subject
English, 27.09.2021 19:20 love123jones

Reading Strange Bedfellows!" lamented the title of a recent letter to Museum News, in which a
certain Harriet Sherman excoriated the National Gallery of Art in Washington for its handling
of tickets to the much-ballyhooed "Van Gogh's van Goghs' exhibit. A hugo proportion of the
200,000 free tickets were snatched up by homeless opportunists in the dead of winter, who
then scalped those tickets at $85 apiece to less hardy connoiseurs
Yet, Sherman's bedfellows are far from strange. Art, despite its religious and magical
origins, very soon became a commercial venture. From bourgeois patrons funding art they
barely understood in order to share their protegee's prestige, to museum curators
stage-managing the cult of artists in order to enhance the market value of museum
holdings, entrepreneurs have found validation and profit in big-name art. Speculators,
thieves, and promoters long ago created and fed a market where cultural icons could be
traded like commodities
This trend toward commodification of high-brow art took an ominous, if predictable, turn in
the 1980s during the Japanese "bubble economy." At a time when Japanese share prices
more than doubled, individual tycoons and industrial giants alike invested record amounts in
some of the West's greatest masterpieces. Ryool Saito, for example, purchased van Gogh's
Portrait of Dr. Gachet for a record-breaking $82.5 million. The work, then on loan to the
I Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art, suddenly vanished from the public domain. Later
learning that he owed the Japanese government $24 million in taxes, Salto remarked that
he would have the paining cremated with him to spare his heirs the inheritance tax. This
statement, which he later dismissed as a joke, alarmed and enraged many. A representativo
of the Van Gogh museum, conceding that he had no legal redress, made an ethical appeal
to Mr. Saito, asserting, 'a work of art remains the possession of the world at large."
Ethical appeals notwithstanding, great art will increasingly devolve into big business. Firstly,
great art can only be certified by its market value. Moreover, the world at largo hasn't the
means of acquisition. Only one museum currently has the funding to contend for the best
pieces-the J. Paul Getty Museum, founded by the billionaire oilman. The art may disappear
into private hands, but its transfer will disseminate once static fortunes into the hands of
various investors, collectors, and occasionally the artist.
Question
What is the TOPIC (main idea) of this passage?
What is the SCOPE (specific focus) of this passage?
What is the PURPOSE of this passage? (What is the author trying to do with this passage?
Describe/explain, argue, advocate, etc...)
What notes would you jot down on your noteboard to paraphrase each paragraph?

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on English

question
English, 21.06.2019 16:30
I’n a rough draft, where should the main idea first appear in the paper
Answers: 2
question
English, 21.06.2019 17:30
What type of figurative language is used in this passage from "letter from birmingham jail"? just as the prophets of the eighth century b.c. left their villages and carried their "thus saith the lord" far beyond the boundaries of their hometowns, and just as the apostle paul left his village of tarsus and carried the gospel of jesus christ to the far corners of the greco roman world, so am i compelled to carry the gospel of freedom beyond my own hometown. allusion symbolism imagery metaphor
Answers: 1
question
English, 22.06.2019 03:00
Need answer asap plz! the descriptions of the west wind in the first two sections of β€œode to the west wind” are dominated by images of a. violence, death, decay, and burial. c. peace, birth, growth, and blossoming. b. sleep, dreams, fantasy, and reverie. d. translucence, light, color, and radiance.
Answers: 1
question
English, 22.06.2019 06:30
50 ! your poem must include the following: ● poetic form: lines and stanzas (not paragraphs! ) o your poem needs to be at least 10 lines long. ● sensory details/strong imagery o β€œpaint a picture” and/or create an emotion with your words, word choice is key in poetry ● figurative language o include at least one of the following: metaphor, simile, and/or personification (click here for more info. on these) ● sound devices o include at least one of the following: repetition, rhyme, rhythm, meter, onomatopoeia, and/or alliteration (click here for more info. on these) ● labels o underneath your poem, include the words from the poem that represent the figurative language and sound devices and label them o examples: booming bombs - alliteration; like a firefly - simile you so
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Reading Strange Bedfellows!" lamented the title of a recent letter to Museum News, in which a
Questions
question
Mathematics, 22.08.2019 05:00
question
Mathematics, 22.08.2019 05:00
Questions on the website: 13722363