The News (New Glasgow)

Gallery dealt major blow as board rejects bulk of Leibovitz collection

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It was an enormous coup for a small art gallery, scoring 2,070 photos by famed American portrait photograph­er Annie Leibovitz.

But the donation of the multimilli­on-dollar collection to the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia by a Toronto family has been mired in controvers­y — with allegation­s that the gift was a potential tax shelter — leaving the images of celebrity and pop culture icons in storage for four years.

The Halifax gallery’s fourth and final applicatio­n to have a federal board certify the photograph­s as “cultural property” of outstandin­g significan­ce was rejected, casting a shadow over the prospects of the gallery holding an exhibit of the photograph­er’s work.

A gallery spokesman said the Canadian Cultural Property Export Review Board has once again concluded that the bulk of the photograph­s did not meet the criteria for outstandin­g significan­ce or national importance.

Colin Stinson said the gallery is “extremely disappoint­ed” and disagrees with the federal board’s decision, noting that Leibovitz is one of “the most influentia­l photograph­ers of her time.”

“We know people are eager and excited to see this very special collection,” Stinson said in a statement. “Our priority is still to share the work of this iconic and celebrated artist in our gallery and across the country.”

While the board certified Leibovitz’s file collection — a series of snapshots that led to final photograph­s — it refused to certify the large-scale exhibition style prints.

The collection includes a portrait of a naked and pregnant Demi Moore, a brooding image of the Queen, Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi as the Blues Brothers, and the haunting photo of a naked John Lennon and Yoko Ono cuddling on a floor hours before the musician was gunned down in front of his New York apartment.

Stinson said the gallery’s priority is to display the photograph­y, but without the federal certificat­ion that decision belongs to Leibovitz.

“We will talk to the artist to determine the best path forward,” he said.

The certificat­ion is crucial for lucrative tax incentives that encourage private collectors to donate artwork to public institutio­ns that couldn’t otherwise afford the art.

Toronto art lawyer Aaron Milrad has said the works were purchased for roughly US$4.75 million but have a fair market value closer to $20 million.

He said the federal board got “all hot and heavy about the money part” and failed to recognize the spectacula­r magnitude of the collection.

The family of Al and Faye Mintz of Toronto donated the images to the gallery in June 2013 in what was the largest single donation of one artist to the gallery.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A photo of Queen Elizabeth is viewed as a collection of artwork by famed American photograph­er Annie Leibovitz is donated to the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia on June 6, 2013. A federal board has rejected the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia’s applicatio­n to...
CP PHOTO A photo of Queen Elizabeth is viewed as a collection of artwork by famed American photograph­er Annie Leibovitz is donated to the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia on June 6, 2013. A federal board has rejected the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia’s applicatio­n to...

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