- The Chinese government would like people to stop hiring strippers for funerals. [The Wall Street Journal]
- Here’s how to help the people suffering in Nepal. [AVC]
- Sadly-not-very-shocking footage of Baltimore police beating a press photographer covering one of the many Freddie Gray protests over the weekend. [City Paper]
- How art collectors can avoid paying taxes on artwork purchases. [The New York Times]
- The Austrian Museum of Applied Arts/Contemporary Art has become the first museum to purchase an artwork using Bitcoin. [ARTnews]
- Katy Perry’s application to trademark the “Left Shark” Super Bowl meme has been denied. [Art Law Report via Live Nation]
- The op-eds continue! In Sacramento, the $8-million commission for a Koons “piglet” sparks a debate over the lack of public art made by women. [The Sacramento Bee]
- Curbed reports: “Forget the Whitney: The Tonya Harding & Nancy Kerrigan 1994 Museum Is the Best Museum.” [Curbed]
- Medical robots can be hacked. [MIT Technology Review]
- Somehow this seems like a slap on the wrist? James Meyer, Jasper Johns’s former studio assistant, stole $6.5 million in work from the artist; Meyer then sold the work to galleries and other purchasers. He will face one-and-a-half years in prison. [Courthouse News Service]
- We feel strangely empowered using CloneZone, an app that clones websites verbatim and allows users to edit and share them. We’ve been editing the New York Times. [CloneZone via: Rhizome]
- I visited the new restaurant Santina the other day and wondered why so much of the building was made of glass (it was very loud). I hadn’t been to the Whitney yet, though, so it didn’t occur to me that restaurateurs Mario Carbone, Rich Torrisi, and Jeff Zalaznick would want it to match the museum (which is literally a stone’s throw away). Anyway, turns out Renzo Piano designed the restaurant too. A review tells us the food is pretty good. (Paddy) [The New York Times]
Monday Links: Don’t Steal From Your Boss
by Paddy Johnson Michael Anthony Farley Corinna Kirsch on April 27, 2015 Massive Links
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