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THE SOLOMON R, GUGGENHElM MUSEUM'S anticipated face-lift gets under way in the spring. Happily, problems with the structure of the iconic Frank Lloyd Wright building are less serious than anticipated. The sprucing up will cost just $27 million, money the institution already has in the bank.
For Director Lisa Dennison, the news came as a relief last month. She's been dealing with the headaches associated with diagnosing the patient - including specially designed scaffolding surrounding the famed museum-since she stepped into the top job just over a year ago.
Replacing windows hasn't been her only focus. The coming restoration could serve as a metaphor for the tidying up she's done in the executive offices during the year, which include shaking up the development department and adding curators.
"All together, it has put us on the path to refocusing attention on the Guggenheim as one of New York's premier cultural institutions," Ms. Dennison says.
Ms. Dennison was named director of the Guggenheim Museum, a new position, in the wake of a falling-out between Peter Lewis, then chairman of the board of trustees and the institution's largest donor, and former Director Thomas Krens. Mr. Lewis believed that the museurn's robust international expansion, spearheaded by Mr. Krens,...