1. PROS CONS
Historical Art from the past holds clues to life in the
past. By looking at a work of art's
symbolism, colors, and materials, we can
learn about the culture that produced it.
Looking at art from the past contributes to
who we are as people. By looking at what
has been done before, we gather
knowledge and inspiration that contribute
to how we speak, feel, and view the world
around us.
Kristen, TAG Member January 20, 2012
During the attack on van Gogh’s Sunflowers
in London, Just Stop Oil protesters shouted:
“What is worth more? Art or life? Is it worth
more than food? Worth more than justice?
Are you more concerned about the
protection of a painting or the protection of
our planet and people?”
Fri 11 Nov 2022 05.39 GMT Sian Cain
Economy Many museums rely on private donations as
well as trade activities to earn income,
despite being fully funded by the government
in some cases. Most museums in the United
States receive very little public funding, so
they rely heavily on private donations.
November 5th, 2021 // By Martha // Business
maintenance can cost another $2 million per
year. November 5th, 2021 //
By Martha // Business
Health
Environment
activists are turning to a new form of
protest to call attention to the climate
crisis
Emma Brown:
I think is interesting because that artwork
was not vandalized, it had a sheet of
glass on it. So really what everyone was
becoming so outraged about was a bit of
soup thrown on a piece of glass. And
So long as you keep on throwing soup at
protective glass around great art works, you
will just keep proving again and again, that
“the system” will save us. But eventually it
won’t. One day, the seal around the
protective glass will not work, and then at last
you will have proven disasters do and can
happen, and not just in images.
They prove that the experts have everything
in hand; that despite terrifying appearances,
we don’t need to worry
2. unfortunately, there's no pane of glass
protecting the life support systems that we
need to survive, you know. There's no
pane of glass protecting the people in
Pakistan from the devastating flooding.
There's no pane of glass protecting the
146 million people in Africa that are
suffering like drought related starvation
Geoff Bennett serves as co-anchor of
PBS NewsHour.
DEC 10, 2022
Thu 17 Nov 2022 14.01 GMT
Last modified on Thu 20 Apr 2023 11.12 BST
Lucy Whelan
https://www.metmuseum.org/blogs/teen-blog/renaissance-portrait/blog/studying-art-from-the-past