The Barnes Belongs in Merion (Gosh, how we HATE to repeat ourselves, but we're going to!)

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Here's the latest:

Montco's about-face on Barnes Museum
By Tom Infield
Inquirer Staff Writer

Seven years of bitter battles came to an end in 2003 when a Montgomery County judge permitted the Barnes Foundation, holder of one the world's greatest private art collections, to move from its Main Line hideaway to a prominent place on the Parkway in Philadelphia.
Some in the international art community decried the move as a bad bargain, a way to boost the Barnes financially at the cost of ruining its oddly charming galleries, in which Impressionist masterpieces are stacked as tight as puzzle pieces on the walls of a Merion mansion.

But in Montgomery County there wasn't a hint of protest. It was as if a long fight over the Merion operations - in which there were suits and counter-suits amid charges of racism - had worn everyone out.

"If you had a 24-karat gold splinter stuck in your [backside], you would not be sorry to have it removed," Walter Herman, a Barnes neighbor on Latchs Lane, said in October 2003.

Now, in a complete turn-about, Herman and other neighbors have joined the Montgomery County commissioners and Lower Merion Township officials in a last-ditch effort to "save the Barnes" and block its move.

A suburban coalition threatened Thursday to pry the lid off the case and let out buried issues by filing yet another suit - this one to force the Barnes to consider a $50 million plan from the county to help the museum stay where it is.

Legal scholars and attorneys say at this late date it may be difficult to get Orphans Court Judge Stanley Ott to reopen the case.

"I would think it is low probability, but it has been such a crazy case for years that it can't be ruled out," said Bruce Mann, a Harvard University law professor who has followed the case.

The county believes it can force the case to be reexamined by showing Ott that the Barnes held a piece of vital information from him: that the state had put $100 million into its capital budget to help a move to Philadelphia.

That was in 2002, before the Barnes told Ott it was doing everything it could to stay in Merion. Attorney Mark Schwartz, hired by the county, said Thursday: "The question is if there were certain misrepresentations."

The state, to date, has given $25 million for the relocation....Montgomery County Commissioner James Matthews, who was in office during the previous battles but did not oppose the Barnes' moving, said he had an "epiphany" over the winter.

He said that while watching Philadelphia raise millions to prevent the out-of-town sale of one painting - Thomas Eakins' The Gross Clinic - he realized how much Montgomery County would lose by letting the Barnes go.

The county now proposes to issue $50 million in bonds to help the Barnes.

The money would go to the county purchase of the museum property. The Barnes Foundation would then lease the property. The museum, with its lease payments, would provide the county with the funds to pay back the bonds.

....The Lower Merion commissioners propose to sweeten the pot July 18 by voting to finally lift some of the restrictions on daily visitors that have held back the fees the Barnes can collect.

Township Commissioner Brinan Gordon said the current restriction is 400 visitors per day, three days a week. The plan would let the museum be open six days a week, with a daily limit of 450 visitors - plus 100 students.

U.S. Rep. Jim Gerlach additionally has proposed giving federal status to the Barnes as a national historic landmark. He says that would enable it to apply for federal arts support.