Hi, gang. I'm in Rome studying beautiful sculptures from antiquity.
This place would be a nightmare for Barney Bishop III because several of these sculptures have penises.
One thing apparent from these great sculptures is that each manifests an enormous struggle.
For example, artists struggled to escape mortality and the way of all flesh by preserving as much of tender skin and hot passion as they were able in permanent marble.
Or, some struggled to escape the limits of two dimensions, with art that literally jumps off the wall:
Many struggled against oblivion, and the inevitable loss of our personality, our face, our individuality. The memories of our loved ones gives us the consolation of a few extra years but even that is soon gone. In Rome we see miles and miles of busts of people hoping for a little endurance.
Artists today no longer have to struggle with these heartbreaking constraints. Digitization gives our work permanence. Video empowers us with motion, audio preserves our voices and our personalities, holograms give us three dimensionality. In so many ways, artists have been freed from the struggle that bedeviled earlier artists.
So what's the consequence of our freedom?
At the Villa Borghese modern sculpture is exhibited side by side with ancient sculpture, for comparison. Here are two sculptures by modern sculptor, Giuseppe Penone.
They are exhibited accompanied by long, pretentious explanations by the artist. Minor struggles will invariably produce minor art.