A press release for a painting show contains the line: “crafting a new language to discuss female sexuality” in reference to the work. A conversation at the opening of the show reached the agreed conclusion that paintings populated solely by female characters in this and almost every instance can only fall someway short of this extraordinary linguistic challenge. Why, the conversation wondered, do press releases always allow the works to take the credit when they are the real craftsmen?
A conversation
A press release for a painting show contains the line: “crafting a new language to discuss female sexuality” in reference to the work. A conversation at the opening of the show reached the agreed conclusion that paintings populated solely by female characters in this and almost every instance can only fall someway short of this extraordinary linguistic challenge. Why, the conversation wondered, do press releases always allow the works to take the credit when they are the real craftsmen?