In this essay, I look beyond the familiar arguments for preservation or removal to ask what these objects actually do in civic life. Monuments compress history into visible form, but they also expose the tensions between reverence and critique. At a moment when public memory is deeply contested, monuments become mirrors, reflecting contemporary values as much as the past they claim to represent.
Tags:
Confederate Monuments,
Contemporary Art,
exhibition,
Julia Friedman,
Kara Walker,
Los Angeles,
MoCA,
Monuments,
Social Justice,
The Brick,
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Posted on December 17, 2025, 9:22 AM, by jfriedman, under
art history.
My contribution to Rizzoli’s recent monograph on Wayne Thiebaud—a retrospective look at the painter, who passed away in 2021 at the age of 100—considers his figure paintings as rigorous meditations on perception, stillness, and the elusive drama of the everyday. Rejecting sentimental or anecdotal portraiture, Thiebaud cultivates a suspended psychological charge, inviting viewers into the […]