19. 十二月 2003
Cathalena E. Burch
Alisa Shorr glanced at the teenager with a look of disbelief.
"This is dope," the 17-year-old boy was exclaiming as he looked at the images in the University of Arizona Museum of Art's latest exhibits, "Comic Release: Negotiating Identity for a New Generation" and "Wit's End: The Art of Laughs, Giggles, Cackles and Guffaws."
"I had never heard that before" uttered in the museum, said Shorr, the museum's spokeswoman.
The double display, on exhibit until Jan. 25, is attracting plenty of interest among teens and young adults who normally avoid the museum. Young people are drawn to the exhibits because both employ comic images - familiar and new cartoon characters - to address serious topics: war, violence, ethnicity, gender, loss of innocence.
Gottfried Helnwein's "American Prayer" incorporates a floating Donald Duck in a young boy's evening prayers, while Phillip Knoll asks the question "What if Superman flew naked?" in his sparse "Real and Imagined."
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