Sculpting a Dream: Artist Can't Cross Beyond Color Barrier


Should artists of specific races be repressed when creating representative art?

Hey Reader,

Something you should know about me is that I'm an active listener of Michael Smerconish. Most weeks I listen to all his content. Today he covered a story where:

  • Philadelphia initially invited a white artist to design a statue of Harriet Tubman for City Hall, leading to complaints and controversy.
  • Following public outcry, Philadelphia ended its partnership with the white artist, opened an open call (think of an auction style) for submissions. Now, five semifinalist designs are in the running. All remaining candidates are Black artists.
  • The city faced criticism for not having a public selection process and for selecting a white artist to create the statue, triggering discussions about the role of racial identity in art.

Full NY Times story here.

Did we seriously get to a point where 60 years (we just celebrated this milestone two days ago) after MLK's most famous speech, only people of certain backgrounds and skin tones can say certain things?

I think art should be judged by the beholder. If necessary, judge the artist by the content of their character, not the color of their skin!

I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. - Martin Luther King Jr., Aug 28, 1963

We all come from unique stories. In our minds we are the only and most accurate representations of those stories. But let all artists speak. Let haters hate, let flatterers flatter, let artisans create inaccurate work.

The best part of letting artists do this is that people would be forced to educate themselves on the complexities and nuances in the world.

I invite dialogue. Reply to this email, let me know your thoughts. Disagree, compliment, or insult me. All is welcomed!

No one knows anything. Keep learning. Stay curious. Never stop questioning.

Thank you again for joining Marketplace of Ideas (what I'm calling this for now). I look forward to embarking on this exciting journey with you!

To an independent-thinking, knowledge-seeking, and skeptical you.

P.S - This list is at a whopping TWO subscribers. None of which are my mom, wife or siblings (who I love very much). Forward this to a friend who would appreciate thought provoking content!

569 Ave Y, Brooklyn, NY 11235
Unsubscribe · Preferences

Charles Chakkalo

It's our duty to constantly learn, question and discover. Join me in doing just that. Weekly takes on what's going on in our world from an independent perspective. "The wise learn from every person" - Ben Zoma

Read more from Charles Chakkalo

To: Reader Let me say this clearly. This is a gamble. It is a gamble for President Trump. It is a gamble for Prime Minister Netanyahu. It is a gamble for the Iranian regime. And frankly, it is a gamble for the American political system itself. And I support the strikes. Not emotionally. Not reflexively. Not because I enjoy escalation. I support them because the alternative was not stability. The alternative was slow drift toward a worse outcome. Before we get into the geopolitics, let’s talk...

To: Reader Everyone who watched Smerconish this weekend knows exactly what I’m talking about. I asked ChatGPT to draw a caricature of me using everything it knows about me. And it did. It was funny. It was sharp. It was weirdly accurate. And then it hit me. Why was it able to do that? The Nest footage.The subscription confusion.The question that won’t go away. Are these companies actually deleting what they say they’re deleting? I have been obsessed with privacy since I was a teenager. Not in...

To: Reader Hey everyone, I just finished recording this week’s pre-recorded episode. The video centers on the arrest of Don Lemon, but not in the way most coverage has handled it. I’m not interested in litigating whether you like Don Lemon, agree with Don Lemon, or think Don Lemon has ever been fair to people you care about. That’s not the point. What is the point is how the federal government arrested him. Here’s the part that stopped me in my tracks: Two federal judges reportedly looked at...