A decision to return has been made in another case, although there will have to be a change in the law to allow deaccession. |
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It was acquired by the Amon Carter Museum in Fort Worth, Texas, which decided to deaccession it last year. |
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The deaccession of photographs provides funds for the museum that allow it to maintain a policy of acquisition through tough financial periods. |
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A deaccession of over 1,000 paintings, statues and other objects from the Dutch national art collection is getting a good deal of attention. |
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The pending deaccession will leave only a handful of minor artworks and decorative objects. |
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Thanks to all the graptolites I'd gathered, my suitcase was overweight, and I decided that I was going to have to deaccession some of them. |
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Professional guidelines set forth by the Association of Art Museum Directors state that museums should use deaccession proceeds solely for acquisitions, not operations. |
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This collection numbers approximately 10,000 objects, and is continually expanding by donation, purchase, and deaccession from other institutions. |
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Because of their public trust responsibilities, museums will always find it easier to accept new collections material than to deaccession material that is no longer within their mandate. |
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The library's decision to deaccession the work was controversial. |
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Mahon's bequest was made on the condition that the Gallery would never deaccession any of its paintings or charge for admission. |
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If museum directors routinely made public their deaccession activity, as the Indianapolis Museum of Art does on its Web site, then we could move beyond the polarizing nature of deaccession discussions. |
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