Friday, 6 November 2015
Monday, 19 October 2015
The traps
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| National Coach Museum, Lisbon (image taken from Boas Notícias) |
Last
month, it was reported by several newspapers that in the first four months of the new National Coach Museum in Lisbon there
were a number of accidents due to deficiencies in the architectural design. By
'deficiencies' I mean solutions adopted (or, if you prefer, architectural elements
created) which become traps for the users of the space (yes, they exist).
Sunday, 20 September 2015
Intellectual access and not an easy way out
All too often, the promotion
of intellectual access by some in the cultural sector is discarded as ‘dumbing
down’. Recently, I read the following in Rob Riemen’s “The eternal return of
fascism”:
“In the culture of this society [the mass-society; our contemporary society] there is an ongoing trend towards the lesser, the lowest level, because this is where one finds most things people can share. This is exactly why university education indicators are levelled down, so that ‘everyone’ can study and obtain a degree. And the same will apply to the arts, because they will have to be accessible to all, not only in what concerns tuition fees, but also at the level of comprehension. After all, the fiercest indignation is directed towards what is difficult. Because what is not understood immediately by everyone is difficult, that is ‘elitist’ and therefore undemocratic.” (my translation from Greek)
Sunday, 6 September 2015
The Italian slap
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| Eike Schmidt, new director of the Uffizzi (image taken from The Art Newspaper, Photo: Zuma Press/Alamy) |
“A slap on the
face of Italian archaeologists and art historians.” According to an article by
Margarita Pournara in the Greek newspaper I Kathimerini, this was the statement
of Vittorio Sgarbi, former Italian Minister of Culture, regarding the
appointment of seven foreign professionals as directors of Italian museums.
Since the appointment was announced on 18 August,
the issue was widely discussed in the media.
Wednesday, 29 July 2015
Practicing, non-catholic
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| Photo taken from the website of the newspaper Expresso. |
A cultured person for me is
not someone with a deep knowledge on a number of subjects, someone who reads books, who goes to museums and to
the theatre, who travels and knows the world. A cultured person for me
is someone who does all this and more and tries to put his knowledge
and experience into practice in order to help reconstruct the world, a better
world. Being a cultured person is not something that comes naturally to us
humans. It is a daily mental and practical exercise against our inner
barbarity, against our ignorance.
Tuesday, 14 July 2015
Who are you?
I hold
strong impressions from the walls of the underground in London (and other
cities), a fundamental platform for one to keep up-to-date with the city’s
cultural offer. Now, imagine what would happen if all those cultural
organizations, competing among themselves and with other entities for people’s
attention, did not consider carefully their visual identity so that they would
stand out immediately and make a connection both with interested and especially
distracted individuals.
Friday, 26 June 2015
The message, the language, the options
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| Paula Sá Nogueira on the TV programme "Inferno". |
The discussion that was generated after
the announcement of the allocation of subsidies from the Directorate General
for the Arts (DgArtes) made me think once again about the way this sector
communicates with the public, citizens and taxpayers. There is a larger issue,
of course, that of the subsidy itself: the system of application, the
evaluation of the proposals, the monitoring of the entities, the purpose and
duration of the subsidy. But today, here, my reflection focuses on
communication.
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