The bard celebrates two other fine practitioners of the art, and laments a lost brewer
EVERY JANUARY, and this one’s no exception, witnesses a ritual of defacing or bringing down of statues of James Cook in Australia in well-planned interventions by those who protest against linking Australia Day to his arrival on the continent in January 1788 and the genocide of native people that followed.
Nearly 20 years earlier, in 2006, British artist Hew Locke mercilessly ridiculed slaver Edward Colston by adorning his statue in Bristol with glittering, ersatz-gold regalia and trinkets as part of his Restoration series.
Locke’s intention to expose Colston’s involvement in corruption and enrichment through slavery was abundantly clear but, at the time, the message remained largely within the realm of contemporary art.
Still the only black man to win the US Open tennis title, a statue of the legendary champion, Arthur Ashe, is now the only one remaining on Monument Avenue in his Richmond, Virginia hometown, where confederate leaders of the Civil War were also once displayed, writes LINDA PENTZ GUNTER
CHRIS SEARLE pays tribute to the late South African percussionist, Louis Moholo-Moholo
PAUL FOLEY welcomes a dramatic account of the men and women involved in the pivotal moment of the 5th Pan African Congress
NICK MATTHEWS previews a landmark book launch taking place in Leicester next weekend


