pfeiffer went over to say hello, and Demna cupped his hands over his heart and said to Pfeiffer: “I love your work.”

    Demna told me he’s restoring a historic architecturally significant home in Los Angeles to live in. He’s also been homing in on the conceptual ideal of Hollywood to situate the narrative of the new Gucci. In lieu of a runway show, he commissioned Spike Jones and Halina Reijn to make The Tiger, a short film starring Demi Moore, Edward Norton, Ed Harris, Elliot Page, Keke Palmer, Alia Shawkat, Julianne Nicholson, Heather Lawless, Ronny Chieng, Kendall Jenner and Alex Consani. The result brought the characters from his “La Famiglia” collection to life.

    And then, to ice that cake, Demna hosted the biggest art museum gala in Tinseltown. It honored Mary Corse, as legendary of the West Coast light and space artists as you can get. James Turrell introduced her—he referred to her as one of his heroes, along with Rothko and Georgia O’Keeffe.

    [ad_2]

    Nate Freeman

    Source link

  • Two More Charged in Connection With Louvre Jewel Heist

    [ad_1]

    PARIS (Reuters) -A woman and a man were placed under formal investigation over the $102 million Louvre Museum jewel heist, the Paris prosecutor said on Saturday, bringing the total number charged in the case to four.

    The man, 37, known to police for previous thefts, was charged with organised theft and criminal conspiracy. The woman, 38, was charged with complicity in organised theft and criminal conspiracy.

    Three other people who had been arrested on October 29 along with the man and the woman were freed without charge, the prosecutor’s office said.

    The two new suspects were brought before investigating judges and remain in pre-trial detention, the prosecutor said. Both deny involvement in the heist.

    The prosecutor gave no further details about them, but French media reported that the woman was from La Courneuve, a hardscrabble suburb north of Paris.

    The prosecutor said last week that the first two suspects charged in the case had “partially admitted” their involvement.

    They included a 34-year-old Algerian who has lived in France since 2010 and was detained by police as he tried to board a flight to Algeria, and a 39-year-old who was already under judicial supervision in an aggravated theft case. Both live in Aubervilliers, a low-income neighbourhood in northern Paris.

    The prosecutor said that investigations are continuing. So far, no trace has been found of the stolen jewels.

    Two weeks ago, two hooded thieves used a movers’ lift to reach a second-floor window, smashed the jewels’ display cases using power tools, and fled on the back of scooters driven by two accomplices. The heist has sent shockwaves around the world as it exposed security flaws at the world’s most-visited museum.

    (Reporting by Geert De ClercqEditing by Peter Graff)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    [ad_2]

    Reuters

    Source link

  • Ford Foundation Visionary Darren Walker Still Believes in America

    [ad_1]

    Darren Walker was not supposed to run the Ford Foundation. Born to a single mother in Louisiana in 1959, Walker grew up Black and poor in rural Texas. “I think I was always a strange little gay boy,” he says with a laugh. “I was fortunate. My mother gave me unconditional love, and so I never felt out of place or unwelcome.”

    Who knew Beula Spencer’s strange little boy would one day become the 10th president of the Ford Foundation, a private philanthropic organization with the goal of advancing human welfare and social change. Founded in 1936 by Edsel and Henry Ford, the Ford Foundation is one of the wealthiest private foundations in the world, with a reported endowment of over $16.8 billion. Since 2013, Walker has overseen the entire operation.

    Today, after almost 13 years, is leaving his post. On a Zoom from his home on the east side of Manhattan, Walker chats with Vanity Fair while sitting in his kitchen, intricately decorated with art and photos of Black luminaries like Muhammad Ali and James Baldwin. “I have all sorts of things pinned on it—an inspiration wall,” he says.

    Marty Baron, José Carlos Zamora, Amal Clooney, George Clooney, Melinda French Gates, Walker, and Fatou Baldeh attend the Clooney Foundation For Justice’s The Albies.Taylor Hill/Getty Images.

    Inspiration is a core tenet of Walker’s new book, The Idea of America. Published on September 3 and featuring a foreword by Bill Clinton, the book is a 500-plus page compilation of Walker’s speeches, essays, and musings about the promise and pitfalls of our nation—and how to remain optimistic even in our current political landscape. “I believe in this country because it made my journey possible,” says Walker.

    A graduate of the University of Texas’s undergraduate program and law school, Walker says that federally funded social programs like the Pell Grant are responsible for getting him to where he is today. “There were so few barriers to my getting on that mobility escalator,” he says. “I was in the first Head Start program. I went to great public schools. I proudly assert that I have never had a day of private education in my life. That is because my country believed in my potential, and that manifests in the kinds of policies and programs and private philanthropy.”

    Walker decided to write his book, which he calls “a love letter to America,” after reflecting on the multitude of essays he’d written and speeches he’d given at both universities and Fortune 500 companies. He quickly realized “how prescient and timely many of them remain,” he says. “I wrote about the growing skepticism of capitalism by younger people. I wrote several about extremism and polarization and how we had been growing intolerant on both sides. On the right and the left, there was less willingness to tolerate, to engage, to even think about building consensus with people who we disagreed with—and how harmful that is for our democracy.”

    [ad_2]

    Chris Murphy

    Source link

  • Video: A Haunted Tour of the Met Museum

    [ad_1]

    new video loaded: A Haunted Tour of the Met Museum

    Zachary Small, culture reporter, takes us on a tour of his four favorite spooky artworks at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. You’re in for a scare: they include a decapitation platter and a sculpture of a rumored cannibal.

    By Zachary Small, Edward Vega, David Seekamp and Joey Sendaydiego

    October 31, 2025

    [ad_2]

    Zachary Small, Edward Vega, David Seekamp and Joey Sendaydiego

    Source link