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Newsnight

thought to be, suspected to be behind this has been there for 35 years and has a phd and he must have entered... ~ ., ., ~ ., ., entered... we do not know who this erson entered... we do not know who this person is- — entered... we do not know who this person is. whoever _ entered... we do not know who this person is. whoever it _ entered... we do not know who this person is. whoever it is _ entered... we do not know who this person is. whoever it is i _ entered... we do not know who this person is. whoever it is i think - entered... we do not know who this person is. whoever it is i think onel person is. whoever it is i think one thin that person is. whoever it is i think one thing that the _ person is. whoever it is i think one thing that the return trustee - thing that the return trustee will not be investigating his demoralisation but it is possible but underneath that there is a kind of sense of demoralisation. discontent. ernst & young had been employed to give the best possible advice on how to catalogue the collection in 2008 and you start thinking, oh, yes? should not be the curator involved in that.— curator involved in that. and a salary difference _ curator involved in that. and a salary difference between - curator involved in that. and a salary difference between the | salary difference between the commercial department and what the curators get. it is commercial department and what the curators get-— curators get. it is unfortunately the case that — curators get. it is unfortunately the case that in _ curators get. it is unfortunately the case that in the _ curators get. it is unfortunately the case that in the past - curators get. it is unfortunately the case that in the past 30 - curators get. it is unfortunately i the case that in the past 30 years museum curators who are valued for their expertise, because it is no market forces, they are poorly paid.

Person , Whoever , Man , Onel-person , Phd , Erson , 35 , Thing , Sense , Demoralisation , Return-trustee-thing , Kind

Newsnight

the extraordinary things, one roman piece which apparently is worth up to £50,000, was on ebay for £40 and no takers. to think that people were smelling a rat? i no takers. to think that people were smelling a rat?— smelling a rat? i think this particular— smelling a rat? i think this particular object _ smelling a rat? i think this particular object may - smelling a rat? i think this particular object may be i smelling a rat? i think this - particular object may be key for solving — particular object may be key for solving at — particular object may be key for solving at least part if not the case — solving at least part if not the case itself. the fact that it went for such — case itself. the fact that it went for such a — case itself. the fact that it went for such a small amount of money may explain _ for such a small amount of money may explain the _ for such a small amount of money may explain the pattern and not maybe the motive may not necessarily have been financial.— been financial. so it might have been financial. so it might have been another _ been financial. so it might have been another motive _ been financial. so it might have been another motive but - been financial. so it might have l been another motive but charles, been financial. so it might have - been another motive but charles, you are keyed into all the national art institutions, can you imagine or have you heard of anything like this not quite on the scale but even vaguely? not quite on the scale but even vauuel ? ., , ~' ., not quite on the scale but even vauuel ? ., , ~ ., , vaguely? the only thing i know is in the 1950s vaguely? the only thing i know is in the 15350s a — vaguely? the only thing i know is in the 1950s a curator— vaguely? the only thing i know is in the 1950s a curator at _ vaguely? the only thing i know is in the 1950s a curator at the _ vaguely? the only thing i know is in the 1950s a curator at the victoria l the 19505 a curator at the victoria and albert died and they discovered that his house was full of things so it is not totally unheard of the type of mentality which is

Things , People , Object , Rat , Takers , Ebay , Roman , 0 , 40 , 50000 , One , 0000

Newsnight

surprises. but the british museum is this receptacle _ surprises. but the british museum is this receptacle of— surprises. but the british museum is this receptacle of extraordinary - this receptacle of extraordinary things on the subject of programmes about what was in the collection, the idea that at least 15,000 artefacts were removed and no one saw it over this period of time, what make of it?— saw it over this period of time, what make of it? to be honest, museums _ what make of it? to be honest, museums do — what make of it? to be honest, museums do checks _ what make of it? to be honest, museums do checks every - what make of it? to be honest, museums do checks every ten i what make of it? to be honest, - museums do checks every ten years, the national audit office will check quite routinely on behalf of the government and generally when they do these checks they discovered that one or two things are missing for one or two things are missing for one reason or another often unknown. but this is on a scale which i've never heard about and the implication is that a single curator was able to do it over a long period of time without it being known. even in spite of the fact that someone in the trade, i mean the antiquities trade is quite small and specialist but someone seems to have pitched up very fast because he was using his twitter handle in order to sell them on ebay. and this guy instantly

It , British-museum , Things , Collection , Make , Artefacts , Surprises , Receptacle , Idea , Saw , Programmes , Subject

The Context

be made public as quickly as possible. be made public as quickly as ossible. ., , , , possible. how typical is this? because i _ possible. how typical is this? because i remember - possible. how typical is this? because i remember when i i possible. how typical is this? i because i remember when i was possible. how typical is this? - because i remember when i was based in cairo, the cairo mimi museum had a similar problem where security was not good enough in areas where it stored its precious artefacts. is it just the british museum or do you think this is a worldwide problem? we get reports every single day of small museums and cultural institutions that have had thefts. 0ne institutions that have had thefts. one does not expect this from the british museum. but ten years ago i had a very similar case, almost exactly like this in sweden, where a curator was stealing objects from the swedish museum, the swedish library, various smaller museums, barring armani suits, cars, when he was confronted he committed suicide and the objects that he had sold were still being found by your organised mission today. an eerily similar case. in this case we have

Mimi-museum , Security , Problem , Public , Enough , Areas , Cairo , Ossible , One , British-museum , Case , Museums

Fareed Zakaria GPS

google. we'll sit down with the man known as the godfather of a.i. who left a top tech job so he could talk freely about its threats. i talked to james cameron about how he harnesses a.i. in his movies and will look at a.i. in art. look at this piece "unsupervised" on display at the museum of modern art in new york city. the artist trained an a.i. model using data from more than 200 years worth of the museum's art collection, which included nearly 90,000 works of art from over 26,000 artists. the machine is always learning and imagining new artworks. if you watched for a hundred years, you would not see the same screen twice. i sat down with him and the museum's curator of sculpture to discuss this extraordinary work. here is a piece of that

Threats , Artificial-intelligence , Tech-job , Godfather , Man , James-cameron , Who , Google , Art , Artist , Movies , Unsupervised

CNN Newsroom Live

foliage around the statues. he says this area used to be paved over. but the gardeners laid down turf so that flowers and clover can grow. that should attract insects, that will bring more birds. although, the curator says 60 species of birds has been spotted here every year. and more wildlife could move in. like the family of foxes that took up residents during the pandemic and have been having new litters every year. thousands of visitors visit every day, with some people saying they appreciate its natural beauty. >> yes. i feel very relaxed. we feel at peace here. >> others complain it looks unkemp and neglected. >> translator: it's good to

Statues , Area , Flowers , Foliage , Clover , Gardeners , Curator , Birds , Wildlife , Insects , Species , 60

CNN Newsroom Live

revive the earthworms. i think the pleasure comes through visual pleasure. i don't think wasteland is great. >> reporter: the curator says even trues that has upturned graves will give a chance to grow. life and death intertwined. it seems there's room for both. michael holmes, cnn. coup leaders are suggesting they will put the country's ousted president on trial. they say they have gathered enough evidence to prosecutor for what they call high treason and undermining niger's security. he's been held underou arrest since the coup last last month. meanwhile, a source from the west afric bloc tells cnn a

Reporter , Pleasure , Curator , Wasteland , Earthworms , Life , Cnn , Room , Chance , Graves , Death , Both

Verified Live

the creator of the iconic posters of the sex pistols singles, jamie reid, has died at the age of 76. as the sex pistols reached fame in the 70s and became the face of british punk, so did the artwork of their songs — as the one for "god save the queen" — which caused backlash at that time, but is seen now as a picture that defined an era. let's talk now to john marchant, gallerist, curator and art director — who has worked with jamie reid. thank you for being here on the programme. sad news this. you work with them for a considerable period of time. tell us what he was like. what an interesting man he was always willing to tell you something you didn't know. very inspirational, great teacher, always willing to talk about for them club, though not

Sex-pistols , Jamie-reid , Age , Posters , Singles , 76 , One , Artwork , Face , Uk , Picture , Backlash

CBS Weekend News

they estimate that over somewhere between 300 and 1 billion birds a year die in the united states from window collisions. and these are migratory birds. so we are interested in documenting this problem so that people become aware of the issue. >> reporter: it's an issue that motivated the redesign of the bird house at the national zoo, which features dozens of species native to north america. it's one of the first in the country to create a structure that's completely bird-friendly. >> what makes it bird-friendly? >> what makes is bird-friendly is you can see the two-inch horizontal stripe. and so birds perceive that as something they can't fly through. >> reporter: sarah haliger is a curator for the exhibit. >> most birds are hitting glass because they see some sort of reflection and they think that's a tree in the glass. and so they want to fly to that tree. they usually fly at very high speeds, and so then they hit the glass and it's either a lethal strike or they're injured. >> reporter: haliger says about half of those collisions occur

U-s- , People , Problem , Migratory-birds , Somewhere , Window-collisions , 1-billion , 300 , Reporter , Country , Immigration-reform , Redesign