Leslie Moody Castro and William Sarradet talk about recent events in the art world including the beheading of a public sculpture and the discovery of the oldest cave art.
“I connect with the sentiment of exhibitions as being a site of experimentation and play. I appreciate at some level vaunting art canon as the be-all-end-all record of what is important and aesthetic in human history but at some point, you trip over yourself just to have a handful of people be successful and valued.”
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Related Readings:
—Glasstire: Controversial Shahzia Sikander Sculpture Beheaded at the University of Houston
—Glasstire: Protestors Oppose Installation of Shahzia Sikander “Satanic” Sculpture; University of Houston Postpones Opening Events
—Glasstire: Public Art UHS Completes Installation of Shahzia Sikander’s Video Work; Protests Continue
—Glasstire: University of Houston to Present Temporary Public Art Project and Artist Talk by Shahzia Sikander
—Artnet: Tasmanian Museum’s Infamous ‘Ladies Lounge’ Has Been Displaying Fake Picassos All Along
—Hyperallergic: How Modern-Day Christian Iconoclasts Lost Their Heads
—Artnews: World’s Oldest Known Cave Painting, Featuring a Mysterious Pig, Found in Indonesia
—Artnews: World’s Oldest Cave Art Discovered, Jorge Perez Blasts Arts Defunding in Florida, Controversial Religious Sculpture Vandalized, and More
—ABC Net News: Family of Pablo Picasso chooses not to take action against Tasmania’s MONA for Kirsha Kaechele’s faked artworks
—Wikipedia: Cave of Forgotten Dreams
—Columbia Museum of Art: Virgin Nursing the Christ Child (Virgo Lactans)
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