AGO trustee, major donor Judy Schulich led internal push to prevent Nan Goldin acquisition | Page 18 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Josh O’Kane
Publication Date: January 26, 2026 - 05:00

Stay informed

AGO trustee, major donor Judy Schulich led internal push to prevent Nan Goldin acquisition

January 26, 2026

The internal push to prevent the Art Gallery of Ontario from acquiring a work by photographer-activist Nan Goldin last year – which has led to four resignations – was prompted by the philanthropic executive Judy Schulich, according to documentation reviewed by The Globe and Mail.

The Globe reported last week that the Toronto gallery’s modern and contemporary collections committee narrowly voted to not acquire Ms. Goldin’s video work, Stendhal Syndrome, after a heated discussion during a meeting in May, 2025. In the meeting, some committee members alleged that the Jewish-American artist’s views on Israel were “offensive” and “antisemitic,” according to an internal memo from AGO director and chief executive Stephan Jost that was revealed by The Globe last week.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Police are investigating a death in the Carlington neighbourhood. Read More
January 29, 2026 - 07:17 | Alex Robinson | Ottawa Citizen
Toronto residents, emerging from homes banked by snow after a record-breaking 56 centimetres fell in one day Sunday, have a new thing to complain about. But if they are upset that someone else has taken a street parking spot that they’ve shovelled out, they would be wise to take the advice of one of the city’s litigation lawyers: “The snow melts, but the neighbours stay.” Clearing a space on the street does not give you the rights to it, says Laya Witty, a lawyer with Singer Kwitner, in an interview. Toronto police Const. Cindy Chung confirms that “the law treats all public streets...
January 29, 2026 - 07:00 | Stewart Lewis | National Post
More than 60 per cent of Ontario hospitals were in the red at the end of the 2025 fiscal year, and many, including some of the largest in the country, have turned to banks to cover their costs, spending millions of public dollars on loan interest payments, the Investigative Journalism Bureau (IJB) has found. More than half a billion dollars were logged by hospitals in annual operating deficits by the end of March, 2025, despite an Ontario law requiring hospitals to plan for a balanced budget each year. As of March 2025, Ontario hospitals owed banks more than $66 million. Among...
January 29, 2026 - 07:00 | Investigative Journalism Bureau | National Post