Bocskor's analysis makes perfect sense on a cocktail napkin, but a
closer look at historical precedent shows that it is difficult to get
young voters to
rock the polls.
* * * Built on the
Rock the Church shall stand, though earthly temples be
closing silenced are voices of evil men, but God's voice still is calling... Calling the
young and old to rest, calling the souls in darkness to Himself, calling to life everlasting!
The bipartisan poll, which was commissioned by
Rock the Vote, found that
young adults are paying
close attention to the election — about 77 percent of those surveyed said they were either very likely or somewhat likely to vote.
What's more, the works, and their titles, reflect a
younger artist's unapologetic aesthetic sensibility that includes pop,
rock, and mod in its source material, not to mention Vegas Baroque and Marfa Minimalism, Dan Flavin, Kenneth Noland, bar codes, Bridget Riley, psychedelia, electronic, Ed Ruscha, test patterns, screen savers, Hang Ten T - shirts, Saturday Night Fever disco floors, and the communication sequences in
Close Encounters of the Third Kind.