Church Turned into a Tennis Court
The U.S. born alleged artist Asad Raza was allowed to transform the 16th-century church San Paolo Converso in Milan, Italy, into a full functioning tennis court. Anyone is allowed to play. The church …More
The U.S. born alleged artist Asad Raza was allowed to transform the 16th-century church San Paolo Converso in Milan, Italy, into a full functioning tennis court. Anyone is allowed to play.
The church was secularized in 1808 by Napoleon Bonaparte who turned it into a warehouse. It is now privately owned.
“For Raza, the game serves as a method of absorbing energetic drives into symbolic but non-harmful practices”, reads a description of the piece. Raza is probably not aware that he could have reached this goal with simpler means.
Picture: Screenshot thespaces.com, #newsWuhomlpuzj
The church was secularized in 1808 by Napoleon Bonaparte who turned it into a warehouse. It is now privately owned.
“For Raza, the game serves as a method of absorbing energetic drives into symbolic but non-harmful practices”, reads a description of the piece. Raza is probably not aware that he could have reached this goal with simpler means.
Picture: Screenshot thespaces.com, #newsWuhomlpuzj
CarolineA03
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I think we need to call "sacrilege" on this one - don't we?