We challenge the contemporary view of the arts as tools for social change; fight for freedom of expression; explore what is unique and special about the arts.
"Being human is an adventure."
What is role art education today? Gregor Claude, Eliza Bonham Carter (RA Schools) and contributors from teaching, student and art history backgrounds discuss its value and future. 👇
#ArtEducation#RASchools#ArtsFirst https://t.co/CYzphFMa0u
Where does art school get anyone? Interesting @ArtsFirstUK podcast discussion. Lots of positive comments about Foundation Art courses... not enough drawing or history of art in mine, far as I was concerned. https://t.co/QusIxw828n
#art#education#artseducation#foundationart
Episode 45 out now! Opera director, conductor, singer Marcio da Silva joins us to talk about his career, Ensemble OrQuesta, the company he founded, and Baroque opera. @Ensemble_OrQ return to @cockpittheatre in June, @arcolatheatre in August @HastingsPhil
https://t.co/wj5zbL7jmi
At the launch of The New Boycott Crisis and the Art Beyond Boycott Toolkit in the Palace of Westminster, I spoke as an artist first about why this work matters so much.
“The arts can survive criticism. They cannot do their best work under intimidation.”
Full speech to release later today with full transcript.
Read the report:
https://t.co/huoXUoflmM
Today we dive into the world of contemporary art, focusing on the @NewContemps exhibition, currently on show at the @SLG_artupdates.
We’re joined by two good friends of the show: artist Rachel Jordan and curator, writer, and campaigner @manick62
https://t.co/6Hhhks4Y9G
Very good by @JamesHeartfield "Some have called for the exhibition to be banned, but that would be a mistake. On the contrary, Matthew Collings has done us a great service by showing us the disturbed mind of the anti-Israel activist." https://t.co/FCR8xEY4Ia
Our latest podcast asks 'Has the National Trust abandoned its historic role?'
Calvin Po, @ASCphiled and @RestoreTrustNT Cornelia van der Poll join us to discuss the @nationaltrust shift away from its core mission, and what to do about it.
https://t.co/sl8rPvhPjF
@CJordanjb Our latest podcast asks 'Has the National Trust abandoned its historic role?' Calvin Po, Dr Alka-Sehgal Cuthbert and @RestoreTrustNT Cornelia van der Poll join us to discuss the @nationaltrust shift away from its core mission, and what to do about it.
https://t.co/FKU96kS62r
‘A lot of members are very unhappy!’
Co-founder of Restore Trust Cornelia Van Der Poll explains why she is calling for previous members of the National Trust to return to the charity amidst accusations of a woke culture being enforced.
'This is not censorship in its most obvious form - no sweeping bans, no public condemnations. It is quieter than that. A label adjusted here, a program dropped there, a show that never quite opens'
The Quiet Censorship of Global Art - C. J. Anderson-Wu
https://t.co/AYZbYsup65
Out tomorrow. Has the @nationaltrust abandoned its historic role? From leaked Mansion House report to the decision to leave @ClandonPark as a ruin, 3 leading critics explain what’s gone wrong and how to fix it. With Cornelia van der Poll, @RestoreTrustNT Calvin Po & @ASCphiled
Over the last week the Joseph Wales studios and gallery in Margate – my manor – exhibited a show by artist, critic and broadcaster Matthew Collings entitled ‘Drawings Against Genocide’.
Whether one considers the work good or not, it features many images which were caricatures of Jews, and which exhibited long-standing and well-known antisemitic tropes, such as “the blood drinking Jew”, “the Jew delighting in murder”, the child-murder Blood Libel, “Jews as racists” and imagery equating Zionism with Nazism. And, of course, the unsubstantiated turning of accusation of genocide on the victims of a genocide – Jews – is a ghastly libel.
Images in the exhibition also include “October 7th denial”, repeating false claims that there is no evidence of sexual violence committed by Hamas ‘fighters’ and others during the invasion of southern Israel.
While I find the content of the exhibition and Collings’ work to be objectionable and hateful, and to inversely echo the well-known antisemitic exhibition of Degenerate Art of the late 1930s, I don’t believe the show should have been cancelled, let alone closed down.
But I do wonder how the artist, and the organisers and hosts of this exhibition think about their fellow citizens.
They appear not to have given a moment of thought to the effect of this exhibition and imagery on our Jewish friends and neighbours. It is fine to criticise or condemn the Israeli government for its actions, just as it is fine to criticise or condemn Hamas.
But the anti-Israel and anti-Zionist imagery and slogans in this exhibition were a ‘dog whistle’ for racist antisemitism. Were such an exhibition to feature imagery of Palestinians or other Arabs, or of Muslims, it would rightly be called out by organisations such as Stand Up to Racism, and by politicians and other civic leaders. But Jews don’t seem to count in the hierarchy of discrimination and prejudice.
I have several Jewish friends, in Thanet and beyond, who are distressed by the attitudes, words and actions of many of those who consider themselves to be ‘pro-Palestinian’ activists. And they are dismayed by hostile conversations they hear, and private messages they have received from people they considered friends. No doubt most would find this exhibition discomfiting at best.
The views exhibited by Collings and his supporters are of people who belive that the world is divided into the “good people” – them – and the “bad people”, who it is virtuous to express hatred towards.
We need unity among citizens in our community, and to not allow this hate to divide us. I hope our politicians and other civic leaders will do more to condemn hatred towards our Jewish fellow citizens, and explain the threat of antisemitism to all of us.