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A CAR-PARK FOR ICE-CREAM VANS

“Modern Trafalgar Square is a dump: Hayling Island with statues, cut off from the rest of London by the four-ring motorway that encircles it. The pigeons are right to deposit their opinions of it.” The now-famous Fourth Plinth project is “the smartest example of sculptural hype I can remember in London. I cannot imagine a more prominent urban showcase for new public sculpture than an empty platform in Trafalgar Square, opposite the National Gallery, and the wheeze of rotating the solutions on a regular basis means that nobody need ever worry unduly about the permanent impact of the results.” – The Sunday Times (UK)

GARBAGE OUT

A mountainous landfill, “25 million tons of trash piled as high as a 20-story building and stretching nearly a mile alongside the main Jerusalem-Tel Aviv highway – a dump so huge, so rank, so grotesque and so in your face that it is now something more than a garbage heap – is the subject of a new museum show. – Washington Post

BRING BACK THE CHEESY SPECIAL EFFECTS

Computer generated imagery has transformed the world of movie special effects. “Whereas, before, if they were making The Attack of the Killer Ants, they’d have papier mache ants chewing someone in half, now they’ll use a computer graphic ant, because it’s cheap and they can get bigger shots.” But the amazing imagery has gotten predictable, and now there’s talk of a backlash. – National Post (Canada) 03/18/00

A BATTLER

“Susan Sontag’s recovery from her second bout with cancer has been dramatic. You will find few with a stronger will to live than this extraordinary American writer, though not of course without aid: medicine, not any wishful or literary thinking about illness (TB, remember, was once considered a romantic disease), is what her celebrated 1973 essay, Illness as Metaphor, advocates.” – National Post (Canada)

CLIENT FIXING

Investigators have discovered that auction houses Sotheby’s and Christie’s swapped confidential lists of super-rich clients. “The shared and overlapping lists of about 50 names which include some of the world’s wealthiest families were described as a crucial tool for auction houses to use in enforcing a form of price control in which certain customers were charged lower commissions, down to zero, that both houses honored.” – New York Times