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Home image/svg+xml 2021 Timothée Giet AL Clippings image/svg+xml 2021 Timothée Giet The NYC Art World Surveys Damage And Makes Predictions Following the Devastation Caused By Hurricane Sandy
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The NYC Art World Surveys Damage And Makes Predictions Following the Devastation Caused By Hurricane Sandy

November 1, 2012

Two people move a large canvas outside.

In the wake of the unprecedented destruction caused by Hurricane Sandy earlier this week, the art dealers, gallerists, and museum professionals of New York City survey the damage done. From Chelsea to Greenpoint, and DUMBO to the Lower East Side, the art world is grappling with destroyed artworks and wrecked office and exhibition spaces.

Art Info reported that many spaces, including R 20th Century in SoHo, Rachel Uffner Gallery on the LES, the New Museum on the Bowery, Postmasters Gallery in Chelsea, and Storm King Art Center in Mountainville are without power. Others, including art spaces in Chelsea and Bushwick, were hit especially hard. Among the most affected was gallerist Zach Feuer, whose gallery is on West 22nd Street between 10th and 11th Avenues. At the peak of the storm, waters reached five feet inside his gallery and almost all of the work in his current exhibition, “Kate Levant: Closure of the Jaw,” has been destroyed. As of yesterday, Feuer and his staff were planning to return to the gallery to break open the warped-shut door to the back room where much of his inventory is kept. Some of the storage racks are built higher than five feet, so he’s hoping they provided minimal protection. Although he had not been able to fully assess the damage, he estimated that 2 percent of the artworks “escaped damage.” Additionally, the wall between his gallery and its neighbor, CRG Gallery, was torn apart during the storm. Meanwhile, in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, 99 Commercial Street, an old factory that was converted into studios for dozens of artists for many years, was flooded by the waters from the Newtown Creek, destroying years of work.

Besides the damage done to the artworks themselves, the exhibit spaces, offices, and storage spaces were affected. Tony Coll, who manages the building that includes Feuer’s gallery, as well as the Franklin Parrasch Gallery and the CRG Gallery, said that the storm caused damage to the building that would have to be dealt with before many of the galleries could open for business. Coll stated that in addition to still being without power, there may be damage to the electrical systems. Repairs will also have to be done to the interior walls and doors. Coll estimated that the costs for his building would be around $200,000.

Once the immediate devastation of the hurricane has been dealt with, a major question to be tackled is how artists, dealers, and institutions will sort out the cost of damage done to art works and how insurance will be affected. Art dealer Lisa Schroeder noted over Twitter that her gallery has insurance for $500,000, but many galleries do not insure art, though most have liability and short-term travel insurance. She predicts that “premiums are going to go through the roof.”

The unprecedented damage done to one of the world’s centers of art creation and business will undoubtedly force insurance companies, business owners, and artists alike to reassess how legal and insurance risks will be managed in the art world.

 

To read up on coverage of how the art world has been affected around the city:

New York Times

Huffington Post

NY Gallerist

Art Info

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.

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Despite the passage of multiple anti-money launder Despite the passage of multiple anti-money laundering laws in the U.S. over the past two decades, the art market is still considered the "largest legal unregulated industry." Its perceived lax regulatory regime and various industry-specific factors, makes high-value art an attractive tool for laundering criminal proceeds. 

The rise in laundering through high-value art is mainly attributed to the high-dollar transactions values, the ease of transporting artwork across borders, the market's longstanding culture of privacy, and art's evolution as a financial asset. That said, the art market is not entirely unregulated. As this article shows, other mechanisms — including industry self-regulation, public pressure from high-profile litigation and settlements, and sanction laws — provide a certain regulatory structure.

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10 DAYS TO GO - MARK YOUR CALENDARS! Saturday, Ju 10 DAYS TO GO - MARK YOUR CALENDARS!

Saturday, June 13 | 11:30–13:00
Auditorium Willy G.S. Hirzel, Landesmuseum Zurich
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With big gratitude to our sponsors, we look forward to welcoming you at the event!
📍June 13, 11:30 - 13:00 | Auditorium Willy G.S. Hi 📍June 13, 11:30 - 13:00 | Auditorium Willy G.S. Hirzel, Landesmuseum Zurich 

Free & open to the public

This June, as part of the official program of @zurichartweekend, we are bringing together some of the sharpest minds in the international art world for a candid conversation on what’s reshaping collecting today.

▪️Art Markets and the World in Transition: Frameworks Shaping Global Collecting

Geopolitics. Tariffs. AML regulation. Taxes. The rules of the art market are changing as fast as your news feed, and this panel is where experts unpack what that means for collectors, gallerists, and art lovers.

Speakers: 

Will Korner (TEFAF) · Alana Kushnir (Aurelian Lawyers & Advisers) · Pascal Robert (Pascal Robert Gallery) · Stefan Puttaert (Nicola Erni Collection) · Irina Tarsis, Esq. (Center for Art Law, moderator)

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Join the Center for Art Law for a conversation wit Join the Center for Art Law for a conversation with Dr. Rubina Raja, Professor of Classical Archaeology and Art at Aarhus University, as she presents contemporary, collaborative approaches to combating the illicit trade in antiquities, with a particular focus on Palmyra (Tadmor), Syria.

Drawing on the historical relationship between collecting and looting, the discussion will highlight the Palmyrene Portrait Project, a corpus of over 4,000 funerary portraits from Palmyra compiled by Dr. Raja and her team since 2012. The project serves as a critical record of material that, in many cases, remained in situ prior to the outbreak of the Syrian Civil War. 

Before its inception, this body of material had not been treated as a unified corpus, nor systematically digitized. Today, the project stands as both the largest corpus of individual Roman period portraits from a single urban context and an essential scholarly and practical tool for identifying objects from Palmyra as they emerge on the art market. 

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This decision raised strong reactions from the art world, denouncing the false administrative logic behind this reorganization, which, according to the Flemish Minister of Culture, aims to strengthen collaboration and coherence within the cultural landscape. How does this transfer truly impact the Belgian artistic landscape — and does it really contribute to any coherence, or does it instead destroy the long-term curation and expertise that the institution has built in Antwerp?

📚 Click the link in our bio to read the full article by Alexandra Kharchenko. 

https://itsartlaw.org/art-law/flemish-governments-plan-to-dismantle-m-hkas-collection-in-the-name-of-centralization-of-art/ 

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Thank you to all of our sponsors for all of their Thank you to all of our sponsors for all of their help in executing our 2026 Art Law Conference!!

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This is the final day to bid in our Annual Art Law This is the final day to bid in our Annual Art Law Conference 2026 Silent Auction to support the Center's mission to advance artists’ rights and provide accessible legal resources to the artistic community. All proceeds go directly toward the Center’s programs, including our Summer Internship and ongoing educational initiatives. 

Don't miss out on the amazing pieces  and experiences up for grabs!

 Biding will end May 27 at 5:30pm ET.

1st: Floragen 2.0.1 by Colleen Hoffenbacker 
2nd: Jumping Frog by Vija Doks 
3rd: Untiled no.11( Amy Hollywood) by Andre Pace 

🖼️ Follow the link in our bio to begin bidding! 

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In 1935 Ernst Magnus was forced to sell "The Virgi In 1935 Ernst Magnus was forced to sell "The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne" and other works in order to escape the Nazi regime. In 1941 the painting was sold to Hermann Göring and was then recovered by the Allies at the close of World War II. By the 1960s the painting was held by the Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen.

Originally restitution was rejected, but under expanded guidelines the Museum chose to restitute the piece  to Ernst Magnus' heirs. It is now set to be Auction by Sotheby's on June 2, 2026. The starting bid is listed at $28k and the estimated price between $40-60k.

🔗 Check out more about this work and it's provenance using the links in our bio!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #artlawyer #lawyer #legalresearch #nazilootedart #artcrime #wwii #restitution
Make sure to check out our Annual Art Law Conferen Make sure to check out our Annual Art Law Conference 2026 Silent Auction to support the Center's mission to advance artists’ rights and provide accessible legal resources to the artistic community. All proceeds go directly toward the Center’s programs, including our Summer Internship and ongoing educational initiatives. 

 Biding will end on May 27 at 5:30pm ET.

🗽 Swipe to preview a selection of the consultations & experiences that will be available for purchase through the auction and follow the link in our bio to begin bidding! 

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Historical examples of famous fakes and forgeries Historical examples of famous fakes and forgeries explain how technical skill is not the only factor that allow forgeries to flourish in the art market. Historical context — as illustrated by World War II-era cases — or, in the modern world, the lack of due diligence and risk assessment and failures of authentication, show how a combination of factors allows forgeries to flourish in particular contexts. 

From a legal perspective, fraud and forgeries are not the only issues complicating the operation of the art market. They are further amplified by related problems such as money laundering, fraud schemes, and theft. In this context, due diligence and authentication become even more critical considerations for buyers and sellers.

🔗 Click the link in our bio to read the complete article by Lauren Stein to get a deeper understanding of the vulnerabilities of the art market!

https://itsartlaw.org/art-law/when-imitation-is-not-flattery-art-fakes-forgeries-and-the-market-they-fool/ 

 #centerforartlaw #artlaw #legal #artlawyer #legalresearch #forgery #fraud #arttransparency
Don't miss out on our Annual Art Law Conference 20 Don't miss out on our Annual Art Law Conference 2026 silent auction to support the Center's mission to advance artists’ rights and provide accessible legal resources to the artistic community. All proceeds go directly toward the Center’s programs, including our Summer Internship and ongoing educational initiatives. 

 Biding will end on May 27 at 5:30pm ET.

📚 Swipe to preview a selection of the books that will be available for purchase through the auction and follow the link in our bio to begin bidding! 

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #legalresearch #2026annualconference #2026 #auction #nonprofit
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