A life marked
by radical inclusion, not selective outrage.
Not exact matches
To have a loving intimate relationship with God; to serve others
by practicing generosity and hospitality; to seek justice, mercy, healing, reconciliation, rehabilitation,
inclusion, and participation; and then to live non-violently without vengeance and with a cheerful fearlessness of death and worldly powers — that is the
radical and the defiant message and the transformational spirit of the universal and timeless Good News.
This world - changing vision is shaped
by ten values, many of them worthy of Scripture, including
radical inclusion (what Christians call grace!)
Duchamp, who became the darling of the
radical Dada movement (founded
by Tristan Tzara), created numerous challenging works such as his «readymades» series of found objects, of which the most celebrated was Fountain (1917), a standard urinal basin, which Duchamp submitted for
inclusion in the annual, exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists in New York.
Given its
radical scale and ambition, the
inclusion of large scale (albeit unprotected, and acessible - feeling) works
by Julian Schnabel, George Condo, and Rita Ackermann and many others, the Brucennial should be considered a serious curatorial gesture.