Public Art in FYROM: From Tito to Alexander the Great
Abstract
Public art aims at the construction of a historical continuation thus reproducing a “useful past” into the present. Within this concept, “places of public memory” are an everchanging visual recording of historic memory. Ideologies, political and historical circumstances as well as current expectations are but a few elements that shape the way in which humans depict the past. As a matter of fact, public art remains an essential part of the complex institutional dynamic, linking the political state and the nation.
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Published
01-12-2015
How to Cite
Mavrogeni, S. (2015). Public Art in FYROM: From Tito to Alexander the Great. Macedonian Studies Journal, 2(1). Retrieved from https://ojs.aims.edu.au/index.php/msj/article/view/6
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Section
Articles