• About
    • Mission
    • Team
    • Boards
    • Mentions & Testimonials
    • Institutional Recognition
    • Annual Reports
    • Current & Past Sponsors
    • Contact Us
  • Resources
    • Article Collection
    • Podcast: Art in Brief
    • AML and the Art Market
    • AI and Art Authentication
    • Newsletter
      • Subscribe
      • Archives
      • In Brief
    • Art Law Library
    • Movies
    • Nazi-looted Art Restitution Database
    • Global Network
      • Courses and Programs
      • Artists’ Assistance
      • Bar Associations
      • Legal Sources
      • Law Firms
      • Student Societies
      • Research Institutions
    • Additional resources
      • The “Interview” Project
  • Events
    • Worldwide Calendar
    • Our Events
      • All Events
      • Annual Conferences
        • 2026 Art Law Conference
        • 2025 Art Law Conference
        • 2024 Art Law Conference
        • 2023 Art Law Conference
        • 2022 Art Law Conference
        • 2015 Art Law Conference
  • Programs
    • Visual Artists’ Legal Clinics
      • Art & Copyright Law Clinic
      • Artist-Dealer Relationships Clinic
      • Artist Legacy and Estate Planning Clinic
      • Visual Artists’ Immigration Clinic
    • Summer School
      • 2026
      • 2025
    • Internship and Fellowship
    • Judith Bresler Fellowship
  • Case Law Database
  • Log in
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
  • Log in
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
Center for Art Law
  • About
    About
    • Mission
    • Team
    • Boards
    • Mentions & Testimonials
    • Institutional Recognition
    • Annual Reports
    • Current & Past Sponsors
    • Contact Us
  • Resources
    Resources
    • Article Collection
    • Podcast: Art in Brief
    • AML and the Art Market
    • AI and Art Authentication
    • Newsletter
      Newsletter
      • Subscribe
      • Archives
      • In Brief
    • Art Law Library
    • Movies
    • Nazi-looted Art Restitution Database
    • Global Network
      Global Network
      • Courses and Programs
      • Artists’ Assistance
      • Bar Associations
      • Legal Sources
      • Law Firms
      • Student Societies
      • Research Institutions
    • Additional resources
      Additional resources
      • The “Interview” Project
  • Events
    Events
    • Worldwide Calendar
    • Our Events
      Our Events
      • All Events
      • Annual Conferences
        Annual Conferences
        • 2026 Art Law Conference
        • 2025 Art Law Conference
        • 2024 Art Law Conference
        • 2023 Art Law Conference
        • 2022 Art Law Conference
        • 2015 Art Law Conference
  • Programs
    Programs
    • Visual Artists’ Legal Clinics
      Visual Artists’ Legal Clinics
      • Art & Copyright Law Clinic
      • Artist-Dealer Relationships Clinic
      • Artist Legacy and Estate Planning Clinic
      • Visual Artists’ Immigration Clinic
    • Summer School
      Summer School
      • 2026
      • 2025
    • Internship and Fellowship
    • Judith Bresler Fellowship
  • Case Law Database
Home image/svg+xml 2021 Timothée Giet Art law image/svg+xml 2021 Timothée Giet Three works from the Harvard Art Museum: How I Introduced Art Law to Educate Visitors
Back

Three works from the Harvard Art Museum: How I Introduced Art Law to Educate Visitors

July 22, 2025

Fog Museum Center for Art Law Article

By Hannah Gadway

Art law is intriguing for those already invested in the realm of law, but can also be an educational tool that can help general museum visitors understand how museums function and the significance of certain pieces in art history. In this article, I will walk through how I specifically used my “Art and Law” Student Guide tour at the Harvard Art Museums to teach about how the law is used to protect art, artists, and art collectors.

Please note that I was part of the Student Guide program at the Harvard Art Museums, which is an interdisciplinary program that focuses on the individual perspectives of Harvard College students.[1] This overview of my tour is meant to reflect my individual interests, not a prescribed set of highlights.

The law has a significant impact on the art world, as it interacts with issues such as taxation, theft, contracts, insurance, and more. The following is a look at three pieces at the Harvard Art Museums to explore art law, and, through their stories, showed how the law is used to protect art, artists, and art collectors. Doing so allowed me to educate visitors about basic aspects of art law, strengthen their museum literacy, and showcase how certain artworks fit into the broader narrative of art history. Let’s walk through the pieces on my tour and how art law allowed me to teach about each artwork.

(Credit: Nocturne in Blue and Silver, c. 1871-72, James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Bequest of Grenville L. Winthrop, Object 1943.176, Harvard Art Museums collections online, Jul 17, 2025, https://hvrd.art/o/299838)
James Abbott McNeill Whistler, “Nocturne in Blue and Silver” (c. 1871-72), Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Bequest of Grenville L. Winthrop, Object 1943.176, Harvard Art Museums collections online, Jul 17, 2025, https://hvrd.art/o/299838

Protecting Artists: Nocturne in Blue and Silver by James Abbott McNeil Whistler (1871-72)

James Abbott McNeil Whistler, a 19th-century American artist who lived in London, was a bit of a character.[2] He pushed the limits of Victorian painting and the limits of acceptable eccentricity.[3] His  Nocturne in Blue and Silver (1871-72) at the Harvard Art Museums, exemplifies his idiosyncratic style and independent spirit, as it is an abstract take on a riverbank, rendered as a hazy and entirely subjective depiction of Whistler’s viewpoint.

Not everyone liked Whistler. In fact, some people downright disliked his unique take on painting. John Ruskin, an eminent Victorian art critic, was one of those doubters.[4] At the Grosvenor Gallery in 1877, he saw one of Whistler’s other nocturnes displayed — Nocturne in Black and Gold, the Falling Rocket, now at the Detroit Institute of Arts — and took to the publication Fors Clavigera to complain.[5] He wrote: “I have seen and heard much of Cockney impudence before now, but never expected to hear a coxcomb ask two hundred guineas for flinging a pot of paint in the public’s face.”[6]

Ruskin found that Whistler was purposefully mocking the art world. The critic was popular, so this writing had an effect, and Whistler’s reputation was substantially damaged. In order to combat Ruskin’s claims, Whistler met with solicitor James Anderson Rose and sued Ruskin for libel in 1877 in London’s High Court of Justice, Queen’s Bench Division.[7]

As I explained this story to museum visitors, I also outlined the legal idea of libel. Libel includes written, published statements which are alleged to defame a named or identifiable individual in a manner which causes them loss in their trade or profession, or damages their reputation.[8] A defamatory statement is presumed to be false unless the defendant can prove its truth.[9] Allowable defenses for defendants are justification, honest opinion (previously known as fair comment), and privilege.[10]

Since the case was about the specific field of the arts, a “special” jury of educated property-holders was assembled to decide if Whistler’s claim of libel could be substantiated.[11] Part of the evidence used at the trial was Whistler’s own paintings, which were displayed to jurors for inspection. This evidence included the Harvard Art Museums’ Whistler painting. As I explained this story to visitors, I provided context as to why this courtroom drama had important legal and art historical significance.

It may seem obvious to us today that Whistler’s painting deserves to be called art, but in Victorian England, this was not so cut and dry. At that time, the value of a painting was highly tied to the hours used to execute a painting and the detail present in the end result.”[12] Whistler directly challenged this idea, proclaiming that his art was a fleeting impression created in a day.[13] Ruskin’s lawyer interrogated Whistler, “You ask two hundred guineas for two day’s work?” to which Whistler replied, “No. I ask it for the knowledge I have gained in the work of a lifetime.”[14] On trial, Whistler defended the idea that the concept behind a piece of art can be just as important as the hours that an artist spends creating a work. This was an example of artists being able to use the law to protect themselves, and I explained that laws prohibiting libel can help artists maintain their reputations.

In the end, Whistler won this fight, although not most of his fees; he was only awarded a single farthing in damages. However, his case did have a lasting impact by both showing that an artist had the right to protect himself through the law and demonstrating that non-representational art had a place in the art world.

Delving into how this painting relates to art law helped me teach museum goers both how the law protects artists and why Whistler and his work are significant in the history of Western art. Artists are protected by the law in different ways, as their copyright is upheld, their property rights are protected, and their freedom of expression is shielded. Here, we see how the courtroom is not only a place to solve disputes, but also to create new ideas and discussions. In many ways, aesthetics were on trial just as much here as Ruskin and Whistler. As he defended himself in court from libel, Whistler also paved the way for the acceptance of impressionistic art in English society. The history of Whistler’s painting demonstrates how legal problems, like deciding what is art and how much an artist can define themselves, still have ramifications today.

Prince Shōtoku at Age Two (Shōtoku Taishi Nisaizō), Kamakura period, datable to circa 1292, Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Partial and promised gift of Walter C. Sedgwick in memory of Ellery Sedgwick Sr. and Ellery Sedgwick Jr., Object 2019.122, Harvard Art Museums collections online, Jul 17, 2025, https://hvrd.art/o/209642
Prince Shōtoku at Age Two (Shōtoku Taishi Nisaizō), Kamakura period, datable to circa 1292, Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Partial and promised gift of Walter C. Sedgwick in memory of Ellery Sedgwick Sr. and Ellery Sedgwick Jr., Object 2019.122, Harvard Art Museums collections online, Jul 17, 2025, https://hvrd.art/o/209642

Protecting (and Educating About) Art: Prince Shōtoku at Age Two (circa 1292)

One of the most common questions that I encountered on my tours was: “How did this get here?”

Many visitors at museums across the country don’t know that that information is normally right on the label of a work. At the Harvard Art Museums, I talked about how ownership at museums is established and utilized for teaching about our artworks.

Prince Shōtoku at Age Two is over 700 years old, and captivates almost everyone who walks into the Harvard Art Museums galleries.[15] The wooden statue depicts Prince Shōtoku, an important figure in Japanese Buddhism, praying at the age of two.[16] On the Harvard Art Museums website (and on the label in the galleries), one can learn about the ownership of this work by reading its provenance label:

[Yamanaka Shoji Co., Ltd, Awata Kyoto (1936)], sold; to Ellery Sedgwick, Beverly, MA, (1936-1960), passed; to his wife, Marjorie Russell, Beverly, MA (1960-1971), inherited; by Ellery Sedgwick, Jr., Gates Mills, Ohio, (1971-1991), inherited; by Walter Sedgwick, Woodside, CA, (1991-2019), partial and promised gift; to the Harvard Art Museums.[17]

How does this line of information help me teach about this little statue of Prince Shōtoku? Firstly, it helps me explain the concept of provenance and the origins of this specific artwork. As I explain to visitors, provenance is “the recorded journey of an artwork from its origin through one or more owners to the present day.”[18] Provenance can help museums establish legal — as well as ethical — claims over pieces in their collection.[19]

Turning back to the provenance string of Prince Shōtoku; in 1930, Harvard graduate Ellery Sedgwick made his first trip to Japan, where he saw this small statue. In 1936, he went to the local dealer Yamanaka and Co. and purchased the statue, which was then sent to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.[20] One day, a visiting curator called Mr. Sedgwick, as he found that the statue was “rustling.”[21] With permission from the owner, the Museum of Fine Arts opened a hole in the base of the statue, and found a unique surprise: Prince Shōtoku was hollow! The inside of the statue revealed over 70 tiny devotional objects, from scraps of paper to other miniature sculptures.[22]

This story is very well-documented, proving a direct line of ownership from the object’s origins in Japan to the galleries of Cambridge today. The authenticity of the statue was confirmed by conservators’ technical research, as the tiny objects inside proved that the work was created around 1292 (making it one of the oldest statues of its kind). Of course, other questions affect provenance research, like ethical boundaries. The MFA’s choice to cut into a Buddhist relic is controversial in light of today’s provenance methods, and non-destructive techniques are now preferred.[23] The standards of provenance research tend to shift, and the legal ability to cut into a statue is not the same as the standard museum practice (and those standards have drastically shifted in the century-wide span between Sedgwick’s purchase and today).

Now the piece is a partial and promised gift to the Harvard Art Museums, and a staple of the galleries. As I explain to visitors, this provenance history serves a legal and educational purpose. On the legal side, provenance research ensures that art is not illegally held by an individual or institution. It also serves an educational purpose. Through tracking Prince Shōtoku’s journey, we understand that he is one of the oldest statues of his kind, which allows us to highlight his importance in the history of Buddhist art.

The law preserves the rightful places of artworks and also ensures that we can tell their full stories. Beyond that, provenance research can bring museums together, as an exhibition exploring the statue’s origins united American and Japanese curators, and Sedgwick’s descendant described the piece as “an ambassador to the world.”[24]

Credit: Self-Portrait Dedicated to Paul Gauguin, 1888, Vincent van Gogh, Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Bequest from the Collection of Maurice Wertheim, Class of 1906, Object 1951.65, Harvard Art Museums collections online, Jul 17, 2025, https://hvrd.art/o/299843
Vincent van Gogh, “Self-Portrait Dedicated to Paul Gauguin” (1888)  Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Bequest from the Collection of Maurice Wertheim, Class of 1906, Object 1951.65, Harvard Art Museums collections online, Jul 17, 2025, https://hvrd.art/o/299843

Protecting Art Collectors and Collections: Self-Portrait Dedicated to Paul Gauguin by Vincent van Gogh (1888)

One of the most famous pieces at the Harvard Art Museums is its Vincent van Gogh piece, Self-Portrait Dedicated to Paul Gauguin. Visitors want to know everything about the contents of the painting, but I use my tour to take a step back and look around at the other pieces in the collection and consider who brought them to the Museums.

I find that helping our visitors understand how art museums acquire work and how the law can protect art collectors and donors can help deepen museum literacy. Museum literacy is working knowledge of what happens in museums, from understanding the role of visitors to the capabilities of curators.[25] Fostering museum literacy is a big goal of many museum educators, as it can help visitors feel more comfortable and empower them to have fulfilling visits to museums in the future.[26]

In 1974, Maurice Wertheim, Harvard class of 1906, gave a bequest to the Harvard Art Museums consisting of 43 pieces of art by various world-class artists, from Picasso to Monet.[27] As Cornell Law School’s Legal Encyclopedia explains, a bequest is “a gift of personal property made through a will.” Bequests normally include personal property, rather than real property, and are subject to certain stipulations. The Wertheim Bequest has a key restriction; it requires that all of the pieces be held together in the same gallery.[28] Any packing, transport, unpacking, installation, deinstallation, repacking, and shipment of all of the objects in the collections must be completed within 3 months.

Wertheim may have had such specific instructions due to how he acquired the van Gogh painting. Wertheim’s acquisition of van Gogh’s self-portrait was fraught with controversy.[29] In the collection of the Neue Staatsgalerie, Munich since 1919, it was denounced by the Nazis along with other examples of modern art as “degenerate” and sold at auction in 1939 in Switzerland.[30] Many collectors refused to purchase works from this sale, not wishing to participate in any transaction with the Nazis,[31] and Wertheim — who would be the president of the American Jewish Committee beginning in 1941[32] — faced a dilemma. Although Wertheim detested the Nazis, he found saving the painting to be justifiable, as he was preserving it for future generations.

The legal stipulations surrounding Wertheim’s bequest, like the fact that it must stay together in the galleries and be constantly displayed, preserve the collector’s aim to provide visitors access to art. I used the history of this storied collection to show how the law can help preserve the wills of collectors even after their deaths. Art law also allowed me to delve into the background of so-called Nazi degenerate art and how art has been labelled by certain groups throughout history.

In Conclusion: Art Law as a Tool for Museum Educators

The three pieces on my tour at the Harvard Art Museums were supplemented with conversations about the law. I used concepts like libel, provenance, and estate planning to help build museum literacy and delve into the importance of these artworks in their wider historical contexts. Art law can be a tool for museum educators that can empower visitors to feel more knowledgeable about artworks and the function of museums and the law. In sum, in the museum, art law is (should be) on display for everyone.

Suggested Readings

  • Jen Thum and Sarah Lieberman, “Fostering Museum Literacy and Museum-Going Identity at the Harvard Art Museums,” Index Magazine (2024), https://harvardartmuseums.org/article/fostering-museum-literacy-and-museum-going-identity-at-the-harvard-art-museums.
  • John O’Brian, Degas to Matisse: The Maurice Wertheim Collection, Harry N. Abrams Publishers and the Fogg Art Museum (1988), https://archive.org/details/degastomatissema00fogg/page/n5/mode/2up.
  • Linda Merrill, A Pot of Paint: Aesthetics on Trial in Whistler v Ruskin, Smithsonian Institution Press in collaboration with the Freer Gallery of Art, Smithsonian Institution (1992), https://archive.org/details/potofpaintaesthe0000merr.

About the Author

Hannah Gadway (Harvard College ’25, Harvard Law School Class of 2028) is the  Center for Art Law 2025 Outreach Coordinator. While attending Harvard College, Hannah helped generate interest in art on campus by working as a Student Guide at the Harvard Art Museums and the Co-President of the Harvard Undergraduate Law Review.

Reference:

  1. Anmol K. Grewal, “Ho Family Student Guide Program at the Harvard Art Museums: A Unique and Interdisciplinary Approach to Art,” The Harvard Crimson (2024), available at https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2024/12/3/harvard-art-museums-ho-student-guide-program-spotlight-tours/. ↑
  2. “James McNeill Whistler,” Smithsonian American Art Museum (2025), available at https://americanart.si.edu/artist/james-mcneill-whistler-5349. ↑
  3. Linda Merrill, A Pot of Paint: Aesthetics on Trial in Whistler v Ruskin, Smithsonian Institution Press in collaboration with the Freer Gallery of Art, Smithsonian Institution (1992), p. 84, available at https://archive.org/details/potofpaintaesthe0000merr. ↑
  4. Demie Kim, “When James Abbott McNeil Whistler Sued His Harshest Critics — and Won,” Artsy (2018), available at https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-james-abbott-mcneill-whistler-sued-harshest-critic-won. ↑
  5. Merrill, p. 47 ↑
  6. Id., p. 47 ↑
  7. Id., p. 58 ↑
  8. “Defamation,” Wex, Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute (accessed 2025), available at https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/defamation. ↑
  9. Id. ↑
  10. Id. ↑
  11. Merrill, p. 66 ↑
  12. Id., p. 219 ↑
  13. Id., 150 ↑
  14. Id., p. 148 ↑
  15. “2019.122: Prince Shōtoku at Age Two (Shōtoku Taishi Nisaizō),” Harvard Art Museums (accessed 2025), available at https://harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/209642?position=0. ↑
  16. Dr. Rachel Saunders and Angela Chang, “Prince Shōtoku at Age Two,” Smarthistory (accessed 2025), available at https://smarthistory.org/shotoku/. ↑
  17. Id. ↑
  18. Luke Kelly, “What Is Provenance—and Why Does It Matter?” Utah Museum of Fine Arts (accessed 2025), available at https://umfa.utah.edu/what-is-provenance. ↑
  19. Id. ↑
  20. “The Mysteries of Prince Shōtoku,” Harvard Art Museums (2018), available at https://harvardartmuseums.org/article/the-mysteries-of-prince-shotoku. ↑
  21. Id. ↑
  22. Id. ↑
  23. Id. ↑
  24. Katie Aberbach, “Reunited with a ‘transcendent’ figure,” The Harvard Gazette (2019), available at https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2019/06/reunion-with-shotoku-sculpture-alumnus-gifted-to-harvard-stirs-memories/. ↑
  25. Jen Thum and Sarah Lieberman, “Fostering Museum Literacy and Museum-Going Identity at the Harvard Art Museums,” Index Magazine (2024), available at https://harvardartmuseums.org/article/fostering-museum-literacy-and-museum-going-identity-at-the-harvard-art-museums. ↑
  26. Id. ↑
  27. “The Maurice Wertheim Collection,” Harvard Art Museums (accessed 2025), available at https://harvardartmuseums.org/tour/80/slide/1895. ↑
  28. Id. ↑
  29. John O’Brian, Degas to Matisse: The Maurice Wertheim Collection, Harry N. Abrams Publishers and the Fogg Art Museum (1988), p. 26, https://archive.org/details/degastomatissema00fogg/page/n5/mode/2up. ↑
  30. Id., p. 26 ↑
  31. Id., p. 26 ↑
  32. Id., p. 27 ↑

 

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not meant to provide legal advice. Readers should not construe or rely on any comment or statement in this article as legal advice. For legal advice, readers should seek a consultation with an attorney.

Post navigation

Previous SOLD OUT: Not so Soft and not so Subtle Art of Capitulation
Next Shedding Light on Copyright’s Challenges in LED-Based Art

Related Art Law Articles

The Legal and Economic Landscape of Federal Arts Funding Lauren Stein
Art lawNEA

Endowments for the Arts: Shrinking Legal and Economic Landscape of Federal Arts Funding

May 4, 2026
Center for Art Law Canada Pledges Resale Royalty
Art lawCanadaresale royalty

Canada pledges an artist’s resale royalty—can the United States follow “suite”?

April 9, 2026
Abraham and Isaac Returned Home Center for Art Law
Art law

Abraham and Isaac: Sculptures returned home after Spanish Supreme Court decision

April 8, 2026
Center for Art Law
What the Heck is Copyright (2)

What is Copy, Right?

2026 Annual Conference

Let’s explore Visual Art, AI, and the Law in the 21st Century together.

 

Reserve Your Ticket TODAY
Guidelines AI and Art Authentication

AI and Art Authentication

Explore the Guidelines for AI and Art Authentication for the responsible, ethical, and transparent use of artificial intelligence.

Download here
Center for Art Law

Follow us on Instagram for the latest in Art Law!

Join us on May 27th at Brooklyn Law School for our Join us on May 27th at Brooklyn Law School for our Annual Art Law Conference 2026: What is Copy, Right? 

We are very excited to introduce you to the topic and speakers for, Panel 1: So Inappropriate — Lessons About Copyright Law and Art: First There Was Art, Then Copyright, Then Fair Use… and Now AI?

From early copyright doctrines to contemporary fair use debates, this panel examines how artists and lawyers have navigated questions of ownership, appropriation, and originality in visual art. Panelists will explore key developments in copyright law affecting traditional artistic practices, from borrowing and remixing to transformative use, while also considering how emerging technologies, including AI, are beginning to reshape long‑standing legal frameworks and artistic norms.

Moderator: Irina Tarsis, Founder, Center for Art Law
Speakers: Vivek Jayaram, Founder, Jayaram Law; Vincent Wilcke, Pace Gallery; Greg Allen, Artist and writer 

Reserve your tickets using the link in our bio or by visiting our website itsartlaw.org 🎟️ 
See you soon!
Next stop: Venice. The 61st Biennale has been maki Next stop: Venice. The 61st Biennale has been making waves and headlines for weeks and the doors have not even opened yet. The jury refused to award prizes and resigned nine days before the opening over geopolitical controversies. Some artists boycott while others show up even if unwelcome. Some pavilions will be empty, some will not be open to the public… Sources of funds, sources of inspiration, so many questions, so much on display for critical eyes. Meanwhile the boats are waiting for anyone lucky enough to find themselves in the floating world.

Help us reflect on the Biennale by sharing your art law stories.

#ArtLaw #Venice #Biennale2026 #ArtWorld #BiennaleofDissent #LaSerenissima #GoldenLion #SeeArtThinkArtLaw
Center for Art Law is very pleased to welcome Prof Center for Art Law is very pleased to welcome Professor Ben Zhao as the Keynote Speaker for our Annual Art Law Conference 2026! 

Ben Zhao is the Neubauer Professor of Computer Science at the University of Chicago where he, and a team of researchers at the university, developed NightShade & Glaze, two data-poisoning tools which protects artists' work from being scraped for AI data training. 

Professor Zhao will discuss tools, such as NightShade, which can assist in defending art in the age of AI. 

The 2026 conference will focus on copyright law as it relates to visual art, artificial intelligence, and the rapidly evolving legal landscape of the 21st century. The program will begin with Professor Zhao's keynote address, followed by three substantive panels designed to build on one another throughout the afternoon. In addition, we will host a curated group of exhibitors featuring databases, legal tools, and technology platforms relevant to artists’ rights, copyright, and AI. The program will conclude with a reception, providing time for continued discussion, networking, and engagement among speakers, exhibitors, and attendees. 

We hope you join us! Reserve your tickets now using the link in our bio 🎟️ 

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #copyrightlaw
A huge thank you to our hosts and incredible speak A huge thank you to our hosts and incredible speakers who made this London panel discussion truly special! 🙏✨ 🇬🇧 🇺🇦 

We were so fortunate to hear from:

🎤 Rakhi Talwar | RTalwar Compliance
🎤 Raminta Dereskeviciute | McDermott Will & Schulte
🎤 Daryna Pidhorna, Lawyer & Analyst | The Raphael Lemkin Society
🎤 Timothy Kompancheko | Bernard, Inc.
🎤 Yuliia Hnat | Museum of Contemporary Art NGO
🎤 Irina Tarsis | Center for Art Law

Your insights, expertise, and passion made this a conversation we won't forget. Thank you for sharing your time and knowledge with us! 💫

Bottom Line: the art market has power and responsibility. Our panel "Art, Money, and the Law: Sanctions & AML Enforcement in 2026" tackled the hard questions around money laundering, sanctions compliance, and what's at stake for art market participants in today's regulatory landscape.

⚠️ Regulators are watching and "history has it's eyes on you..." too We don't have to navigate the legal waters alone. Let's keep the conversation going.

What was your biggest takeaway? 

#ArtLaw #AMLCompliance #Sanctions #ArtMarket #ArtAndMoney #Enforcement2026
At the Center for Art Law we are preparing for our At the Center for Art Law we are preparing for our Annual Art Law Conference 2026, "What is Copy, Right? Visual Art, AI, and the Law in the 21st Century", and we hope you are as excited as we are! The event will take place on May 27th at Brooklyn Law School. 

In addition to the panels throughout the day, which will offer insights into the rapidly shifting landscape of art and copyright law, our conference will feature exhibitors showcasing resources for promoting artists' rights, and a silent auction aimed at bolstering the Center's efforts. 

We would like to invite you to take part in and support this year's Annual Art Law Conference by being an exhibitor or sponsor. We express our sincere appreciation to all of our sponsors, exhibitors and you! 

Find more information and reserve your tickets using the link in our bio! See you soon!
In this episode, we speak with art market expert D In this episode, we speak with art market expert Doug Woodham to unpack how Jean-Michel Basquiat became one of the most enduring cultural icons of our time.

Moving beyond his rise in 1980s New York, this episode focuses on what happened after his death. We explore how his estate, led by his father, shaped his legacy through control of supply, copyright, and narrative; how early collectors and market forces drove the value of his work; and how museums and media cemented his place in art history.

Together, we explore the bigger question: is creating great art enough, or does becoming an icon require an entire ecosystem working behind the scenes?

🎙️ Check out the podcast anywhere you get your podcasts using the link in our bio!

Also, please join us on May 27  for the highly anticipated Art Law Conference 2026, held at Brooklyn Law School and Online (Hybrid). Entitled “What is Copy, Right? Visual Art, AI, and the Law in the 21st Century,” this year’s conference explores the evolving relationship between visual art, copyright law, and artificial intelligence!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #artlawyer #podcast #legal #research #legalresearch #newepisode #artmarket #basquiat
Amy Sherald cancelled her mid-career retrospective Amy Sherald cancelled her mid-career retrospective, scheduled at the National Portrait Gallery (NPG) in D.C., after a curatorial controversy over the potential removal of her recent work, "Trans Forming Liberty" (2024). Sherald denounced the attempt to remove this work as a blatant and intentional erasure of trans lives. 

This is one of the best examples and the most illustrative examples of the current administration's growing efforts to control the Smithsonian Institution's programming. In this climate of political tension, how do cultural institutions defend themselves against censorship and keep their curatorial independence?

📚 Click the link in our bio to read more!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #legal #artlawyer #legalreserach #artcuration #curatorialindependance #censorship
Grab 15% off tickets the upcoming bootcamp on Arti Grab 15% off tickets the upcoming bootcamp on Artist-Dealer Relations, now available online!! 

Center for Art Law’s Art Lawyering Bootcamp: Artist-Dealer Relationships is an in-person, full-day training aimed at preparing lawyers for working with visual artists and dealers, in the unique aspects of their relationship. The bootcamp will be led by veteran attorneys specializing in art law.

This Bootcamp provides participants -- attorneys, law students, law graduates and legal professionals -- with foundational legal knowledge related to the main contracts and regulations governing dealers' and artists' businesses. Through a combination of instructional presentations and mock consultations, participants will gain a solid foundation in the specificities of the law as applied to the visual arts.

Bootcamp participants will be provided with training materials, including presentation slides and an Art Lawyering Bootcamp handbook with additional reading resources.

Art Lawyering Bootcamp participants with CLE tickets will receive New York CLE credits upon successful completion of the training modules. CLE credits pending board approval.

🎟️ Grab tickets using the link in our bio!

Get 15% off using the code: Final15 

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #legal #research #lawyer #artlawyer #bootcamp #artistdealer #CLE #trainingprogram
On the night of April 15–16, 2026 alone, Russia se On the night of April 15–16, 2026 alone, Russia sent hundreds of drones and missiles on sleeping cities across Ukraine, killing and injuring dozens of civilians. War is funded in part by individuals who have important artworks in their personal collections. This full-scale invasion of Ukraine, now in its fifth year, daily exacts a grave toll on Ukrainian lives and cultural heritage, while fundamentally disrupting European commerce. In response, art market participants have adapted their practices, most have accepted, if not always embraced, the need to scrutinize the source of funds and the ultimate beneficiaries of their transactions. Yet there is a growing sense that parts of the trade are holding their breath, waiting to see when they might safely return to dealing with the oligarchs who continue to fund the Russian war machine.

For art market participants operating in the UK, compliance is no longer a peripheral concern, it is a legal imperative. Regulators are watching, the consequences of non-compliance increasingly extend beyond administrative penalties into criminal liability, and private-public partnerships offer the most credible path toward a more resilient and trustworthy market. 

Join us on April 24th for a panel discussion in London on the current state of AML enforcement and sanctions.

🎟️ Grab your tickets using the link in our bio!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #artlawyer #lawyer #artcrime #london #artissues #museumissues
Sotheby's sold Modigliani’s Portrait de Leopold Zb Sotheby's sold Modigliani’s Portrait de Leopold Zborowski to Cahn in 2003 for the low price of about $1.55 million. In 2016, Cahn claimed he was verbally informed about authenticity issues with the painting by Sotheby's. The parties did make an agreement regarding Cahn reselling with Sotheby's for a guaranteed price in exchange for releasing the auction house from all claims related to the painting. Cahn claims that he attempted to set this process in motion in June 2025, but he received no response. Cahn now seeks damages totaling $2.67 million, plus interest and attorneys’ fees, for breach of contract. 

Through this dispute, Vivianne Diaz's article highlights a bigger issue in the art market by explaining how forgeries negatively affect both collectors and auction houses, and how auction houses need to be more careful, but most importantly, proactive in their authentication determinations.

📚 Click the link in our bio to read more!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #artlawyer #legalresearch #art #Modigliani #LeopoldZborowski #sothebys
Don't miss our upcoming April 20th bootcamp on Art Don't miss our upcoming April 20th bootcamp on Artist-Dealer Relations, now available online!!

Center for Art Law’s Art Lawyering Bootcamp: Artist-Dealer Relationships is an in-person, full-day training aimed at preparing lawyers for working with visual artists and dealers, in the unique aspects of their relationship. The bootcamp will be led by veteran attorneys specializing in art law.

This Bootcamp provides participants -- attorneys, law students, law graduates and legal professionals -- with foundational legal knowledge related to the main contracts and regulations governing dealers' and artists' businesses. Through a combination of instructional presentations and mock consultations, participants will gain a solid foundation in the specificities of the law as applied to the visual arts.

Bootcamp participants will be provided with training materials, including presentation slides and an Art Lawyering Bootcamp handbook with additional reading resources.

Art Lawyering Bootcamp participants with CLE tickets will receive New York CLE credits upon successful completion of the training modules. CLE credits pending board approval.

🎟️ Grab tickets using the link in our bio!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #legal #research #lawyer #artlawyer #bootcamp #artistdealer #CLE #trainingprogram
The historic Bayeux Tapestry, conserved in Normand The historic Bayeux Tapestry, conserved in Normandy, France, is scheduled to be loaned from the Bayeux Museum to the British Museum for ten months beginning in the fall of 2026. This is the first time the tapestry will have returned to the UK in over 900 years. 

This loan, authorized by France, has raised multiple controversies, particularly over conservation concerns. Nevertheless, it has been made possible through a combination of factors, including improved conservation techniques, enhanced transport precautions, comprehensive loan agreements, insurance, and the application of relevant protective laws. 

Check out our recent article by Josie Goettel to read more about this historic loan regarding not only in its symbolic significance, but also in its technical complexity.

📚 Click the link in our bio to read more!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #artlawyer #lawyer #legalresearch #legal #museumissues #bayeuxtapisserie #bayeuxtapestry #britishmuseum #bayeuxmuseum
  • About the Center
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter
  • Upcoming Events
  • Internship
  • Case Law Database
  • Log in
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
DISCLAIMER

Center for Art Law is a New York State non-profit fully qualified under provision 501(c)(3)
of the Internal Revenue Code.

The Center does not provide legal representation. Information available on this website is
purely for educational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice.

TERMS OF USE AND PRIVACY POLICY

Your use of the Site (as defined below) constitutes your consent to this Agreement. Please
read our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy carefully.

© 2026 Center for Art Law

Loading Comments...

You must be logged in to post a comment.