Drifting through Cityscapes Drifting through Cityscapes MTL final copy | Page 30

ISABEL WOCIAL »Protest March«, Leeds, 1967 The image I have chosen, is of a student protest in Leeds in 1967. The protest was in fact a performance art in response to the growth of student protests across the world, sometimes international issues such as the Vietnam war or »Ban the bomb« but also more parochial or prosaic issues. The students were using humour in their art to satirise the student protest but at the same time presenting performance art and happenings as a legitimate art form to be rec- ognised by their college. This act was part of a move- ment to broaden the curriculum within Leeds Col- lege of Art. The impact of this movement has transformed the college to what Leeds Art University is today. One could question that without this revlu- tion. »For the Love of God,« Damien Hirst, 2007 Leeds Art University may not have produced con- temporary artists that are contributing to shaping the art world today, including the alumni student Damien Hirst and performance and installation artist Georgi- na Starr. The second image is Damien Hirst’s, »For the love of God« (2007). Created 40 years after the ‘Pro- test march’. The work consists of 8.601 diamonds en- crusting a platinum cast of a human skull. This piece of work costs £28 million of Hirst’s money and the work sold for £100 million. This piece of art work chal- lenges the concept between art and value within the art market and capitalist society.