Star power: Robert De Niro has established a $25,000 annual prize for a U.S. painter in honor of his late artist father. (Bloomberg)
Clean-cut: Josh Gad and Andrew Rannells have joined the cast of Broadway’s “Book of Mormon,” opening March 24. (Playbill)
Major acquisition: The Philadelphia Museum of Art is acquiring a trove of photographs by Paul Strand. (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Dissident voice: Chinese artist Wu Yuren is on trial in Beijing after a protest that he led against property developers. (Voice of America)
Mobile app: New York’s Museum of Modern Art has just released its first application for the Apple iPad. (New York Times)
Going home: The Netherlands has returned a long-missing work by Jan Brueghel the Younger to Concordia University in Canada. (Agence France-Presse)
Musical summit: The International Conference of Symphony and Opera Musicians said it plans to bring its annual meeting to Detroit in August, in a show of support for the striking musicians of the Detroit Symphony. (Crains Detroit Business)
Politics and art: The Portland Public Art Committee in Maine has voted to relocate a controversial piece of public art titled “Tracing the Fore.” (Portland Press Herald)
And in the L.A. Times: The L.A. Philharmonic lands the premiere of a long-lost Shostakovich opera; artist Jasper Johns and cellist Yo-Yo Ma are to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011; music critic Mark Swed on the music of George Crumb.
— David Ng
Photo: Robert De Niro stands next to a painting executed by his father, Robert De Niro Sr. Credit: Dave Allocca / Associated Press