Which Way, L.A.?
Stolen Art
Broadcast live from the Getty Center in Brentwood. - Descendants of Holocaust victims the world over are suing for the return of art stolen by the Nazis and later sold abroad to museums, galleries and private collectors. The famed Elgin Marbles of Greece remain in the British Museum; Iraq is desperately trying to slow modern day theft of ancient treasures; while pre-Columbian and Native American art continue to be hot and hard to trace. Who has the right to art of disputed ownership? Does the passage of time dim ownership claims? And if art is returned, what precedent does that set?
Nick Goodman: Heir to paintings taken from his grandparents, who died in the Holocaust. Glenn Lowry: Director, New York's Museum of Modern Art. Member, the Association of Art Museum Directors Task Force Hector Feliciano: Editor in chief, World Media Network. Former culture writer for the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times. Author of The Lost Museum: The Nazi Conspiracy to Steal the World's Greatest Works of Art. Cliff Einstein: Chair and Creative Director of the advertising agency, Dailey & Associates; Trustee, the Museum of Contemporary Art. Dr. Selma Holo: Director of the Fisher Gallery at the University of Southern California. Head of USC's Museum Studies Department. James Snyder: Director, the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Former Deputy Director for Planning and Program Support, at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Edward Goldman: Art critic for KCRW and cultural editor for KCET public television Cancelled:
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