Writing Shotgun
SECOND ART MUSEUM AUDIT IS IN, AND RESULTS ARE SOBERING
Long Beach Museum of Art’s third audit in two years–and its second audit this year–was unleashed earlier today by City Auditor Laura Doud’s office. As promised, it takes a long, hard look at the museum’s extensive inventory, and the results are rather chilling.
As was rumored earlier this year, Doud’s office discovered that a large number of pieces were “not located or observed,” which could mean missing, or stolen–or, for some reason, just not found or seen.
It’s available for download at the City of Long Beach website, but you can see the audit and the museum’s response directly by clicking here. And Long Beach City Council will hear about the audit in eight days, at the council’s Aug. 12 meeting. (If you click, though, be warned: the audit is 43 pages, so it may take a little while to open.)
The museum’s inventory is divided between pieces owned by the Foundation, which runs the museum, and pieces owned by the City of Long Beach.
According to the audit, 144 of 1,134 city-owned art objects identified “were not located or observed” during the audit. (To be fair, and as if that helps, the audit reports that 121 of those 144 art objects weren’t observed during the museum’s “last reported complete inventory,” in 1988.)
These 144 missing art objects included examples of African art and artwork, and the two Alexei Jawlensky paintings we told you about in May.
Turns out, though, there’s another missing Jawlensky: a city-owned “artwork … attributable to Andreas Jawlensky, son of the famous artist, Alexei Jawlensky.” According to the audit, this Jawlensky–a third, missing Jawlensky, for those following along at home–”was observed in 1988, but has since been missing.”
The audit notes variously that collection inventories and appraisals can be prohibitively expensive, but then there’s this: “An appraisal of selected artwork completed in 1999, valued 146 City pieces of art at $11 million. The current appraised value of the City’s collection is unknown.”
But wait, there’s more: according to the audit–and, again to be fair, we’d already heard this–the museum’s storage facilities aren’t large enough to house both city- and foundation-owned artwork, together numbering more than 2,800 pieces, so more than 40 percent of the city’s collection “is stored off-site.”
We’ll leave you with this–for now: “Five City-owned art pieces were found in City Departments and not properly safeguarded. Subsequent to the completion of our audit, these five pieces have been returned to the Foundation for safekeeping.”
Makes you wonder where exactly these five pieces were located. We’ll have more on the audit coming soon, including the museum’s response.
Tags: alexei jawlensky, California, Laura Doud, Long Beach, Long Beach City Council, long beach museum of art, missing Jawlensky paintings, museum audit, Southern California, The District Weekly, Theo Douglas
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