Feds Meet to Shield Priceless Art from Loan Risks
Published Date: 5/6/2025
Notice
Summary
The Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Panel is having a meeting soon to discuss how to protect valuable art and historical items during loans and exhibits. This affects museums, galleries, and anyone who borrows or lends important cultural treasures. The meeting helps make sure these priceless pieces stay safe without costing too much money or time.
No Economic Impacts Identified for this Document
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this regulation affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Key Dates
Department and Agencies
Related Federal Register Documents
2026-06750 — Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Panel Advisory Committee
The Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Panel will meet on April 30, 2026, to review and recommend insurance coverage for art exhibits starting in 2027. This affects museums and galleries applying for protection on valuable items during transport and display. The meeting is private to protect sensitive financial and security details, ensuring smooth and safe art shows with financial peace of mind.
2026-00817 — Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Panel Advisory Committee
The Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Panel will meet on February 26, 2026, to review and recommend insurance coverage for valuable art exhibits starting later that year. This affects museums and organizations applying for protection against loss or damage during exhibitions. The meeting is private to protect sensitive financial and security details, ensuring these priceless treasures stay safe without risking public leaks.
2025-19779 — Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Panel Advisory Committee
The Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Panel will meet on November 24, 2025, to review and recommend insurance for art exhibits starting in 2026. This meeting affects museums and galleries applying for protection on valuable items during shows. The session is private to keep financial and security details safe, ensuring smooth support for future art displays.
2025-14490 — Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Panel Advisory Committee
The Arts and Artifacts Indemnity Panel is having a meeting soon to discuss how to protect valuable art and artifacts during loans and exhibits. This affects museums, galleries, and anyone involved in sharing art safely. The meeting helps make sure these treasures stay safe without costing too much or causing delays.
2026-13613 — Arts Advisory Panel Meetings
The National Endowment for the Arts is holding 11 online meetings this summer to review and decide on grant applications for opera, dance, theater, and media arts. These meetings, happening between July 14 and August 6, 2026, are closed to the public to protect sensitive info. Artists and organizations applying for funding should watch these dates closely as they impact who gets financial support.
2026-12007 — Meeting of Humanities Panel
The National Endowment for the Humanities is holding ten video meetings in July 2026 to review and recommend grants for projects about history, art, languages, and more. These meetings affect people and groups applying for financial help to preserve and study important cultural collections. If you’re applying, get ready for decisions between July 8 and July 28, which could bring funding to support your work!
Previous / Next Documents
Previous: 2025-07813 — Maximum Dollar Limit in the Fee Agreement Process; Partial Rescission
The Social Security Administration (SSA) is keeping the $9,200 fee limit for now and canceling part of their earlier plan to change it. They’ll only announce fee increases in the future, following the law. This means anyone dealing with fee agreements can count on the current cap staying put—at least for now!
Next: 2025-07816 — Franklin Lexington Private Markets Fund, et al.
Franklin Lexington and its partners want permission to team up and invest together in certain companies, even though current rules usually say no. This change affects several investment funds and could help them work smarter and share opportunities. If no one objects by May 27, 2025, the SEC will likely approve this move, potentially impacting how these funds manage their money.