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The historical aesthetics of white
For those who have walked the streets of Athens, Rome or Palmyra sadly destroyed by zealots the impact of ancient ruins can raise other, more earthy and colorful questions these days.
As discussions on the destruction of public art go on, it should be noted that, over the course of history, more art has been destroyed than preserved. Violence against long-held ideas has expressed itself through the physical destruction of items of “sacred” tradition for thousands of years. In a recent article in the New York Times, professor Erin L. Thompson observed,” we tend to destroy rather than protect cultural objects during times of transition.”
Germany
New-york
United-states
Athens
Attikír
Greece
Afghanistan
Bamyan
Bamian
France
New-yorker
America