United Arts Agency | UAA

Posts

BLOG

Letzte Generation protest with mashed potatoes on Monet

Certainly, our planet is in the grip of severe climate degradation and environmental destruction and in need of immediate action. This makes it no surprise that protests, especially staged by younger generations, are becoming more and more prevalent. The latest such event in the public eye is one staged by the German environmentalist group Letzte Generation (translating to “last generation”) involving a Monet and mashed potatoes and follows in suit with other near-identical demonstrations staged at art galleries across the globe.

 

Arriving at the Museum Barberini in Potsdam, Germany, two individuals from Lezte Generation proceeded to throw a moderate serving of mash onto Meules (translating to “stacks”) by Monet, a vibrant depiction of sunrise emerging and casting colour across a series of haystacks in a field. They then appear to have quickly applied superglue to their hands to affix them to the painting’s wall in an effort to remain there. Mirjam Herrmann, one of the protestors, went on to state to the crowd:

 

“People are starving, people are freezing, people are dying. We are in a climate catastrophe. And all you are afraid of is tomato soup or mashed potatoes on a painting. You know what I’m afraid of? I’m afraid because science tells us that we won’t be able to feed our families in 2050.”

 

Almost identical actions have been performed by the UK group Just Stop Oil, both earlier this month at the National Gallery in London as well as several other galleries in England. The group has thrown soups on the likes of Van Gogh, smeared cake on a wax sculpture of King Charles III, and stopped traffic at the famous Abbey Road crossing. While not seeming to be under the same leadership, Letzte Generation and Just Stop Oil seem to be exact iterations of the same plan down to their orange regalia; this might denote a growing presence for this movement globally.

 

Meules—which is currently on loan from art collector Hasso Plattner which he purchased in 2019 for over $110 million—was unharmed in Letzte Generation’s protest. As actions have progressed, that seems to be a fact the protestors are aware of in their actions. And while their demonstrations in many ways seem juvenile or misdirected, the sentiment behind them is one of utmost importance. Many in the art world seem to be unfazed by these actions, but both the public and officials have shown such disdain for the essentially harmless actions that it points to the question—does a minuscule inconvenience really bother you more than the death of our planet?

What We’re Watching: Nothing is Broken: What Evaluation and Philanthropy Can Learn from Abolitionism

From Nonprofit Quarterly: “At GEO’s 2022 National Conference, hosted in partnership with Forefront, grantmakers and other practitioners had the opportunity to come together in Chicago, Illinois to explore challenges and uncover solutions with fellow grantmakers who are continuing to lean into transformational change in order to create a just, connected, and inclusive society where we can all thrive. The conference program included Short Talks—engaging, 20-minute, keynote-style presentations that challenge current philanthropic culture and practice or inspire participants to think about the topic, their work and/or lives differently.”

Watch the talk with Dr. Aisha Rios (Coactive Change) here.

What We’re Listening To: Pro-Blackness as a Way of Knowing and Being

From Nonprofit Quarterly: “I have the privilege of being interviewed by Cyndi for the [piece] ‘Pro-Blackness is Aspirational.’ I think that a couple of things came up for me when thinking about this one. It was like, how do you talk about the aspiration of pro-Blackness without making people feel like we’re not making any inroads right now? Or feel anxious that it’s interminable, racism is interminable?”

“…what does pro-Blackness look like in different parts of the sector, because, existing within the radical left flank where, like, people always tell us, ‘Your ideas are not politically possible, they’re not logistically possible’ when we’re trying to help people imagine a future that is super radical and super pro-Black, and we’re often dismissed or disregarded in that way. And reading these articles has really helped me to understand where different people inside of social movements exist on the pro-Black spectrum, and how people are thinking about these ideas. And offers me some insight into maybe how narrow some of the spaces that I’m in can be when they’re deeply radical—when they see the nonprofit infrastructure as being something that is not useful to them, but instead an impediment.”

Listen to the full interview here.

ICYMI: NDN Collective Celebrates Indigenous Peoples’ Day By Uplifting indigenous Power Building Through Art, Voter Engagement and Landback

“On Indigenous Peoples’ Day, NDN Collective took part in several events to celebrate and uplift the brilliance and resilience of Indigenous Peoples – participating in Indigenous Peoples’ Day Phoenix Fest in Arizona, the Grantmakers in the Arts Conference in New York and opening up pre-sale opportunities for the inaugural issue of the LANDBACK Magazine.”

“We came as guests onto the lands of the Lenape, Munsee, Shinnecock, Wappinger & Canarsie Peoples. And while the place now known as the City of New York does not yet officially recognize Indigenous Peoples’ Day, and still honors a colonizer with a full blown Columbus Day parade, the Peoples of this land remain steadfast in their resistance and resilience,” said Gaby Strong, NDN Foundation Managing Director. “We shared our similar struggles and our collective energy as part of the LandBack movement.”

“If we’re fighting for the liberation of our people, then I’m going to use every single tactic available to me in that fight. If I have the ability to cast a vote to influence who I am sitting across the table with, then hell yeah I’m going to use that power, because I’m all about any means necessary – whether it be voting, taking it to the streets, buying land or occupying land,” said Nick Tilsen, NDN Collective President and CEO.

Read the full article here.

Working on the design details of our next Mechan robot in the shop today. The tr…


 

Working on the design details of our next Mechan robot in the shop today. The trick is to make each robot similar yet completely different from the ones before it. We want them all to look like they’re from the same family yet each one should have it’s own personality. This one is going to be pretty awesome. Can’t announce it quite yet exactly what it’s for, but stay tuned! #tylerfuquacreationsmechan_inc



Source