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Scenes from an Execution
Scenes from an Execution | Howard Barker
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Commissioned to paint a vast canvas celebrating the triumphant Battle of Lepanto, the free?spirited Galactia creates instead a breathtaking scene of war?torn carnage. In her fierce determination to stay true to herself, she alienates the authorities and faces incarceration. Her younger lover Carpeta is approached to take over and seizes the assignment for himself. Howard Barker's Scenes from an Execution makes sixteenth?century Venice the setting for a fearless exploration of sexual politics and the timeless tension between personal ambition and moral responsibility, between the patron’s demands and the artist’s autonomy. Art is opinion, and opinion is the source of all authority. This edition includes a new essay by Howard Barker, entitled The Sunless Garden of the Unconsolled: Some Destinations Beyond Catastrophe.
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Caralen
Scenes from an Execution | Howard Barker
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Galactia, a Venetian painter, only paints the truth - how events and people really are. She's commissioned to paint a battle scene glorifying the Venetian armed forces and their admiral. It goes over really well as one can see from the play's title and the meme.

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