Posted on March 20, 2024, 12:07 PM, by jfriedman, under
art history.
The April issue of the New Criterion has my article about the Santa Barbara Museum of Art debacle—the eleventh-hour cancellation of the “Three American Painters: Then and Now” exhibition, and the firing of its curator Dr. Eik Kahng. Read and weep.
Tags:
Amada Cruz,
Art History,
Eik Kahng,
Frank Stella,
ideology,
idiocracy,
Jules Olitsky,
Kenneth Noland,
Michael Fried,
museums,
Santa Barbara Museum of Art,
Scholarship Comments Off on Art History cancelled |
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Posted on February 2, 2023, 12:28 PM, by jfriedman, under
Public art.
Art and politics simply do not mix, and attempts to force them together reduce the efficacy of both.
Tags:
Art,
Art History,
brancusi,
clementgreenberg,
gestalt,
hankwilliamsthomas,
henrimoore,
ideology,
lesliejones,
MLK,
paulmccarthy,
photography,
politics,
propaganda,
publicsculpture,
quillette,
rorschach,
sculpture,
theembrace Comments Off on Why the Boston MLK memorial misses the mark |
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An article for The New Criterion co-authored with friend and colleague Professor David Hawkes. It was recently republished in the New Discourses. “The most ruthless, radical fringes of all great revolutions have drawn much of their initial support from more peaceful, moderate parties. They have also been unvaryingly efficient at eliminating their erstwhile allies once […]