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This from the ROME list:

The Getty Research Institute is pleased to announce the new Provenance
Index® database "Payments to Artists."

<http://www.getty.edu/research/conducting_research/provenance_index/payments_to_artists/index.html>

The wealth of most Renaissance and Baroque painters was principally 
derived from what they earned selling their art. Data that documents 
payments to artists—as opposed to resale prices or inventory 
evaluations—is the primary means for analyzing the socioeconomic lives 
of painters in early modern Europe. This new online database contains 
approximately 1,000 payments recorded in Rome between 1576 and 1711.

We are grateful to Richard Spear who gathered this set of data in order
to write the Rome section of his book Painting for Profit: The
Economic Lives of Seventeenth-Century Italian Painters (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 
2010)<http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300154566>, 
which focuses on painters active in five
major Italian cities. In its initial phase, this new Provenance Index®
database is limited to information from Richard Spear's research. It
nonetheless is conceived as an open-ended, pilot project that can be
easily corrected and significantly expanded as other scholars provide
information from all periods of Western painting.

In addition, we would like to let patrons know of the following
resources actively being added to and made freely available from the
Getty website
<http://www.getty.edu/research/conducting_research/provenance_index/>.
The Getty Provenance Index® databases, part of the Project for the Study 
of Collecting and Provenance (PSCP), are compiled with the collaborative 
participation of institutions and individuals in Europe and the United 
States. The databases contain indexed transcriptions of inventories, 
auction catalogs, and stock books. More than one million records 
covering the period from the late sixteenth to the early twentieth 
century are searchable online. Originally designed as research tool for 
the ownership history of individual masterpieces, the index also allows 
scholars to model complex market developments, social networks, and 
cultural transfers.

· 64,000 new records from French auction catalogs of the 1770s and 1780s 
have recently been added to the Sales databases, completing a
collaborative project with the Institut National d’Histoire de l’Art
<http://www.inha.fr/> in Paris. The French auction market from the early 
17th to the early 19th centuries is therefore fully covered.

· A new custom display and downloading feature has been implemented
which accommodates statistical analysis and data visualizations. Users
are now able to save up to 10,000 records onto their computers and
manipulate them according to their own scholarly purposes.