The Heart

Her name was Allie. She was 25, but looked like 30. Her neck was thin, her nostrils wide, her heart cold and her hair blonde. She knew full well what her purpose on Earth was: she would succeed. No…

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Sticky Fingers

As you may have figured out by now, I am constantly on the lookout for examples of nonviolent action and dissent. All of the algorithms for search engines and advertising and which articles digital newspapers and magazines to put in front of my face certainly have. As such I see examples of how to stand up for what you believe in and how different folks do it, pretty much every day.

I am inspired and awed every time.

But sometimes, something crosses my desktop that just, hands down, delights me. It might be the inherent cleverness or the wordplay or the beauty of the sentiment or the simplicity in the delivery.

Often it is the straightforward clarity and elegance of the message.

Friday, September 27, 2019 was one of those days. The incident happened in Paris. At the Louvre.

For those who don’t know it, I used to be an architect. Among the many buildings I was a part of bringing into the world is the Getty Museum. So when I say I have a sort of mixed reaction to the glass pyramid addition by I.M. Pei know that I’m coming at it from some base of knowledge and experience.

The thing is, I’ve come to understand my impressions of Pei’s work are not all based in the forms, the opposition of style, the slick and shiny of the new vs the aged depth and tangible wear on the stone of the old. My take on museums is now woven through with an understanding of cultural appropriation and theft, patrons and benefactors, sponsors and inequality, highbrow and lowbrow, of the people and of the elite.

For me, art museums are fraught institutions. While I love beauty and thought-provoking creativity, I loath the gatekeeping, judgement, commodification, and biases inherent in the world around art.

So when crossed my desktop, I was delighted to learn activists, dressed in black, had dipped their hands into thick molasses and planted hand-prints all over the polished glass of the Louvre’s pyramid to protest a museum sponsor.

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