This past Saturday, February 5th, Saint David's School officially turned 60. To kick off "Founder's Week" today, the Student Council President and I cut the ceremonial cake at 7th and 8th Grade Lunch to the rousing rendition of "Happy Birthday." The cake was then distributed throughout the school for all the boys to enjoy. Each day this week, we will celebrate Founder's Week with the boys, alums, parents, trustees, faculty, and friends of the school, through a variety of activities, gifts, and retrospectives all culminating in a special liturgy at The Church of St. Ignatius Loyola.
Yesterday evening, independent scholar and critic Michelle Marder Kamhi ( www.mmkamhi.com ), co-editor with husband Louis Torres of Aristos , an online review of arts; author of Who Says That's Art? A Commonsense View of the Visual Arts ; and grandmother of two Saint David's boys, gave a thought provoking talk on art for our grandparent community. An advocate of objective standards in arts scholarship and criticism, Ms. Kamhi focused her talk on the ways in which art critics such as Clement Greenberg promoted the shift from representational art to abstraction. Kamhi argues that the abstract and post-modern art prevalent today, which often requires explanation by docents in order to be understood, goes against art's purpose. Taking issue with Greenberg's contention that representation is an expendable convention of painting, she quoted the late art critic John Canaday: "Art is the tangible expression of the intangible values that men live by." ...
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