09-12-2019, 03:21 PM
Quote:
Hillary Clinton leafs through her emails for nearly an hour at resolute desk in art exhibit
© Francesco Urbano Ragazzi, Kenneth Goldsmith, Gerda Studio
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spent nearly an hour leafing through some of her emails on display at an art exhibit in Italy.
In photos surfacing online, the former Democratic presidential nominee could be seen looking through stacks of some of her past emails, which came under scrutiny during the presidential campaign in 2016.
More than 60,000 pages of emails were printed out and assembled in large stacks on a mock presidential resolute desk for the exhibit, which was held at the Venetian Teatro Italia in Venice. The exhibit, titled “HILLARY: The Hillary Clinton Emails,” was created by artist Kenneth Goldsmith.
Francesco Urbano Ragazzi, who curated the show, said in a statement that Clinton visited the former movie theater for the exhibit Tuesday. Urbano Ragazzi said that Clinton sat down the exact replica of the resolute desk in the Oval Office, where she spent roughly an hour looking through her emails.
Clinton told local media that exhibition “is further proof that nothing wrong or controversial can be found on these emails,” HuffPost reported.
“It makes them accessible to everyone and allows everyone to read them,” she reportedly said, while adding: “They are just a bunch of boring emails.”
Urbano Ragazzi told The Hill in a statement that “in the digital age, making these documents available to everyone in a touchable format is a way to focus on something concrete in order to exit the impalpable toxicity of ideological narratives.”
“The exhibition is a way to allude to an alternative world that will never exist. We are happy that the real Hillary Clinton has been part of this image full of possibilities,” the curatorial team continued. “Visiting HILLARY by Kenneth Goldsmith, she has not only been in front of her emails. The exhibition is indeed the portrait of a powerful woman, but also the portrait of a historical change in our understanding of notions such as transparency, propaganda, public and private space.”
Goldsmith told HuffPost on Wednesday that he hoped “she would see it as an act of tribute and love" and added that he believes she has.
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