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The Headlines

THE WRITING ON THE WALL.It’s been a strong week for amateur archaeologists. TheNew York Timesjust had a story about three Norwegian friends whohunt petroglyphs. Now theGuardianhas a piece on a self-described “person off the street” in Britain who has investigated the dots and markings that appear near depictions of animals in 20,000-year-old cave art in Europe. Studying photos, the sleuth,Ben Bacon, determined that they amount toa system of keeping time, denoting when various creatures were mating and giving birth, on a lunar calendar. Bacon has coauthored a paper with some pros, and said, “As we probe deeper into their world, what we are discovering is that these ancient ancestors are a lot more like us than we had previously thought.”

Related Articles

Visitors with their backs to the camera look at the Mona Lisa painting, which hangs on a blue-wall.

Louvre Will Limit Daily Visitors In Effort to Provide More 'Comfortable Visit'

French Authorities Have Detained Two Archaeologists Key to the Louvre Antiquities Investigation

ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST.Two new buildings forColumbia University’s business school in Manhattan are named for ARTnewsTop 200 collectorsHenry R. KravisandDavid Geffen, and were designed by art-world favoriteDiller Scofidio + Renfro(withFxCollaborative). Their layout “reflects the close fit of the architecture to person-to-person connection and intensified interaction—what the school’s leadership sees as essential to the sprawling aspirations it has for its graduates to do good as they make money,”James S. Russellwritesin theNew York Times. Meanwhile, theNational Museum of the U.S. Navyhasshortlisted five firms, includingFrank Gehry PartnersandBjarke Ingels Group, to develop proposals for a potential home in theWashington Navy Yardin D.C., theWashington Timesreports.

The Digest

For the first time, the United States has repatriated a looted antiquity to the Palestinian Authority. The returned item is an Assyrian ritual spoon from the 8th century B.C.E. that is believed to have been stolen from the West Bank. It wasseizedfrom the collection ofMichael H. Steinhardt.[The New York Times]

TheLouvre, regularly the most-visited art museum in the world, reported attendance of 7.8 million for last year: still down 19 percent from the pre-pandemic 2019, but a very healthy 170-percent increase over 2021. Interesting datapoint: 45 percent of the visitors were under 25. The kids are alright![AFP/Yahoo! News]

The Seoul art world is continuing to heat up, withPeres Projectsplanning to open a gallery in the Samcheong area, where South Korean powerhouses likeKukjeandPKMare headquartered.[The New York Times]

The French architectRenée Gailhoustet, who made affordable, social housing the focus of her long and decorated career, has died at 93.[Dezeen]

The Los Angeles home of actor-producersViola DavisandJulius Tennonfeatures a statue of an Agojie warrior that they acquired in Cape Town and a work by the South African photographerDavid Ballam.[Architectural Digest]

Glasgow, Scotland is enjoying a“street art renaissance,”and officials are developing a plan to make walls available for renegade artists to work legally.[The Guardian]

The Kicker

A CASE OF MISTAKEN IDENTITY.Last month,Marina Abramovicwroteabout her admirationfor the work of fellow artistAnne Imhofin theFinancial Times—and admitted that she mistook a wall of lockers in Imhof’sStedelijk Museumshow for, well, actual lockers, rather than an installation involving lockers. (Thank you to theArt Newspaperforsurfacing that item.) In any case, judging by this one essay, Abramovic would make a solid art critic. She writes of the exhibition, “I left feeling I had just witnessed something important—something that’s happening right now with the humans in this world. I was also left with a strong feeling of beauty, sadness, melancholy and loss.”[Financial TimesandThe Art Newspaper]