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- <text id=92TT0125>
- <title>
- Jan. 20, 1992: Thomas Krens:The CEO of Culture Inc.
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Jan. 20, 1992 Why Are Men and Women Different?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 36
- The CEO of Culture Inc.
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Controversial Guggenheim director Thomas Krens is changing the
- way the world's art museums operate
- </p>
- <p>By Alex Prud'Homme--With reporting by Alexandra Tuttle/Paris
- </p>
- <p> In 1988 New York City's Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum was
- in trouble. Money was tight; the museum's famous Frank Lloyd
- Wright-designed building was falling apart; exhibitions were
- uninspired; donors were losing interest. Enter Thomas Krens,
- armed with a degree in nonprofit management from Yale. As the
- Guggenheim's new director, he offered the board of trustees a
- stark choice: Preserve funds and run the museum conservatively,
- or attack. "If you want a vital institution," he said, "change
- has to take place on so many fronts that it's likely to be
- bewildering."
- </p>
- <p> That turned out to be an understatement. Today the museum
- has projects going in New York, Massachusetts, Italy, Austria
- and Spain, and a Guggenheim exhibit has just wound up a
- four-month tour of Australia. Using aggressive financial and
- marketing strategies normally applied to commercial enterprises,
- Krens, 45, may be reinventing the way museums do business--and
- in the process creating the art world's first multinational. He
- is the most outspoken and controversial of a growing number of
- museum directors who are fusing hard-edged business acumen with
- classic connoisseurship.
- </p>
- <p> "He's really a visionary," says Arthur Levitt Jr., former
- head of the American Stock Exchange and a Guggenheim board
- member. "But he's breaking some eggs in the art community."
- Krens' business-school jargon and management style offend many
- in the traditionally genteel, nonprofit world of museums. Says
- Hilton Kramer, editor of the New Criterion, a monthly arts
- review: "Krens has so far proven himself to be a complete
- disaster. His conception of a museum is all about expansion.
- He's a perfect example of what happens to a major cultural
- institution when it is given over to a bureaucrat."
- </p>
- <p> After a 20-year boom in the museum business, the costs of
- acquiring, insuring, transporting and storing art are spiraling
- beyond the means of many institutions. As tax breaks that
- encouraged the rich to donate to museums are eliminated in the
- U.S. (roughly 80% of all the objects in American museums are
- gifts), corporate and individual contributions are drying up.
- Public funding for art is shrinking dramatically. According to
- the American Association of Museums, as many as 29 states are
- contemplating reductions of 50% or more in art funding. And the
- recession has dampened Americans' interest in visiting museums,
- buying gift-shop tchotchkes and becoming members.
- </p>
- <p> Krens' solution is a three-pronged attack that
- traditionalists consider radical:
- </p>
- <p>-- Construction and Financing.
- </p>
- <p> The museum's spiral-shaped building on Fifth Avenue will
- reopen in May after two years of restoration and expansion. The
- $48 million project will increase exhibition space by
- two-thirds, even though critics charge that a new, 10-story
- annex designed by Gwathmey & Siegel detracts from the Wright
- building's architecture. At the same time, the Guggenheim will
- unveil a fully funded $5.5 million exhibition and office space
- in New York's SoHo district, designed by Arata Isozaki. To help
- pay for the flagship expansion--and additional storage
- facilities--the Guggenheim floated $54.9 million in tax-exempt
- bonds in 1989. Other museums issue bonds to finance projects,
- but typically use their endowments as collateral. The Guggenheim
- has an endowment of only $30 million and its loans are secured
- with a letter of credit from the Swiss Bank Corp.
- </p>
- <p>-- De-accessioning.
- </p>
- <p> In May 1990 the Guggenheim auctioned three paintings from
- its extraordinary collection of 19th and 20th century art--a
- Kandinsky, a Chagall and a Modigliani. The purpose was to raise
- $30 million for a deal to acquire more than 300 pieces of
- American Minimal art owned by Italian collector Count Giuseppe
- Panza di Biumo. It was the first step in Krens' plan to become
- a world-class presence in postwar art. Although such sell-offs--"de-accessionin museum jargon--are not unprecedented,
- cognoscenti complained that Krens was callously treating
- masterpieces as "assets." Maybe so. But each of the paintings
- went for more than 40% above Sotheby's highest estimate,
- bringing in $47.3 million. Krens insists that he does not have
- a policy of de-accessioning and sold only to obtain the Panza
- collection.
- </p>
- <p>-- Franchising.
- </p>
- <p> Because of space limitations, the Guggenheim can show only
- about 3% of its 6,000 works at any one time. To air out its
- collection and raise the museum's profile, Krens hopes to create
- what amounts to Guggenheim franchises. While the Whitney Museum
- of American Art has branches around New York and Connecticut,
- the Guggenheim is the first museum to think of opening
- international satellites.
- </p>
- <p> Critics mock Krens for creating a "McGuggenheim" chain and
- contend that constant travel will endanger fragile art. But the
- museum insists that every precaution is taken to ensure quality.
- Krens argues that overhead would be kept to a minimum by
- planning exhibitions years in advance and lining up
- international companies as sponsors. The key element is that
- host governments would bear the cost of building and operating
- the franchises, benefiting from the cachet (and tourist dollars)
- generated by the visiting collection.
- </p>
- <p> In the U.S., Krens has been involved in planning an $87
- million satellite museum in North Adams, Mass. If the
- long-delayed project gains enough financial backing--most
- importantly from the state--the Guggenheim would operate its
- new art outpost much as it has the Peggy Guggenheim Collection,
- housed in a neo-Palladian palazzo on Venice's Grand Canal since
- 1979. And Krens is making moves in Europe. In December
- representatives from Bilbao signed an agreement for a $100
- million Spanish Guggenheim to be designed by architect Frank
- Gehry. In 1989 Salzburg proposed an $80 million Austrian branch
- to be built inside a mountain. But many in Salzburg--resentful
- of the huge cost and what they see as Krens' imperious ways--oppose the project. In Paris, meanwhile, three of Peggy's
- grandchildren are threatening to sue the Guggenheim over the way
- the Venetian palazzo is run. "Krens has robbed the museum of all
- its originality and personality," says one of the Guggenheim
- grandchildren, art dealer Sandro Rumney. "He's just a
- businessman." Replies Krens: "We believe we've been faithful to
- what Peggy wanted in every way."
- </p>
- <p> "What cost success?" wonders a museum director. "He's very
- smart and ambitious, but how many projects can you do and keep
- your focus?" Krens is unapologetic. "My colleagues know what I'm
- doing, and it makes them apprehensive," he says. "Are we
- becoming a tough institution? I'd be a little bit concerned if
- I were not on this side of the picture. I believe, culturally
- speaking, that we're going to blow people's minds."
- </p>
- <p> Other young directors are watching Krens carefully to see
- how his initiatives fare. Says Ned Rifkin, 42, the new director
- of Atlanta's High Museum: "If Krens succeeds, we can truly say
- there is a new way to foster and nourish these institutions that
- are the lifeblood of our country." If not, Krens may be
- remembered for little more than reaping the whirlwind of his
- aggressive tactics.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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