“Great theater — drama and excitement,” says Met Museum CFO
“Wow,” says Daniel Herrick, Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of the Metropolitan Museum of Art from 1968 until 1985, and subsequently the CFO and Treasurer of the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. “There’s so much more in Rogues’ Gallery than I, even after working there for seventeen years, could possibly have imagined or […]
“Highly entertaining” but banned in Met bookstore — Bloomberg.com
Introducing “Secrets, Phonies Animate Lively Met Museum History,”an interview about Rogues’ Gallery for Bloomberg’s Muse, its executive editor, the Pulitzer Prize-winning cultural critic Manuela Hoelterhoff calls the book “highly entertaining,” and reports something I assumed but didn’t know, that the book “is not for sale in the gift shop of the lofty art house on […]
#1 (with an asterisk)
Rogues’ Gallery, which already hit this spot at Barnes & Noble, is now the best-selling book on art (and #1 in urban sociology, too) on amazon.com, too.
Page Six on Fifth
Today’s Page Six in the New York Post covers the Rogues’ Gallery book party.
Costume Drama
Although she leads with a photo of Richard Avedon-inspired elephants, Lee Rosenbaum, aka the art-blogger culturegrrl, doesn’t mention the elephant in the room, Rogues’ Gallery, in her post today on the Metropolitan Museums’ new Costume Institute show, “The Model as Muse.” But she does second the point already made in the book and in comments […]
#1 (with an asterisk)
Rogues’ Gallery is the bestselling work of art history in the country.
Vanity Fair: Rogues’ Gallery is “explosive”
Vanity Fair’s Society & Style gives Georgette Mosbacher‘s launch party for Rogues Gallery top billing over competing fetes that attracted mere movie stars and Chelsea Clinton in a post on Thursday night’s top parties. “Why?” asks VF. “Because social powerhouses have been awaiting this book with bated breath, and where better to toast it than […]
Sympathy for the Devil: At the Brooke Astor trial
On Thursday morning, Charlene Marshall was sobbing, her eyes bloodshot and bright red when she walked into Supreme Court in Manhattan where her husband Anthony is on trial, charged with manipulating his Alzheimer’s Disease-stricken mother, the philanthropist and socialite Brooke Astor, into changing her will in his favor, plundering her estate and selling off her […]
Frieze: a “meticulous” and “entertaining romp”
Brian Sholis of Frieze calls Rogues’ Gallery “an unabashedly unofficial history… ranging from the Met’s early days as ‘a firetrap with shellacked floors and walls covered with red billiard cloth’ to the questions facing the institution today as it adjusts to a new director, Thomas P. Campbell, after being led for 30 years by Philippe […]
I’ll Huff and I’ll Post
I’ve just made my debut on The Huffington Post (thanks Arianna!), with some contrarian observations about the prosecution of Anthony Marshall, Brooke Astor’s only child. Astor, Marshall and Annette de la Renta, who testified at the trial this week, have all been trustees of the Metropolitan Museum, and feature prominently in the cast of characters […]