Cal. Code Regs. Tit. 18, § 1586 - Works of Art and Museum Pieces for Public Display
(a) General.
(1) Original Work of Art. Tangible personal
property which is an original work of art and which is purchased by or for
donation to certain public or nonprofit organizations for the purpose of
display to the public in museums or public places is exempt from the sales and
use taxes under certain conditions.
(2) Museum Pieces. Tangible personal property
purchased by certain organizations to replace museum pieces which were
destroyed by a calamity are exempt from the sales and use taxes under certain
conditions.
(b)
Definitions.
(1) "Original Work of Art" for
purposes of this regulation means tangible personal property which has been
created as a unique object intended to provide aesthetic pleasure to the
beholder and/or to express the emotions of the artist. The form in which an
original work of art is presented includes but is not limited to:
(A) visual art, e.g., a drawing, painting,
mural, fresco, sculpture, mosaic, film, or photograph, a work of calligraphy, a
work of graphic art (an etching, lithograph, offset print, silk screen, or a
work of graphic art of like nature),
(B) crafts, e.g., crafts in clay, textile,
fiber, wood, metal, plastic, glass, costume, dress, clothing, personal
adornment, and like materials, or
(C) mixed media, e.g., a collage, assemblage,
or any combination of the foregoing art media.
(2) "Museum" for purposes of this regulation
means a place specifically designated for display of artifacts or objects of
art which either:
(A) has a significant
portion of its display space open to the public without charge during its
normal operating hours;
(B) has its
entire display space open to the public without charge for at least six of its
normal operating hours during each month of operation; or
(C) has its entire display space open without
charge to a segment of the student or adult population for educational
purposes.
(c)
Application of Tax.
(1) Original Works of Art.
(A) Tax does not apply to the sale or use of
original works of art which are:
1. purchased
by this state, or any city, county, city and county, or other local
governmental entity in this state;
2. purchased by any nonprofit organization
which operates a public museum under contract for such governmental
entity;
3. purchased by any
nonprofit organization qualifying for exemption from state income tax pursuant
to Section
23701d
of the Revenue and Taxation Code. The works of art must be purchased for
display in a museum either operated by the purchaser or by another nonprofit
organization which qualifies for exemption pursuant to Section
23701 d. The museum in which the
art is displayed must be open to the public regularly for not less than 20
hours per week and for not less than 35 weeks of the calendar year;
4. purchased by any person for donation to
the above governmental entities or nonprofit organizations. To qualify for
exemption from the tax under this subparagraph, donated works of art must be
delivered by the retailer of the art directly to the donee pursuant to the
instructions of the buyer-donor. Written evidence of transfer of title to the
works of art from the buyer-donor to the donee must be maintained by the
retailer and the buyer-donor to support the exemption; or
5. operative January 1, 2007, leased from one
nonprofit organization to another nonprofit organization for 35 years or more,
if both lessor and lessee are nonprofit organizations as defined in
subdivisions (c)(1)(A)(2) and (c)(1)(A)(3) of this
regulation.
(B) The
exemption provided by subdivision (c)(1)(A) applies only to original works of
art which are purchased or leased to become part of the permanent collection of
any of the following:
1. a museum;
2. a nonprofit corporation which (1) has
qualified for exemption from the state income tax pursuant to Revenue and
Taxation Code Section 23701d,(2) regularly loans not less than 85 percent of
the value of its collection of works of art to one or more museums, and (3) is
required by its articles of incorporation to loan its works of art and is
otherwise prohibited by its articles from making any private use of its works
of art. The works of art for which the exemption is claimed pursuant to this
subparagraph must be placed on display at a museum in California for not less
than 24 months during the three-year period commencing from the date of
purchase; or
3. operative January
1, 1988, this state and any city, county, city and county, or other local
governmental entity in this state for display to the public in buildings,
parks, plazas, or other places which are open to the public without charge for
not less than 20 hours per week and for not less than 35 weeks of the calendar
year. Operative January 1, 2007, "permanent collection" as it applies to leases
of original works of art, means a collection with a lease term of 35 years or
more.
(2)
Museum Pieces.
(A) Tangible personal property
is exempt from the sales and use tax if purchased to replace destroyed objects
of a museum's permanent collection when such property is purchased by:
1. a nonprofit museum regularly open to the
public and operated by or for a local or state government entity,
2. a nonprofit museum regularly open to the
public and operated by a nonprofit organization which has qualified for
exemption from the state income tax pursuant to section 27301d of the Revenue
and Taxation Code, or
3. operative
January 1, 1988, this state or any local governmental entity in this state as
part of a public art collection for display in a space which is open to the
public without charge.
(B) To qualify for the exemption, the
property must be purchased and used exclusively for display purposes. However,
the property purchased does not need to be similar in character to the property
it is replacing. The exemption does not extend to display cases, shelving,
lamps, lighting fixtures, or other items of tangible personal property utilized
in the operations of the museum. The purchased property must be:
1. purchased to replace property which has
been physically destroyed by fire, flood, earthquake, or other
calamity,
2. purchased within three
years from the date of the calamity, and
3. the aggregate amount of property purchased
must not exceed the value of the property destroyed on the date the calamity
occurred.
(d) Records. Records must be maintained to
substantiate any claim of exemption pursuant to this regulation. Such records
must include, but are not limited to, documents indicating the name of the
purchaser, the date of purchase, the purchase price, the date the property was
first brought into this state (if applicable), and the dates and locations the
work of art was on display at a museum.
Notes
2. Change without regulatory effect amending subsections (b)(1)(B), (c)(1)(A)-(B) and (c)(1)(B)3. filed 7-26-2007 pursuant to section 100, title 1, California Code of Regulations (Register 2007, No. 30).
Note: Authority cited: Section 7051, Revenue and Taxation Code. Reference: Sections 6365 and 6366.3, Revenue and Taxation Code.
2. Change without regulatory effect amending subsections (b)(1)(B), (c)(1)(A)-(B) and (c)(1)(B)3. filed 7-26-2007 pursuant to section 100, title 1, California Code of Regulations (Register 2007, No. 30).
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