Filming for a biopic starring Kate Winslet was
also meant to have begun at Farleys House in Muddles Green,
where the American-born Miller recovered from documenting the
horrors of war and entertained guests including Pablo Picasso
and fellow surrealist photographer and her former lover Man Ray.
Instead, the pandemic has put almost every plan on hold.
"It's like a wasteland of tumbleweed," said Ami Bouhassane,
Miller's granddaughter.
She curates the Miller archive with her father, Antony Penrose,
Miller's son with the surrealist artist Roland Penrose.
COVID-19 has compounded the uncertainty created by Britain's
departure from the European Union (EU), with a transition period
ending on Dec. 31. That has left galleries anxious about how
complicated it might become to stage shows and transport
artworks abroad.
For more than a decade, Farleys House and Gallery has averaged
four international exhibitions a year, loaned mostly around
Europe, accounting for roughly a third of its revenue. Other
income comes from rights relating to the 60,000 negatives in the
Miller archive and from visitors to Muddles Green.
This year, it was planning on seven and to expand into the
United States as part of a strategy to cope with Brexit. Two
have gone ahead - one in Germany, traditionally one of its most
important markets, and another in non-EU Switzerland.
A third show, intended for Europe, is being shown instead to
Farleys' trickle of socially-distanced visitors, while the other
exhibitions are in storage.
Such problems are shared to varying degrees by art institutions
great and small as visitor numbers no longer justify large-scale
exhibitions and planning is fraught.
"The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the entirety of the arts and
culture sector," said Arts Council England in an email. The body
is helping to administer a government 1.57 billion pound ($2.04
billion) Culture Recovery Fund.
London's Wallace Collection, which includes works by Rubens, Van
Dyck and Titian, has also seen a 90% fall in visitors and has
deferred exhibitions to next year.
"Financially it doesn't make sense to do blockbuster shows at
the moment," Xavier Bray, director of the museum, told Reuters.
Commercial revenue from events, a shop and restaurant has
dropped by 1.5 million pounds and the museum faces "a massive
deficit" this year, Bray said. "Any help is going to be crucial
to the survival of institutions like the Wallace Collection."
($1 = 0.7717 pounds)
(Reporting by Barbara Lewis in Muddles Green and Will Russell in
London; additional reporting by Gerhard Mey and Carolyn Cohn,;
Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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